O’Donnell + Tuomey complete faceted brick student centre at London School of Economics

Irish architects O’Donnell + Tuomey mapped sight lines along the narrow streets of the London School of Economics campus to generate the faceted red brick structure of the university‘s new student centre (+ slideshow).

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

The Saw Swee Hock Student Centre consolidates all of the university’s student facilities under one roof at the LSE‘s historic Aldwych campus. Designed by architects Sheila O’Donnell and John Tuomey, the seven-storey-high building has an irregular faceted shape informed by the angular geometries of its site and surroundings.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Walls angle inwards along the eastern facade to give the centre a recessed public entrance that lines up with approaching streets to the north, south and east.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

“The public space at the threshold of the student union, on axis with St Clement’s Lane, creates a place of exchange; a spatial bowtie that intertwines circulation routes, splices visual connections between internal and external movement, and pulls pedestrian street life into and up the building,” said the architects.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

“Like a Japanese puzzle, our design is carefully assembled to make one coherent volume from a complex set of interdependent component parts,” they added.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Red brick was used to construct the walls of the building using a typical flemish bond. In some places the material forms solid walls, while in others it creates perforated screens across windows.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

“The perforated planes are constructed from a single leaf of brickwork with spaces in the flemish bond pattern to allow light to both infiltrate the interior spaces and filtrate out at night to create a pattern effect,” said the architects.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Spaces within the building accommodate a variety of functions, including an events venue, a bar, a cafe, a gym and dance studios. There are also prayer rooms, offices and multimedia facilities.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Designed to resemble a “lived-in warehouse”, the building has an exposed structure that combines steel columns and trusses with concrete floor slabs.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Floor plates differ in shape and size on different floors. Angular stairwells are positioned at three corners of the building, while a spiral staircase is positioned near the entrance.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

“Space flows freely in horizontal plan and vertical section, with stairs gently twisting and slowly turning to create a variety of diagonal break-out spaces at landings and crossings throughout the building,” said the architects.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

An assortment of windows and skylights ensure that each corridor receives daylight, and an events hall in the basement can be naturally lit though a row of clerestory windows.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

The building will open next month, but its surrounding landscaping is not set to be finished until the summer.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Photography is by Dennis Gilbert/VIEW.

Here’s a project description from O’Donnell+Tuomey Architects:


Saw Swee Hock Student Centre, London School of Economics

Client Brief

The brief was to bring student facilities together under one roof. The multi-functional building includes a venue, pub, learning café, media, prayer, offices, gym, careers, dance studio and social spaces. The brief asked for the “best student building in the UK” and had the aspiration for BREEAM Excellent rating. The design achieved BREEAM Outstanding.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Planning Constraints

The site lies within the Strand Conservation Area. The context was complex and the site was restricted by surrounding building lines. Specifications were closely monitored by Westminster planners, who supported the ambition for a contemporary design integrated with its setting. Throughout the building process, the planners maintained a commitment to the enduring quality of carefully crafted construction.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Street Life

The site is located at the knuckle-point convergence of narrow streets that characterise the LSE city centre campus. The faceted facade operates with respect to the Rights of Light Envelope and is tailored to lines of sight, to be viewed from street corner perspectives and to make visual connections between internal and external circulation. The brick skin is cut along fold lines to form large areas of glazing, framing views. Analysis of the context has influenced the first principles of a site specific architectural design.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Embodiment

The building is designed to embody the dynamic character of a contemporary Student Centre. The complex geometries of the site provided a starting point for a lively arrangement of irregular floor plates, each particular to its function. Space flows freely in plan and section, with stairs turning to create meeting places at every level.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Construction, Colour and Atmosphere

London is a city of bricks. The building is clad with bricks, with each brick offset from the next in an open work pattern, creating dappled daylight inside and glowing like a lattice lantern at night.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

The building has the robust adaptability of a lived-in warehouse, with solid wooden floors underfoot. The structure is a combination of reinforced concrete and steelwork. Steel trusses or ribbed concrete slabs span the big spaces. Circular steel columns prop office floors between the large span volumes and punctuate the open floor plan of the café. Concrete ceilings contribute thermal mass with acoustic clouds suspended to soften the sound.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

There are no closed-in corridors. Every hallway has daylight and views in at least one direction. Every office workspace has views to the outside world. The basement venue is daylit from clerestory windows.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Inclusive Design

The building is designed with accessibility and inclusive design as key considerations. Approaches are step free. Floor plates are flat without steps. Circulation routes are open and legible with clearly identifiable way-finding. Services are located at consistent locations. The central wide stair was carefully designed to comply with standards and details agreed with the approved inspector.

