Stockholm, Sweden

Extension of the National Museum of Science and Technology, housing a visualization dome, a spherical space where visualization technology achieves an immersive audiovisual experience, along with a café and an exhibition hall. The building splices together museum functions around an unused courtyard, and though the dome function is tall, the addition is sensitive to the vaulted hall and lower buildings defining the courtyard today.

Wisdome Stockholm by Elding Oscarson, received an 2025 International Architecture Honourable Mention from The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design.
Conventionally, the program would generate a low volume with a protruding dome, but to utilize the unique dome to create a strong interior space as well as a telling exterior form, the dome is given a focal position under a free form timber structure. The roof mediates between the tall dome and the low facades of the one-story building, spanning 26x48m across the dome.


This generates an overwhelming interior space, while the oddly vaulted exterior communicates a unique function. The gridshell structure is constructed from flat standard LVL panels. This has never been done before and has required great commitment from everyone involved. Architecturally and technologically material properties, and the potential of timber construction, is explored. Sustainable construction should include experimental projects, whose benefits are well into the future and are perhaps more geared towards innovation, than more acutely applicable timber solutions. In all technological leaps, research that pushes boundaries have been pivotal.
This is happening at The National Museum of Science and Technology.


Architects: Elding Oscarson
Lead Architects: Jonas Elding and Johan Oscarson
Design Team: Arin Alia, Catherine Yarwood, Anton Nordfelt, Alexander Lundmark, Gustaf Karlsson, Jule Milz, Antonio Minto, and Paolo Migliori
Client: National Museum of Science and Technology
General Contractors: Oljibe (Main Contractor) and Blumer Lehmann (Contractor Timber Structure)
Landscape Architects: Urbio AB
Client: National Museum of Science and Technology
Photographers: Mikael Olsson












