The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is embarking on an expansion and renovation project that will enable the museum to share more art, welcome more visitors, and provide more enjoyment on a seamless journey through the collections.
The expansion and renovation will support the museum’s commitment to enhancing the visitor experience and the institution’s strategic plan, which calls for offering a range of visitor-centered, curator-led art experiences that engage, captivate, and delight a diverse audience.
This is the largest expansion and renovation project in the museum’s history.
As we prepare for the largest expansion and renovation project in VMFA history, please note the following temporary closures.
Currently Closed:
VMFA’s gallery expansions will yield spaces that rank nationally as the second-largest space for African art, the fourth-largest space for American art, and the fourth-largest suite of galleries devoted to Photography.
The addition of a McGlothlin Wing II will expand the museum by approximately 173,000 square feet to include the following:
The project will also renovate approximately 45,000 square feet of existing gallery space in the existing wings that were added in 1936, 1970, and 2010. Renovation highlights include the following:
The Leslie Cheek Theater’s renovation was completed in spring 2025, when it welcomed back attendees of VMFA talks, films, and performances. The new theater also became the new venue for Richmond Ballet’s studio series, Moving Art.
The look of the expansion will signal VMFA’s commitment to openness and community engagement. The expansion’s exterior will have a novel surface that plays with natural light. It will cast dynamic shadows, invite curiosity and exploration, and blur the boundary between the museum’s interior and the outside world. These design characteristics are architectural expressions of VMFA’s ongoing intention to be a welcoming space for all.
The last major expansion was in 2010, when the museum added a new wing named for VMFA’s American art patrons James W. and Frances Gibson McGlothlin. Shortly after the McGlothlin Wing opened, significant new acquisitions nearly doubled the collection’s size. The collection has grown to more than 50,000 works of art—all belonging to the people of the Commonwealth.
VMFA held multiple two-way listening sessions to engage a diverse range of individuals, groups, and communities from the Commonwealth. The museum also heard from more than 3,500 survey participants. This invaluable community input will influence the final design. The community has expressed an interest in improving accessibility and wayfinding, connectivity between indoor and outdoor spaces, additional spaces for pause and reflection, the activation and preservation of the Robins Sculpture Garden, and beautiful, yet functional architecture that blends in with the rest of the museum building.
Groundbreaking is expected to begin in March 2026. The new wing is currently slated to open in 2028. As with any expansion and renovation project, designs and dates are subject to change.
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VMFA’s expansion design phase will take two years with groundbreaking expected in March 2026. The new wing is slated to open in 2028.
We do not anticipate closing the entire museum during construction, and special exhibitions will continue to be available to visitors. While VMFA is undergoing expansion and renovation, some art collections will be removed from the galleries that are impacted by or adjacent to the construction area.
VMFA’s new wing will be added to the 1985 Mellon and Lewis West Wing, on the museum’s west and south facades, along Grove Avenue and facing towards the Robins Sculpture Garden and Sheppard Street.
Currently VMFA comprises 718,831 square feet. The latest expansion plans call for a new wing that will provide approximately 173,000 gross square feet of total space. In addition to new construction, the museum will carry out approximately 45,000 square feet of renovations to the existing building, including improvements to the Leslie Cheek Theater.
With minimal encroachment into the E. Claiborne and Lora Robins Sculpture Garden on the museum’s campus, a new wing comprising approximately 173,000 square feet will be added to the south and west sides of the building. Preserving the Robins Sculpture Garden is at the forefront of VMFA’s expansion project because it is such an important space for the community. The new wing is situated in an area of the Sculpture Garden adjacent to the 1985 Mellon and Lewis Wing that is rarely used by our visitors. VMFA will maintain four acres of green space, including the areas that our visitors currently use, such as the Belvedere Terrace over the parking deck and the spaces adjacent to the pond and Chihuly’s Red Reeds. The Confederate Memorial Chapel, located on VMFA’s campus, is considered the largest artwork in our collection and will remain on its current site and open throughout the expansion.
Six electric vehicle (EV) charging stations will be added to VMFA’s parking deck.
VMFA has selected the international architecture firm SmithGroup to plan and design its next visitor-centered expansion and renovation project. SmithGroup, one of the world’s preeminent integrated design firms, creates exceptional design solutions for healthcare, science and technology organizations, higher education and cultural institutions, urban environments, workplaces, mixed-use and waterfront developments, and parks and open spaces. SmithGroup was selected following an international search that followed the Commonwealth’s established process of architect selection for state projects.
The award-winning firm’s extensive portfolio includes several impressive national museum projects such as the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collections and Conservation Center in Maryland, the Detroit Institute of Arts in Michigan, as well as the National Museum of the American Indian and the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, DC. SmithGroup is currently designing the re-envisioned Thomas Gilcrease Museum of American History and Art in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The firm’s work is recognized locally as well: SmithGroup designed the concept for the National Slavery Museum at the Lumpkin’s Slave Jail Site/Devil’s Half Acre for the City of Richmond.
The total cost for the expansion and renovation is $261 million, which will be funded through a combination of public and private funds.
VMFA will continue its current admission practice: Permanent collection galleries will remain free to visitors while some special exhibitions will be ticketed.