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Architect: O’Donnell+Tuomey Architects
Executive Architect: O’Donnell+Tuomey Architects
Structural Engineer: Dewhurst Macfarlane and Partners/Horganlynch Consulting Engineers

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Services + Environmental Engineer: BDSP
Security / Fire / Acoustics / Transport & Logistics / Venue: Arup
Catering: Tricon Foodservice Consultants
Access:David Bonnett Associates
Archaeology: Gifford
Project Manager: Turner & Townsend

Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics by O'Donnell + Tuomey

Quantity Surveyor: Northcroft
Planning Consultant: Turley Associates
Party Wall Consultant: Anstey Horne
Building Control Consultant: Carillion
CDM Coordinator: Gardiner & Theobald
Main Contractor (D&B): Geoffrey Osborne Limited

Ground floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
First floor plan – click for larger image
Second floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Third floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Third floor plan – click for larger image
Fourth floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Fourth floor plan – click for larger image
Fifth floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Fifth floor plan – click for larger image
Sixth floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Sixth floor plan – click for larger image
Basement floor plan of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Basement floor plan – click for larger image
Lower basement floor of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Lower basement floor – click for larger image
Section one of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Section one – click for larger image
Section two of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Section two – click for larger image
Section three of Saw Swee Hock Student Centre at London School of Economics
Section three – click for larger image

The post O’Donnell + Tuomey complete faceted brick
student centre at London School of Economics
appeared first on Dezeen.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of Futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum

Jewellery that resembles stove pipes is among body adornments by Dutch fashion design duo Gijs+Emmy to go on show at Amsterdam‘s Stedelijk Museum later this month (+ slideshow).

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Large Collar by Gijs Bakker, 1967, from collection Stedelijk Museum, ‘s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

The Gijs+Emmy Spectacle revisits a sensational collaborative exhibition of work by husband and wife team Gijs Bakker and Emmy van Leersum that was at the Stedelijk Museum in 1967.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker in blue and black pantsuit with Large Collar, 1967. Pantsuit from collection Gemeentemuseum, Den Haag. Collar from collection Stedelijk Museum, ’s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

“In the late 1960s, Bakker and Van Leersum, both trained jewellery designers, created a furore with their avant-garde jewelry and clothing that fused fashion, design and art,” said a statement from the museum.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Stovepipe Collar and Stovepipe Bracelet by Gijs Bakker, 1967. Collar from collection Centraal Museum, Utrecht. Armband from collection Stedelijk Museum, ’s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

The pair’s duct pipe bracelets and curved aluminium collars caused a stir when first exhibited, displayed on live models who moved to electronic music under futuristic lighting.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Ten-loop Bracelet by Gijs Bakker, 1965. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

For this new retrospective, the original exhibition will be recreated with the help of first-hand accounts and consultation from Bakker.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Large Collar by Gijs Bakker, 1967, from collection Stedelijk Museum, ‘s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

Sculptural jewellery and fashion designs created by the duo between 1967 and 1972 from the museum’s collection and other sources will go on show.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Large Collar by Gijs Bakker, 1967, from collection Stedelijk Museum, ‘s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

Iconic designs such as Bakker’s purple Stovepipe Necklace and matching bracelet are among the pieces to be exhibited.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker in turquoise halter dress with Neck Ornament by Gijs Bakker, 1967. Dress from collection Gemeentemuseum, Den Haag. Neck ornament from collection Stedelijk Museum, ’s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

Hinged metal collars that curve downwards over the shoulders and upwards around the sides of the face will also feature, alongside gold bangles with sinuous shapes and oversized earrings.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Sonja Bakker with Onion Bracelet, 1965 and Untitled Earings, 1966 by Gijs Bakker. Photograph by Matthijs Schrofer.

In these images the designs are worn by 1960s model Sonja Bakker, who isn’t related to the designers.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Stovepipe Bracelet by Gijs Bakker, 1967, from collection Stedelijk Museum ’s-Hertogenbosch. Photograph by Rien Bazen, courtesy of Gijs Bakker.

Bakker and Van Leersum met while studying at the Institute of Applied Art in Amsterdam during the 1950s. Bakker went on to found Droog, the avant-garde conceptual Dutch design collective in 1993.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Scholderpiece by Gijs Bakker, 1967. Photograph by Rien Bazen, courtesy of Gijs Bakker.

The exhibition opens on 22 February and will continue until 24 August.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Renie van Wijk with PVC Head Ornament by Gijs Bakker, 1967. Photograph by Sjaak Ramakers.

The Stedelijk Museum is currently hosting a retrospective of work by Dutch designer Marcel Wanders.

Gijs+Emmy exhibition of futuristic jewellery to open at the Stedelijk Museum
Renie van Wijk in cyclamen dress with Two-piece Aluminum Collar by Emmy van Leersum, 1967. Photo by Sjaak Ramakers.

An extension to the museum, which looks a bit like the underside of a kitchen sink, was completed in September 2012 by Benthem Crouwel Architects.

The post Gijs+Emmy exhibition of Futuristic jewellery
to open at the Stedelijk Museum
appeared first on Dezeen.

Interactive slideshow: One Nordic Furniture Company extends flat-pack furniture range

Stockholm 2014: here’s an interactive slideshow showcasing the latest collection from Finnish brand One Nordic Furniture Company, which features flat-pack designs specifically created for online retail.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

All the items in One Nordic‘s range are designed to pack flat. The brand recently launched an online platform so the ordering and shipping process can all be managed on the web.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

“It’s not innovative to ship effectively or to buy things online, but the idea of us developing every product in this collection with that brief is innovative,” One Nordic creative director Petrus Palmér told Dezeen at Stockholm Furniture Fair last week.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

He explained that furniture is lagging behind other online retail sectors due to the size of items such as sofas and dining tables.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

“The furniture industry is still a bit behind the [online sales] developments of the rest of the world, thanks to the size of the products we’re dealing with,” said Palmér.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

This is why all items in One Nordic’s collection can be broken down into parts and shipped more efficiently. “The products have to be adjusted for the world we live in today,” Palmér added.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

