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News Release

High Desert Museum Breaks Ground On Transformative Campus Expansion (Photo) - 03/19/26

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, March 19, 2026, 9:00 am PDT

 

$40M Expansion Will Add a New Wing, Strengthening the Museum’s Role as a Civic and Cultural Anchor for the Region by Creating New Spaces for Art, Education, and Community Gathering

 

Bend, Oregon – March 19, 2026 – The High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon today broke ground on its $40 million campus expansion, which will add a new wing to the museum, transforming the arts and cultural landscape of central and eastern Oregon.

 

The new 24,000-square-foot wing will increase the interdisciplinary Museum’s capacity for exhibitions, education, and engagement, and will feature new classrooms, expanded gallery space, and new event and gathering spaces for the community. In addition, the expansion includes the reinstallation of the Museum’s permanent Doris Swayze Bounds collection dedicated to the communities of the Indigenous Plateau region, the first such update in more than 25 years. Opening to the public in winter 2027, the project will expand access to the Museum for visitors and allow it to better serve one of the nation’s most geographically vast and culturally diverse areas.

 

Designed by Portland-based architecture firm Hacker, which also designed the Museum’s first new building when it expanded in 1989, the new wing responds directly to the evolving needs of the fast-growing region. Since opening in 1982, the High Desert Museum has grown into the largest cultural institution east of the Cascades in Oregon, bringing together art, history, cultures, and natural science to explore the diverse landscapes and people of the High Desert region. It houses a collection encompassing over 28,000 objects from the intermountain West ranging from historic objects to contemporary artwork, including the Doris Swayze Bounds collection of 7,000 Indigenous plateau objects. The only institution of its kind in central and eastern Oregon, the Museum has doubled its programming over the last 15 years as attendance has grown by 40%, underscoring both its growing impact and the need for expanded facilities.

 

"The High Desert Museum exists to inspire curiosity, foster understanding, and celebrate the unique cultures and landscapes of our region and the ways in which people and landscape thrive together. This expansion allows us to share our mission with broader audiences, creating spaces where people can gather, learn, and engage with the stories that shape our communities,” said Dana Whitelaw, Executive Director of the High Desert Museum. “The transformed campus will deepen our ability to evolve alongside the diverse audiences we serve and to reinforce the Museum’s integral role in our community as a leading cultural, educational, and civic institution.”

 

Connected to the Museum’s main building, the new wing will include a dedicated entrance and commons, and will allow for a holistic visitor experience with a seamless flow across the campus. The expansion encompasses an art gallery; the Gathering, an intimate community space; the Learning Center, featuring four new classrooms and an outdoor learning space; and the High Desert Hall and outdoor Event Terrace, offering the ability to accommodate large public events. The architecture draws inspiration from the surrounding sagebrush steppe landscape, with floor-to-ceiling windows, open gathering areas, and a nature-based color palette that visually connects interior spaces with the surrounding environment and reinforces the Museum’s commitment to place-based storytelling.

 

“This project reflects the extraordinary generosity and shared commitment of the many donors, foundations, and community partners who believe deeply in the High Desert Museum’s mission, and the Museum's role as a space where art, history, science, and nature come together to tell the story of this singular region, ” said Sharon Gueck, Chairperson of the Board of Trustees. "The expansion will allow the Museum to deepen its impact and increase its capacity as a vital community hub while continuing to celebrate the cultures that define the High Desert.”

 

About the Museum Expansion

Conceived as a continuation of the High Desert itself and envisioned to blend seamlessly with the original building, the new wing’s design reflects the local landscape’s rimrock formations, volcanic geology, and the nearby Steens Mountain escarpment, with an intentionally restrained material palette that incorporates weathered steel, stone walls, and glass. In an acknowledgement of the Museum’s deep connection to place and its interconnectedness with nature, the new wing is fully electric and features solar-ready infrastructure, and is designed for potential net-zero energy and net-zero water expenditure.

 

A new 3,225-square-foot gallery will be the only art space of its kind in Oregon east of the Cascades, with flexible exhibition space featuring high ceilings and integrated audiovisual technology, allowing the Museum to expand its presentation of modern and contemporary art and to organize more impactful exhibitions featuring notable loans alongside collection highlights. Exhibition programming will continue to spotlight artists whose perspectives broaden understandings of the American West, and to emphasize underrepresented voices, offering visitors the opportunity to experience the region through a diverse cultural lens. The gallery will connect to the main building via a light-filled, 2,775-square-foot Gallery Walk, where visitors will encounter works of art in a beautiful setting inspired by nature.

