In the new museum building, you can visit 11 exhibition areas spanning over seven floors and explore many of the 28 000 works by Edvard Munch from the museum… The classic museum procession is a lobby that begins and ends a loop of galleries. The new Munch Museum will open to the public in 2020 and the visitors will enjoy the painter’s most famous works, such as “The Scream”, “Girls on the Bridge” and “Madonna”. The Munch Museum has the world's largest collection of Edvard Munch's works, and provides insight into the artist as a pioneer of expressionism. The new National Museum is part of a major project to develop Oslo, opening up the city where it meets the fjord. The Munch Museum – designed by the Spanish architecture firm Estudio Herreros – provides strong, engaging, and modern art experiences. Challenge 2: The new Munch Museum requires a flexible circulation sequence capable of individually or simultaneously presenting the museum’s own collections, self-produced exhibitions, and travelling exhibitions. The museum is centrally located on Oslo’s Rådhusplassen (city hall square), making it a perfect place to stop by for an unforgettable cultural experience. The new museum is further shaping “The New Oslo” through a burst of construction that, like the spring season itself, is bursting out all over. PHOTO FEATURE: Oslo’s new Munch Museum is now rising on the eastern waterfront of the Norwegian capital, influencing the city’s landscape in line with the impact of Edvard Munch’s art. More than 40,000 objects connected with the famous painter Edvard Munch will be moved to the new Munch Museum in Oslo. The new Munch Museum will be a dynamic arts center, with different audiences (experts, schoolchildren, tourists, art lovers) that are expected to come regularly, attracted by a program with a variety of formats. A new museum housing the evocative works of Norwegian painter Edvard Munch, most famously known for The Scream, is now taking shape in Oslo.The world-famous artist bequeathed his vast collection — amounting to 28,000 paintings, sketches, photographs and sculptures — to the Norwegian capital.