All the designs unpack and assemble with minimal effort once they arrive. For example, the Bento chair by Palmér’s own design studio Form Us With Love is fixed together with just one clamp.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Bento chair by Form Us With Love

New items launched at Stockholm Furniture Fair include the Kuu pendant lamp by Jenny Stefansdotter and Kerstin Sylwan, developed from a design released last year.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Kuu pendant lamp by Jenny Stefansdotter and Kerstin Sylwan

The lampshade is formed from a structural textile that diffuses the light, and is pulled into a sphere using drawstrings at the top and bottom.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Vinkel mirror by Nicole Losos and Nikolaus Kayser

Nicole Losos and Nikolaus Kayser’s circular Vinkel mirror is split in two so the angled halves reflect different areas of a room. The mirror is delivered in two sections to take up as little space as possible.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014

Prints by fashion photographer Erik Wåhlström depicting photography shoots behind-the-scenes and still life images are also new additions.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Hai armchair by Luca Nichetto

Product lines that have been extended include Hai by Luca Nichetto, who has designed an ottoman to accompany his armchair with a folding backrest.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Hai ottoman by Luca Nichetto

One Nordic’s inaugural Bento family now comes in a walnut frame and leather seat, plus dining and conference tables have been added.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Bento chair by Form Us With Love

The Lift shelving system by Steffan Holm has been created as a modular piece so it can be formed into a giant storage unit and mounted on the wall or stood on the floor.

One Nordic Collection Stockholm 2014
Lift shelving system by Steffan Holm

One Nordic founder Joel Roos told Dezeen that the way design is sold to the public is “stuck” in the past during an interview last year.

The post Interactive slideshow: One Nordic Furniture
Company extends flat-pack furniture range
appeared first on Dezeen.

Nendo styles Tokyo department store like a European park

Japanese design studio Nendo has installed screens based on wrought iron fences in the women’s clothing section of Tokyo‘s Seibu department store so it resembles a European city park (+ slideshow).

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Brands and product displays on Seibu‘s third floor change rapidly, so Nendo designed modifiable fixtures for the space that look like street furniture in parks.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

“Our design took inspiration from the wrought iron fences surrounding the parks, squares and other green spaces in European cities,” said the designers.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

The decorative white screens are suspended from the ceiling, dividing the space and doubling as rails for hanging the garments.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

These can be taken down and reinstalled in other areas of the store to change the layout.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Manequins are hung on wires attached to rails on the ceiling, so they can also be relocated.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

A herringbone pattern of plastic tiles in shades of grey to represent paving spreads across the entire floor surface.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Wooden pedestals resembling planters display accessories on their illuminated tops.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Shoppers can rest on outdoor furniture such as low seating and park benches, some of which are used to present folded clothes.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

In the changing rooms, artificial plants that match the colours of the walls crawl down from the lit gaps along the ceiling edges.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Photographs are by Masaya Yoshimura.

Here’s some text from Nendo:


The multi brand and shared areas for the women’s clothing floor on the third floor of the Seibu department store in Tokyo’s Shibuya. The ‘contemporary luxury’ floor presents multiple brands together in a unified environment, but each brand needs to be gently distinguished from the others.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

The brands’ lineup and product arrangement change at a dizzying pace, so the fixtures needed to be easily modifiable.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

Our design took inspiration from the wrought iron fences surrounding the parks, squares and other green spaces in European cities. We created screens based on these fences, and suspended them from the ceiling as hanger racks for the clothes. The screens are easy to remove and relocate, and have built-in lighting to illuminate the clothes. They come in seven different patterns, to give each brand a distinctive look.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

We also created ceiling-suspended shelves, as well as low floor fixtures inspired by park benches and a bench reminiscent of a fountain’s edge.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

To overcome cost and thickness restrictions for the flooring, we cut ordinary plastic floor tiles into different shapes and created a variegated flooring pattern that recalls cobblestones.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

The colourful changing room walls are finished with artificial ivy in different hues, and the changing rooms offer simulated outdoor light as well as indoor light, for checking clothes in a variety of environments.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

These designs create a free, lighthearted environment, similar to the experience of strolling in a park.

Compolux at Seibu department store Tokyo by Nendo

The post Nendo styles Tokyo department store
like a European park
appeared first on Dezeen.

FLIP alarm clock turns off by turning it over

This alarm clock created by Adrian and Jeremy Wright for French design brand Lexon is turned on and off by flipping it over (+ slideshow).

FLIP alarm clock turns off by turning it over

The FLIP clock by DesignWright for Lexon is a small rectangular case, with “ON” written on one of the larger surfaces and “OFF” written on the opposite side.

When ON is visible, the clock’s alarm has been activated and a smaller clock symbol appears in the right-hand corner of the display to indicate what time the alarm is set for.

FLIP alarm clock turns off by turning it over

When the alarm rings, the user simply turns the clock upside-down to reveal the OFF side.

The numbers on the LCD display automatically rotate when it tips over 90 degrees so the time is still displayed the correct way up.

FLIP alarm clock turns off by turning it over

“The concept came from a simple observation that the seven segment display is symmetrical, which allows you to display numbers both ways up,” explained Adrian Wright. “We thought instead of trying to find a small button in the dark to turn the alarm on/off, you just turn it over and the time flips as well.”

Both sides of the clock are touch-sensitive, acting as both a snooze button and also a way of illuminating the LCD display.