 

Reflecting this renewed commitment to engaging exhibition programming, the expansion project includes the renovation and reinstallation of the Museum’s permanent exhibition dedicated to sharing the Doris Swayze Bounds collection of objects from the Indigenous Plateau region, one of the most significant Plateau collections in the nation. Developed in close collaboration with an advisory committee comprised of Indigenous members, the reimagined galleries will foreground contemporary Native voices and perspectives, emphasizing the continuity of Plateau cultures and their enduring relationships to the High Desert landscape.

 

The heart of the new wing will be the Gathering, the Museum’s “living room” that offers a welcoming environment featuring a wood-burning fireplace and comfortable spaces for rest and reflection. The space provides opportunities for intimate and informal gathering alongside facilitated dialogue, workshops, and community-driven programs that invite participation across generations and perspectives to explore issues important to the community. Positioned at the intersection of exhibition, education, and event areas, the Gathering will encourage visitors to linger, exchange ideas, and engage more deeply with the themes explored throughout the Museum.

 

The wing will also be home to the Learning Center, which will feature four classrooms with flexible education space totaling 4,500 square feet and an outdoor area. This more than doubles the museum’s current education facilities, which provide an essential resource for preK-12 teachers and students in the Museum’s rural region with over 14,000 students and 100 teachers reached annually. The new spaces will significantly expand the High Desert’s capacity to offer interdisciplinary field experiences, artist residencies, and teacher trainings. The classrooms are designed to open directly onto an outdoor “learning porch” featuring a stepped outdoor amphitheater space that lets learning experiences flow between indoor and outdoor environments and reinforces connections between cultural understanding and the natural landscape.

 

The High Desert Hall will be a 5,000-square-foot, flexible event center with a 300-person capacity that establishes a civic gathering space capable of hosting lectures, performances, film screenings, conferences, and community conversations. Featuring adaptable seating and a raised stage, the venue will accommodate significantly larger audiences than the Museum’s current facilities, while the ability to host multifaceted events that flow seamlessly between the Hall, the Art Gallery, and the Gathering will allow for a more diverse range of programming. The Hall opens directly onto a terrace, welcoming visitors into the ponderosa pine forest and seamlessly transitioning to the surrounding meadow and the Museum’s outdoor trails. Together, these spaces are designed to function as an integrated environment where art, the natural landscape, scholarship, and community dialogue intersect.

 

The Museum is currently fundraising towards the $40 million project, which encompasses the capital expansion and the renovation of the Indigenous Plateau permanent exhibition. To date, the Museum has raised 87% of its goal through a combination of government grants, private foundations, and individual giving, including a $6 million grant awarded from the Roundhouse Foundation.

 

About the High Desert Museum

The High Desert Museum is the only institution in the nation dedicated to the study of the High Desert region and the largest cultural institution in central and eastern Oregon. Since opening in 1982, the Museum has evolved into a place that annually serves almost 225,000 visitors from across the nation and cares for a collection of over 28,000 objects and 170 animals. Located in Bend, Oregon, the Museum encompasses 135 forested acres, two permanent cultural exhibitions, three changing exhibition galleries, a bird of prey center, otter exhibit, and the High Desert Ranch and Sawmill, and offers learning experiences uniquely rooted in the surrounding landscape.

 

The Museum was a 2021 recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Service. In 2025, it was awarded the 2025 Autry Public History Prize for its original exhibition, Sensing Sasquatch.

 

###

Attached Media Files: The entryway to High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. The Museum is nestled in a Ponderosa pine forest. Photo by Chris Murray, Art is encountered throughout the High Desert Museum, such as this piece in the Museum’s collection, Blanket Stories: Works Progress, Talking Stick, Steward by Marie Watt (Seneca). Photo by Chris Murray, Interior view of the new gallery dedicated to art in the region at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The learning center interior with a natural amphitheater and outdoor space at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The High Desert Museum’s West entrance to the new wing for education, programs and events. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The east-facing terrace and entrance to the gathering hall for programs and events at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The south-facing expansion, showing the current building to the new wing, of the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, A tule reed tipi graces the entry to the Museum’s permanent exhibition dedicated to the Indigenous cultures of the Plateau region, By Hand Through Memory. Photo by Chris Murray, There is half a mile of trails at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon, to explore, connecting outdoor exhibitions. Photo by Chris Murray, Lil Fat Guys by Pat Courtney Gold (Wasco), waxed linen basket, 2012, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Pat Courtney Gold was a fiber artist and basket weaver from Warm Springs, Oregon. Lil Fat Guys , which became part of the Museum’s collection in 2014, is regularly on display in the Museum’s permanent exhibition, By Hand Through Memory. Photo by Kyle Kosma, Deer-tail dress, believed to be Yakama in origin, circa 1850s - 1860s or earlier, Plateau artist once known, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Photo by Kyle Kosma, Beaded belt bag believed to be Nez Perce in origin, circa 1900, Plateau artist once known, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Photo by Kyle Kosma,

High Desert Museum Breaks Ground On Transformative Campus Expansion (Photo) - 03/19/26

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, March 19, 2026, 9:00 am PDT

 

$40M Expansion Will Add a New Wing, Strengthening the Museum’s Role as a Civic and Cultural Anchor for the Region by Creating New Spaces for Art, Education, and Community Gathering

 

Bend, Oregon – March 19, 2026 – The High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon today broke ground on its $40 million campus expansion, which will add a new wing to the museum, transforming the arts and cultural landscape of central and eastern Oregon.

