The Met measures almost long and with more than of floor space, more than 20 times the size of the original 1880 building. The museum building is an accretion of over 20 structures, most of which are not visible from the exterior. The City of New York owns the museum building and contributes utilities, heat, and some of the cost of guardianship. In the early 1890s, the Austrian-born sculptor
Karl Bitter was selected to provide the sculptural motifs for the new building's monumental entrance facade. In the spandrels of the museum's central structure, he placed six
portrait medallions of famed Renaissance artists
Raphael,
Michelangelo,
Albrecht Dürer,
Rembrandt,
Donato Bramante, and
Diego Velázquez. On the extensions flanking either side of the larger central structure, he also designed four
caryatids that represented different artistic fields: painting, sculpture, architecture, and music. The most elaborate sculptural feature of the facade was intended to be four sculpture groupings representing major epochs in the history of art:
Ancient,
Classical,
Renaissance, and
Modern. A lack of funds and disagreement over how to represent "modern art", led that element of the facade's design to be abandoned; the only vestige of these planned sculptures is four pyramids of roughly-hewn limestone atop the columns.
Interior The building houses numerous galleries, including the
Anna Wintour Costume Center and
Astor Court, along with other spaces, including the
Thomas J. Watson Library and the
Robert Goldwater Library. The Charles Engelhard Court of the American Wing features the facade of the Branch Bank of the United States, a Wall Street bank that was facing demolition in 1913.
Roof garden The
Iris and
B. Gerald Cantor Roof Garden is located on the roof near the southwestern corner of the museum. The garden's café and bar is a popular museum spot during the mild-weathered months, especially on Friday and Saturday evenings when large crowds can lead to long lines at the elevators. The roof garden offers views of
Central Park and the Manhattan skyline. The garden is the gift of philanthropists Iris and B. Gerald Cantor, founder and chairman of
securities firm
Cantor Fitzgerald. The garden was opened to the public on August 1, 1987. Every summer since 1998 the roof garden has hosted a single-artist exhibition.
Frank Stella (2007),
Jeff Koons (2008),
Roxy Paine (2009),
Big Bambú by
Doug and Mike Starn (2010),
We Come in Peace by
Huma Bhabha (2018), and
Parapivot by
Alicja Kwade. The roof garden has views of the
Manhattan skyline from a vantage point high above Central Park. The views have been described as "the best in Manhattan."
Art critics have been known to complain that the view "distracts" from the art on exhibition.
New York Times art critic
Ken Johnson complains that the "breathtaking, panoramic views of Central Park and the Manhattan skyline" creates "an inhospitable site for sculpture" that "discourages careful, contemplative looking." Writer
Mindy Aloff describes the roof garden as "the loveliest airborne space I know of in New York." The café and bar in this garden are considered romantic by many. In 2025, the Met announced that the roof garden would close for five years starting that October. == Landmark designations ==