FLIP alarm clock turns off by turning it over

The FLIP comes in ten colours and is made from ABS plastic with a rubberised finish. “We didn’t really design the product for anyone in particular, but when we heard that people were also buying it for their children, we realised we must have got it right,” said Wright.

The post FLIP alarm clock turns off
by turning it over
appeared first on Dezeen.

Vaulted brick primary school built on a Mali plain by Levs Architecten

Dutch firm Levs Architecten used unfired clay bricks from local mines to build the barrel-vaulted structure of this primary school on one of Mali’s vast plains (+ slideshow).

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

Located in Tanouan Ibi, a village within Mali’s Dogon region, the school complex is made up of several blocks but the main teaching areas are located in one single-storey classroom building.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

Levs Architecten positioned three identically sized classrooms in a row along the central axis of this building, then added a pair of sheltered verandas to the two long sides to provide spaces where students can sit down between classes.

“The verandas, equipped with small stone benches, offer pleasant exterior room to the students,” said the architects.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

The arched roof structures of these arcades also function as buttresses, supporting the weight of the main vault running along the building’s centre.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

The architects enlisted students from a nearby university and members of the local community to help construct the building, using the compressed clay bricks to build walls, floors and roofing.

“The use of these blocks of compressed earth leads to a supple integration into the environment, corresponding to the way almost all Dogon villages fit into the landscape,” they said.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

Ceramic pipes puncture the roof of the building, bringing light and ventilation into the classrooms. These can be blocked up during the two-month-long rainy season, during which time a waterproof layer of clay mixed with cement prevents ceilings from leaking.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

Each classroom accommodates up to 60 students and there’s also an office and storage closet. Doors and window shutters are painted pale yellow to complement the red tones of the clay.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten

Here’s a project description from Lev Architecten:


Primary School Tanouan Ibi

The village of Tanouan Ibi is situated on the plain, one hour driving from the main village Koundou in Dogon country, next to the rockface of Bandiagara in Mali (World Cultural Heritage of Humanity, Unesco 1986).

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten
Site plan – click for larger image

The ensemble is composed of different buildings. The first block is a school of three classes with two verandas and a curved roof. Next to this the installation of the sanitary block is arranged. The enclosure and the planting of trees will follow afterwards. The school is complying with the demands imposed by the government and by the CAP (Centre d’Animation Pédagogique). A classroom has a surface of 7 x 9 m² and offers space to about 60 students. In total the school delivers space to minimally 180 students (3 classrooms) and an office with storage facilities for the director.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten
Floor plan – click for larger image

The architecture of the school building is a search for a connection with the local traditions of building, of culture and of architecture. Through the use of a newly developed hydraulic-compressed earth block, the building withstands the climate of both hot sunlight and heavy rainfall. The stones are produced on the spot from locally mined clay. Processed in vaults, they provide an optimal cooling climate. The search for connection also implies seeking an expression joining itself to an architecture applying partitions of surfaces, openings and closures, windows and door frames and decorative forms. The use of these blocks of compressed earth, leads to a supple integration into the environment, corresponding to the way almost all Dogon villages fit into the landscape. The language of forms is a clear consequence of functional requirements.

The structure of the school building is unique with two verandas running parallel to the class rooms. The two verandas operate like buttresses to be able to capture the weight of the barrel vaults in the roofs over the classrooms. Next to this, the verandas, equipped with small stone benches, offer pleasant exterior room to the students. The verandas have been built in strokes of blocks of compressed earth. At the entries the blocks follow the tension lines of the arcs, which lead to characteristic openings. The roof and the eaves have been accentuated by an additional layer of stones and by dilatation stones, separating the barrel vaults.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten
Cross sections – click for larger image

The roof has been covered by a thick layer of 20-30 mm of red earth, mixed with cement in order to achieve a water proof and water resistant layer. The gargoyles, manufactured by the local people named Bozo, guarantee the swift drainage of rainwater. In the roof, custom-made ceramic tubes have been inserted, providingventilation for a pleasant inside climate and allowing daylight through the roof, like a starry sky. During the rainy season (2 months), taking place out of the school period, these tubes can be closed.

The openings in the facades, with their window frames and with blinds, are painted in a fresh and yellow colour. The floor stones have been laid down in a decorative pattern.

Primary school Tanouan Ibin in Mali by Levs Architecten
Elevations – click for larger image

Project: Primary School
Architects: LEVS architecten, Amsterdam
Client: Foundation Dogon Education, Amsterdam
Contractor: Enterprise Dara, Sevaré, Mopti and executor Amayoko Tagadiou, in collaboration with students of the Lycée Technique in Sevaré and with the local population of Tanouan Ibi.
Commission: 2012
Construction: March – July 2013
Occupancy: October 2013
Site: 2.5 ha
Gross Floor: 200 m2
Costs: 45.000 Euro

The post Vaulted brick primary school built
on a Mali plain by Levs Architecten
appeared first on Dezeen.

Budapest cafe with vaulted brick ceilings by Spora Architects

Following our earlier story about a tea house in Prague, here’s another cafe with vaulted ceilings by Hungarian studio Spora Architects, in a two-hundred-year-old former palace in Budapest (+ slideshow).