 

The new 24,000-square-foot wing will increase the interdisciplinary Museum’s capacity for exhibitions, education, and engagement, and will feature new classrooms, expanded gallery space, and new event and gathering spaces for the community. In addition, the expansion includes the reinstallation of the Museum’s permanent Doris Swayze Bounds collection dedicated to the communities of the Indigenous Plateau region, the first such update in more than 25 years. Opening to the public in winter 2027, the project will expand access to the Museum for visitors and allow it to better serve one of the nation’s most geographically vast and culturally diverse areas.

 

Designed by Portland-based architecture firm Hacker, which also designed the Museum’s first new building when it expanded in 1989, the new wing responds directly to the evolving needs of the fast-growing region. Since opening in 1982, the High Desert Museum has grown into the largest cultural institution east of the Cascades in Oregon, bringing together art, history, cultures, and natural science to explore the diverse landscapes and people of the High Desert region. It houses a collection encompassing over 28,000 objects from the intermountain West ranging from historic objects to contemporary artwork, including the Doris Swayze Bounds collection of 7,000 Indigenous plateau objects. The only institution of its kind in central and eastern Oregon, the Museum has doubled its programming over the last 15 years as attendance has grown by 40%, underscoring both its growing impact and the need for expanded facilities.

 

"The High Desert Museum exists to inspire curiosity, foster understanding, and celebrate the unique cultures and landscapes of our region and the ways in which people and landscape thrive together. This expansion allows us to share our mission with broader audiences, creating spaces where people can gather, learn, and engage with the stories that shape our communities,” said Dana Whitelaw, Executive Director of the High Desert Museum. “The transformed campus will deepen our ability to evolve alongside the diverse audiences we serve and to reinforce the Museum’s integral role in our community as a leading cultural, educational, and civic institution.”

 

Connected to the Museum’s main building, the new wing will include a dedicated entrance and commons, and will allow for a holistic visitor experience with a seamless flow across the campus. The expansion encompasses an art gallery; the Gathering, an intimate community space; the Learning Center, featuring four new classrooms and an outdoor learning space; and the High Desert Hall and outdoor Event Terrace, offering the ability to accommodate large public events. The architecture draws inspiration from the surrounding sagebrush steppe landscape, with floor-to-ceiling windows, open gathering areas, and a nature-based color palette that visually connects interior spaces with the surrounding environment and reinforces the Museum’s commitment to place-based storytelling.

 

“This project reflects the extraordinary generosity and shared commitment of the many donors, foundations, and community partners who believe deeply in the High Desert Museum’s mission, and the Museum's role as a space where art, history, science, and nature come together to tell the story of this singular region, ” said Sharon Gueck, Chairperson of the Board of Trustees. "The expansion will allow the Museum to deepen its impact and increase its capacity as a vital community hub while continuing to celebrate the cultures that define the High Desert.”

 

About the Museum Expansion

Conceived as a continuation of the High Desert itself and envisioned to blend seamlessly with the original building, the new wing’s design reflects the local landscape’s rimrock formations, volcanic geology, and the nearby Steens Mountain escarpment, with an intentionally restrained material palette that incorporates weathered steel, stone walls, and glass. In an acknowledgement of the Museum’s deep connection to place and its interconnectedness with nature, the new wing is fully electric and features solar-ready infrastructure, and is designed for potential net-zero energy and net-zero water expenditure.

 

A new 3,225-square-foot gallery will be the only art space of its kind in Oregon east of the Cascades, with flexible exhibition space featuring high ceilings and integrated audiovisual technology, allowing the Museum to expand its presentation of modern and contemporary art and to organize more impactful exhibitions featuring notable loans alongside collection highlights. Exhibition programming will continue to spotlight artists whose perspectives broaden understandings of the American West, and to emphasize underrepresented voices, offering visitors the opportunity to experience the region through a diverse cultural lens. The gallery will connect to the main building via a light-filled, 2,775-square-foot Gallery Walk, where visitors will encounter works of art in a beautiful setting inspired by nature.

 

Reflecting this renewed commitment to engaging exhibition programming, the expansion project includes the renovation and reinstallation of the Museum’s permanent exhibition dedicated to sharing the Doris Swayze Bounds collection of objects from the Indigenous Plateau region, one of the most significant Plateau collections in the nation. Developed in close collaboration with an advisory committee comprised of Indigenous members, the reimagined galleries will foreground contemporary Native voices and perspectives, emphasizing the continuity of Plateau cultures and their enduring relationships to the High Desert landscape.