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Spora Architects designed Embassy Espresso as an artisanal coffee shop in the basement of a former nobleman’s city palace, and architect Ádám Hatvani told Dezeen the space is suspected to have been originally used as a stable.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

“We know that in this kind of palace from time to time the ground floor was the place for the guard, the servants, horses and carriages,” Hatvani said. “We found some holes in the walls that are probably the places of the barrier beams, usually between the horses and the stable.”

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Located in the financial district of downtown Pest, the cafe’s existing doors and window shutters open the space out to the street.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Inside, the architects uncovered the original vaulted brick ceilings and exposed walls built from a mixture of brick and stone.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Pipes run along the upper parts of the walls and extend outwards to form splayed lighting installations, as well as to support hanging pendant lights and simple bulbs.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

“There are four different types of lights installed; in the pipes are cables for the lamps so there are no visible cables or installation elements in the cafe,” Hatvani explained.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Wooden benches are positioned around the edges of the cafe. The serving counter is made from wood and is fronted by black steel barstools and chairs.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

The floor is covered with natural black slate tiles.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Photography is by Danyi Balázs.

Here’s a project description from Spora Architects:


Espresso Embassy

Take a 80 square meter ground floor flat in the downtown of Budapest, and transform it into an artisanal coffee shop, for one of the world’s best baristas. The building is an urban palace, with beautiful classicist detail, structures of that period, today a residential house.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

This was before the artisanal coffee revolution of quality, simplicity, inviting interiors. This is the background in which Espresso Embassy was spawned. After cleaning up the structures, hidden beauties were uncovered. Bohemian spherical brick vaults, stone-brick mixed walls. It turns out the space might have been a stable, this is where the mysterious little gaps in the wall could have come from: holding the walls between two horses, or the timber for the loft on which hay was stored. All this in great condition.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

Almost finished. What was needed to add, was a simple black stone floor, furniture made of oak and steel, unique lighting from water pipes. Everything is from what it seems. Material thickness, bricks, stone, oak, raw steel, slate, and the white and black rendering on some parts. Everything else is the work of hospitality.

Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects

It is as if we were in a two hundred year old inn, where there is wifi, filtered water for the guests through a tap made of copper and a bowl of concrete, high quality espresso machine, überboiler, milk patterns on cappuccinos, quests with laptops and tablets, breakfast-goers, cultural nomads, urban coffee lovers, intellectuals, businesspeople, bankers, university goers, Hungarians and foreigners: it’s the city.

Floor plan of Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image

Architectural design: Dékány Tibor, Hatvani Ádám _sporaarchitects
Year: 2012
Location: Espresso Embassy, Arany János u. Budapest, V., Hungary
Lighting: sporaarchitects, Tarcali Dávid, Jánosi András _lumoconcept
Concrete wash basin : VPI betonmanufaktúra

Section of Cafe in Budapest by Spora Architects
Section – click for larger image

The post Budapest cafe with vaulted brick ceilings
by Spora Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

University library by RH+ Architecture encased within a timber lattice

An all-encompassing timber lattice creates a sheltered gallery around the perimeter of this university library in the South American country of French Guiana by Paris studio RH+ Architecture (+ slideshow).

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Located at the heart of the newly constructed Rectorat de Guyane campus in capital city Cayenne, the library was designed by RH+ Architecture as the building that brings together students from all the surrounding teaching departments.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

“Our aim is to give to this unique building a proper architecture, identifiable by its volume and its uses,” said the architects.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Constructed from narrow timber slats, the screening outer wall functions as a brise soleil that diffuses light onto the second facade – a concrete wall punctured by dozens of rectangular and square windows.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

The open-air gallery is sandwiched between the two facades on all four sides of the building, but widens on the eastern elevation to create a generous entrance lobby that blocks out direct sunlight but allows a breeze to flow through.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

“This gallery is an open space, a place where the students meet and pass through, an extra room between inside and outside, sheltered from sun and rain,” said the architects.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Indoor patios divide the interior of the library into two sections, separating public reading rooms and workspaces from staff offices and storage areas.

 New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

The main reading room is a large open space beyond the entrance. It includes a dedicated section for periodicals and a temporary exhibition area, plus stairs lead up to study spaces on a mezzanine floor above.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Diffused daylight filters in through the surrounding windows and is complemented by low-hanging lighting pendants suspended from the ceiling.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

“The library is a place for studying that is not cut off from the rest of the world; all it takes to see the life of the university campus is to look up when sitting at a reading table and have a look at the traffic and motions in the gallery,” added the architects.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

The two-storey administrative section runs along the southern side of the building and has its own separate entrance.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Photograph by Jonathan Cacchia

Photography is by Jean-Michel André, apart from where otherwise indicated.

Here’s a more detailed description from RH+ Architecture:


Construction of the New University Library in Cayenne, French Guiana

A coordinating facility, open to the University

The building of the University Library, located at the heart of the Guyanese University Campus has to be a driving force within the University and contribute to its regional radiance. It is a structuring facility for all the buildings that constitute the Guyanese University Campus: its vocation is to gather books and readers in a unique place dedicated to knowledge, an open and generous place within the University. It is about providing a cultural and documentary service of quality and also materialise the image of the regional community, therefore one of the main issues is to give to the building of the University Library a physical, social and symbolic identity that will impact the one of the neighbourhood and of the city.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Our aim is to give to this unique building for its program and its central position, a proper architecture – identifiable by its volume and its uses – combined to an opening upon the whole University.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

A gallery around the building and at the heart of the University

The main architectural choice is the creation of an open peripheral space: unlike a construction cast in one piece with no dialogue with the surrounding, the building is wrapped up with a peripheral space of variable dimensions called “gallery” or peristyle. This gallery is an open space, a place where the students meet and pass through, an extra room between inside and outside, sheltered from sun and rain.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Photograph by Jonathan Cacchia

Additional wealth, the peristyle forms a place to exchange, a public space taken over – and even “the space for the public” – which connects the library to the rest of the University: the library is a place for studying that is not cut off from the rest of the world, all it takes to see the life of the University Campus is to look up when sitting at a reading table and have a look at the traffic and motions in the gallery. This one is made of a filter: a slope of wooden lace carefully placed around a concrete core.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Photograph by Jonathan Cacchia

The wooden filter allows:

» to open the building upon the whole University,
» to provide an extra collective space, a transitional space for stimulating sociability,
» to bring dim light inside the building,
» to offer a building of great unity and create a landmark on the University Campus.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture

Amazonian environmental quality

The construction industry in general, is a field highly consumer for the primary resources (water, energy, raw material) and great waste producer. Our thought has naturally been brought towards an Amazonian Environmental Quality process, version of the High Environmental Quality certification in tropical and subtropical countries.

The aim is to minimise, during its whole lifespan, how much the building will impact its external environment and the users who will live there during several generations.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Site plan – click for larger image

The main goal for a library is to be able to read comfortably and, beyond the comfort given by the furniture planning, the essential following criteria have to be taken into account:

» The thermal comfort – the sun protection of the building rests on the principle of the double-skin facade. All the facades and particularly the W/E facades are protected by this wooden filter that forms a very effective brise soleil, a second roof protects the programmatic heart from the solar radius very intense in Guyana (proximity of the Equator).

» The visual comfort – it is a decisive condition: it consists in providing a diffuse light into the room so that any angle with which one takes a book, there are no embarrassing reflections. The project offers a gentle and enveloping light, as a result of the many openings spread over the facade: the generous light first filters by the wooden skin is then released in a homogeneous manner inside the building. With the same logic, the artificial light is regularly distributed in order to avoid any brutal dazzling light or source of reflections and backlighting.

» The acoustic comfort – by implementation of absorbing materials: soundproof ceiling, plaster wall lining for sound insulation of the Mezzanine and the training / exhibition rooms, etc, offer inside calm inviting concentration.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Functional organisation

The library is considered as an open space, with wide reception spaces, diverse reading and research spaces and the possibility of lending books. It is also a facility that combines traditional documentation and modern technologies.

The building is composed of 2 parts: one that receives the public and one reserved for administration and its technical rooms. The spaces dedicated to the public are located on the ground floor and on the mezzanine; the ones for the administration on the ground floor and the upper level. Patios and rifts mark this dissociation and improve the lighting at the centre of the building.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
First floor plan – click for larger image

On the ground floor: once coming through the gallery – true threshold – the library is reached through a double door entrance space open on a wide entrance hall. Into the hall there are: a waiting area, a reception desk, and in the back the sanitaries (the central position of this desk allows to control at a distance away from the reading room). After going through the access control, the visitor directly reaches the lending desk, the press room, or the temporary exhibition space. The documentary room largely extends in the whole space located behind the reception desk and the temporary exhibition space.

Two patios have been set up in order to bring natural light at the core of the building between the public part and the administrative part, and also in anticipation of an extension requested in the program. The central patio therefore becomes the heart of the connection element organised in a thematic garden.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Cross section – click for larger image

On the upper floor: for the public part on the mezzanine there are:

» in the documentary room, spaces dedicated to individual consultation: individual work cubicles and research networks; reachable directly from the large central staircase or from a smaller staircase on the side. This configuration offers privileged workplaces that have a clear view over the large room located below.

» a “box” or an autonomous volume that contains the multimedia training room on one side and the exhibition room on the other. The latter is also reachable from a staircase that gives onto the entrance hall.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
Long section – click for larger image

The entrance to the administrative part is direct from the ground floor, taking the elevator or stairs located on the side of the patio. The offices and the common premises are divided on both sides of the staircase ; they all benefit from natural lighting and views outside and to the patio.

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
East elevation – click for larger image

Programme: construction of a new university library
Project owner: Rectorat de Guyane
Location: Cayenne, Guyane (973)
Cost: 5,3 M € HT
Net surface: 2 143 m²
Delivery: December 2013

New University Library in Cayenne by RH+ Architecture
North elevation – click for larger image

Architect: rh+ architecture
Architect partner: ARA – Jocelin Ho-Tin-Noé
In charge of the construction: Anaïs Durand
Eng. Structure: Technopôle Martinique / SODETEC
Eng. Fluid: Louis Choulet
Eng. HQE: Solener
Eng. Acoustic: Rémi Raskin
Eng. Wood: Sylva Conseil

The post University library by RH+ Architecture
encased within a timber lattice
appeared first on Dezeen.

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled

News: a swimming pool, a theatre and a restaurant are among designs by French studios Oxo Architectes and Laisné Associés to renovate abandoned Metro stations in Paris (+ slideshow).

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into an art gallery

Manal Rachdi of Oxo Architects and and Nicolas Laisné of Laisné Associés were commissioned by Paris mayoral candidate Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet to develop possibilities for renovating the disused spaces into places where Parisians can go to eat, dance, watch a play or even exercise.