 

The heart of the new wing will be the Gathering, the Museum’s “living room” that offers a welcoming environment featuring a wood-burning fireplace and comfortable spaces for rest and reflection. The space provides opportunities for intimate and informal gathering alongside facilitated dialogue, workshops, and community-driven programs that invite participation across generations and perspectives to explore issues important to the community. Positioned at the intersection of exhibition, education, and event areas, the Gathering will encourage visitors to linger, exchange ideas, and engage more deeply with the themes explored throughout the Museum.

 

The wing will also be home to the Learning Center, which will feature four classrooms with flexible education space totaling 4,500 square feet and an outdoor area. This more than doubles the museum’s current education facilities, which provide an essential resource for preK-12 teachers and students in the Museum’s rural region with over 14,000 students and 100 teachers reached annually. The new spaces will significantly expand the High Desert’s capacity to offer interdisciplinary field experiences, artist residencies, and teacher trainings. The classrooms are designed to open directly onto an outdoor “learning porch” featuring a stepped outdoor amphitheater space that lets learning experiences flow between indoor and outdoor environments and reinforces connections between cultural understanding and the natural landscape.

 

The High Desert Hall will be a 5,000-square-foot, flexible event center with a 300-person capacity that establishes a civic gathering space capable of hosting lectures, performances, film screenings, conferences, and community conversations. Featuring adaptable seating and a raised stage, the venue will accommodate significantly larger audiences than the Museum’s current facilities, while the ability to host multifaceted events that flow seamlessly between the Hall, the Art Gallery, and the Gathering will allow for a more diverse range of programming. The Hall opens directly onto a terrace, welcoming visitors into the ponderosa pine forest and seamlessly transitioning to the surrounding meadow and the Museum’s outdoor trails. Together, these spaces are designed to function as an integrated environment where art, the natural landscape, scholarship, and community dialogue intersect.

 

The Museum is currently fundraising towards the $40 million project, which encompasses the capital expansion and the renovation of the Indigenous Plateau permanent exhibition. To date, the Museum has raised 87% of its goal through a combination of government grants, private foundations, and individual giving, including a $6 million grant awarded from the Roundhouse Foundation.

 

About the High Desert Museum

The High Desert Museum is the only institution in the nation dedicated to the study of the High Desert region and the largest cultural institution in central and eastern Oregon. Since opening in 1982, the Museum has evolved into a place that annually serves almost 225,000 visitors from across the nation and cares for a collection of over 28,000 objects and 170 animals. Located in Bend, Oregon, the Museum encompasses 135 forested acres, two permanent cultural exhibitions, three changing exhibition galleries, a bird of prey center, otter exhibit, and the High Desert Ranch and Sawmill, and offers learning experiences uniquely rooted in the surrounding landscape.

 

The Museum was a 2021 recipient of the National Medal for Museum and Library Service. In 2025, it was awarded the 2025 Autry Public History Prize for its original exhibition, Sensing Sasquatch.

 

###

Attached Media Files: The entryway to High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. The Museum is nestled in a Ponderosa pine forest. Photo by Chris Murray, Art is encountered throughout the High Desert Museum, such as this piece in the Museum’s collection, Blanket Stories: Works Progress, Talking Stick, Steward by Marie Watt (Seneca). Photo by Chris Murray, Interior view of the new gallery dedicated to art in the region at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The learning center interior with a natural amphitheater and outdoor space at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The High Desert Museum’s West entrance to the new wing for education, programs and events. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The east-facing terrace and entrance to the gathering hall for programs and events at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, The south-facing expansion, showing the current building to the new wing, of the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Rendering by Hacker Architects, A tule reed tipi graces the entry to the Museum’s permanent exhibition dedicated to the Indigenous cultures of the Plateau region, By Hand Through Memory. Photo by Chris Murray, There is half a mile of trails at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon, to explore, connecting outdoor exhibitions. Photo by Chris Murray, Lil Fat Guys by Pat Courtney Gold (Wasco), waxed linen basket, 2012, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Pat Courtney Gold was a fiber artist and basket weaver from Warm Springs, Oregon. Lil Fat Guys , which became part of the Museum’s collection in 2014, is regularly on display in the Museum’s permanent exhibition, By Hand Through Memory. Photo by Kyle Kosma, Deer-tail dress, believed to be Yakama in origin, circa 1850s - 1860s or earlier, Plateau artist once known, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Photo by Kyle Kosma, Beaded belt bag believed to be Nez Perce in origin, circa 1900, Plateau artist once known, in the care of the High Desert Museum. Photo by Kyle Kosma,