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into a nightclub

“Why can’t Paris take advantage of its underground potential and invent new functions for these abandoned places?” Rachdi asked. “Far from their original purpose, more than a century after the opening of Paris’ underground network, these places could show they’re still able to offer new urban experiments”

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into a swimming pool

These designs illustrate how Arsenal station, a disused stop near the Bastille that was closed in 1939 at the start of the Second World War and never reopened, could potentially be transformed into a swimming pool, theatre and concert hall, nightclub, art gallery or even refectory-style restaurant.

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into a park

“To swim in the metro seems like a crazy dream, but it could soon come true,” said Rachdi. “Turning a former Metro station into a swimming-pool or a gymnasium could be a way to compensate for the lack of sports and leisure facilities in some areas.”

Another solution included an underground park, which would require a series of skylights to be built into the station’s roof to provide natural light.

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into a theatre and concert hall

The plans have been criticised for their huge cost and the safety issues involved in converting stations that still have live electricity running through them. Jean-Michel Leblanc, of France’s state-owned public transportation operator RATP told Le Parisien that it would be extremely difficult to make these stations safe for public use.

If Kosciusko-Morizet wins the election on March 30 this year, she plans on crowdsourcing other ideas for repurposing Paris’s abandoned stations.

Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
Arsenal Metro station converted into a restaurant

There are 16 disused Metro stations in Paris, most of which closed between 1930-1970. A small number were also built but never opened. Previously the stations have been used as temporary sets for advertising campaigns and films. Porte-des-Lilas, a disused station closed in 1935, was used as a backdrop in 2001 film Amélie.

The post Plans to convert disused Paris Metro stations
into swimming pools and galleries unveiled
appeared first on Dezeen.

SOM completes campus building for The New School in New York

Faceted concrete staircases connect a string of social spaces inside this SOM-designed campus building for The New School in New York, visible outside the building through huge diagonal windows (+ slideshow).

University Center, The New School by SOM

The University Center was designed by architecture firm SOM to provide 35,000 square-metres of teaching facilities and student housing for The New School, allowing the university to pull its activities away from sites around the city and consolidate them onto its Greenwich Village campus.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Conceived as “a campus within a building”, the 16-storey building contains student housing in its nine upper floors, while the seven lower levels accommodate multi-purpose classrooms, design studios, laboratories, an 800-seat auditorium and the main university library.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Social areas, dubbed “sky quads”, are interspersed throughout the building to provide areas where can staff and students can interact, whether relaxing between classes or working on group projects.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Broad staircases create leisurely routes between these spaces. Clad with glass-fibre-reinforced concrete panels, these structures alternate between straight and diagonal trajectories, and some integrate seating areas.

University Center, The New School by SOM

“The University Center transforms the traditional university environment,” said SOM design partner Roger Duffy. “Rather than compartmentalising living and learning spaces, we strategically stacked these functions to create a vertical campus that supports the kind of interdisciplinary learning that has defined The New School since its founding.”

University Center, The New School by SOM

Exterior walls are clad with hand-finished brass shingles, intended to fit in with both the cast-iron facades of the Ladies’ Mile Historic District to the north and the brownstones of the Greenwich Village Historic District to the south and west. These panels also provide solar shading for windows during the daytime.

University Center, The New School by SOM

In addition to the staircases that stretch through the building, SOM added fire-safe staircases that students can use to move quickly between floors. The architects also installed skip-stop elevators that miss out floors during peak hours to speed up movement.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Three dining areas are located on different floors. Other features include bike storage rooms and showers for students and residents, which the university hopes will encourage cycling.

University Center, The New School by SOM

The student housing floors provide accommodation for approximately 600 students and can be accessed via a dedicated entrance on Fifth Avenue. Residents have access to a series of communal facilities in the basement, including a gym, a common room, study areas, art studios, a mailroom and a laundry room.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Photography is by James Ewing.

Here’s a project description from SOM:


University Centre, The New School

For nearly a century, The New School has been at the forefront of progressive education, with design and social research driving approaches to studying the issues of our time, from democracy and urbanisation, to technology, sustainability, and globalization. Over the past 15 years, The New School has built on this legacy to grow into a major degree-granting university, with nearly 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students. But, in recent years, as the school outgrew its longtime home in New York’s Greenwich Village and found its real estate holdings spread across the city, from the Financial District to the Upper West Side, this pedagogical model proved challenging to maintain without the physical plant to support it. The University Center both supports and furthers this model through its innovative design and responds to the school’s increasing demand for state-of-the-art, interdisciplinary spaces.

University Center, The New School by SOM

The University Center adds 375,000 square feet of academic and student space to The New School’s Greenwich Village campus. The 16-storey centre houses design studios, laboratories, interdisciplinary classrooms, the main university library, a nine-floor student residence, an 800-seat auditorium, a café, and flexible academic and social spaces for student activity.

Conceived as a campus within a building, the University Center transforms the traditional university environment. Rather than compartmentalise learning, living, dining, and socialising spaces, these functions are situated in a vertical configuration, creating strategic adjacencies and heightening the university’s commitment to interdisciplinary learning. Connections between classrooms, studios, library, cafés, auditorium, and student residences take the form of stacked staircases and “sky quads” that facilitate the chance encounters vital to the cultivation of discussion and debate at The New School.

University Center, The New School by SOM

This innovative interior organisation isexpressed in the exterior of the building. Tightly woven, purpose-built spaces clad in hand-finished brass shingles contrast with the open connective tissue of the stairs and quads visible through a glazed skin. The exterior mediates between the cast-iron facades of the Ladies’ Mile Historic District to the north and the brownstones of the Greenwich Village Historic District to the south and west. Located at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 14th Street, the University Center broadcasts the experimental nature of the school’s new home, creating a dialogue between the campus community, the local neighbourhood, and the city.

University Center, The New School by SOM

A New Kind of Urban Campus

With its 230,000-square-foot, seven-storey campus centre (located in the building’s base) and 130,000-square-foot residential tower, the University Center reimagines the organising elements of a traditional campus, from quads to classrooms and living quarters. Vertical, horizontal, and diagonal campus pathways work together to facilitate movement through the building, while increasing opportunities for interaction among students and faculty from across the university. Academic spaces are flexible and easily adaptable, and can be renovated or reconfigured with no impact on power, data, or lighting to meet changing needs.

Raw finishes and an exposed mechanical system further ensure flexibility in the academic spaces. To bring light into the 30,000-square-foot academic floor plates, clerestory windows line both walls of the main corridor. Horizontal windows and light shelves naturally illuminate classroom ceilings, reducing lighting loads.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Pathways to Discussion and Debate

The University Center’s system of double stairways plays a critical role in the life of the building; it works in conjunction with skip-stop elevators to move large numbers of students vertically through the building. Stacked one above the other, the fire stair is designed for quick circulation, while the broader, open “communicating stair” allows for travel between floors at a more leisurely pace. With faceted walls clad in glass-fibre-reinforced concrete panels, the high-use stairways are a place for chance meetings between students and faculty, and encourage social interaction and interdisciplinary exchange.

University Center, The New School by SOM

Circulation paths that weave vertically, horizontally and diagonally through the building lead into and activate sky quads – interactive spaces that also orient users due to their adjacency to stairways and corridors. Like the “local” and “express” stairs that link them, the sky quads are intended to perform as social spaces, promoting formal and informal encounters between students and faculty, as well as supporting academic and leisure activities. These interactive spaces include student lounge areas, student resource centres with adjacent meeting rooms, study areas, cafés, and pin up spaces for design studios.

To avoid crowded conditions and delays during class-change times in this vertical campus, peak elevator demand is mitigated through the combination of the intuitive system of stairways and a skip-stop elevator system. During peak times, the elevators stop at floors one, four, and six, and stairs are utilised to access the intermediate floors, while at off-peak times, the elevators stop at all floors.

University Center, The New School by SOM

A Commitment to Sustainability and Energy Efficiency

Designed to meet LEED Gold certification from the US Green Building Council, the University Center sets the New York City standard for green technology and building practices with super-efficient LED lights, occupancy sensors, a 265-kilowatt cogeneration plant, and sustainably sourced materials.

Envisioned as a model of energy efficiency, carbon reduction, and sustainability, the building anticipates 31 percent energy savings over a code-compliant school. Both passive and high-tech solutions increase energy efficiency. The envelope of the building is limited to 35 percent glass, which decreases solar heat gain while optimising interior daylighting. The shingled cladding shades the windows up to 20 percent during daylight hours. An ice-storage system, located in the second basement, uses electricity from the power grid during off-peak times to freeze water in a series of chambers; the ice melts during the day, reducing consumption during peak times. Heat recovery wheels recover heat from exhaust air and help heat supply air, saving energy. A green roof, funded in part by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection, mitigates the heat-island effect, as well as storm-water runoff, capturing water for both gray-and black-water treatment facilities in the building. Waterless urinals contribute to potable-water conservation. Composting is employed with an in-vessel composter in the cafeteria.

The building serves as a living element of the curriculum, providing on-site training to the next generation of green leaders to students in environmental studies, sustainability management, and urban design. Design elements that demonstrate architectural, structural, mechanical and green building strategies are visible through signage and working exhibits. Back-of-the-house systems have been transformed into instructional spaces for New School students and facilities staff, as well as for professional organisations and unions, who are expected to use the building for hands-on training.

University Center, The New School by SOM
Cross section

Active Design Features

A central stair is the principle design feature in the University Center – a focal point both inside and outside the building. These stairs are intended as the principal means of circulation through the building for the physically able. Through the use of clerestory windows in hallways and on the façade, the University Center provides for daylighting along paths of travel, and the design is organised to encourage walking between destinations, as well as spaces for social interaction. The building provides bike storage rooms and showers to encourage cycling, walking, and running between home and school. The building was recognised by Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg as a model of the successful implementation of the “active design” strategies that are part of New York City’s anti-obesity and health initiatives.

University Center, The New School by SOM
Staircase detail

Student Resources

A co-ed residential tower for more than 600 students occupies floors 8-16 of the University Center. An amenity space on the lower level is accessible only by residents and consists of a large common room, art studios, an exercise facility with gym equipment, soundproof music practice rooms, a study hall, bicycle storage area, mailroom, and laundry room. The University Center has three dining areas: a 280-seat cafeteria on the second floor, an 80-seat library café on the seventh floor, and a 60-seat event café on the lower level off the entrance lobby and auditorium.

The post SOM completes campus building
for The New School in New York
appeared first on Dezeen.