Inspired by Yale School of Management’s
reinvention of business school education and pioneering integrated curriculum,
the new Edward P. Evans Hall combines world-class teaching facilities with
inspirational social spaces.
The design unites Yale’s faculty departments in
a single location for the first time and brings a high level of transparency to
the traditionally enclosed college courtyard, creating a green heart for the
campus community, which is visible throughout the school.
The classrooms are contained within sixteen
double-height oval drums, arranged around the central courtyard. The social
spaces are concentrated at ground level, where there is a coffee shop, media
library and a large common room, opening out into the courtyard.
On the second floor, the classrooms are
connected by a wide internal circulation ‘cloister’ – the glazed façade around
the courtyard follows the undulations of the blue classroom drums to define
bays where students can sit and gather. The third floor is pulled back from the
facade to form a mezzanine, opening visual connections between the different
levels.
The design process involved close collaboration
with faculty members, as well as analyzing interactions within the classrooms,
experimenting with different spatial configurations and producing full scale
mock-ups to allow teaching staff to experience the lecture space.
The resulting 16 classrooms are unique,
tailored to Yale’s curriculum and can support every style of learning, from
team-based working to lectures, discussions ‘in the round’ and video
conferencing. Integrating state-of-the-art technology, the facilities include
simultaneous translation, filming, multimedia displays and enhanced acoustics.
A number of significant works of art have been
commissioned for the new building. These include bold murals by Sol LeWitt,
which bring the circulation spaces to life in swirls of color; and a
site-specific installation by the Swiss artist Adrian Schiess, whose 90 painted
panels appear to magically change color as the viewer moves around them.
The semi-circular Beinecke Room on the second
floor provides a flexible events and meeting space with capacity for 80 diners,
and is connected to a large, curving terrace with views over the natural
landscape to the east. A 350-seat auditorium below the Beinecke Room provides
an impressive venue for Yale’s high-profile lecture series and retains a visual
connection with the courtyard outside.
This open, welcoming approach extends to
embrace the wider campus: the transparent façade opens the building up to Whitney Avenue,
making visible the feature staircases contained within two glass drums on
either side of the entrance, and showcasing the School’s activities. The roof
is held aloft by slim pillars and projects to shade both the façade and a wide
entrance plaza.
Targeting the highest environmental standards,
the sustainable design responds to the unique climate of New Haven and the patterns of use specific to
a university faculty. The building utilizes chilled beams, a displacement
system of ventilation and solar shading, and the building’s high performance
envelope with solar responsive shading naturally reduces energy demand.
Location: New Haven, USA
Architect: Foster + Partners
Collaborating Architect: Gruzen Samton
Structural Engineer: Buro Happold
Quantity Surveyor: Davis Langdon
M+E Engineer: Buro Happold
Landscape Architect: Olin Partnership
Lighting Engineer: Claude Engel Lighting Design
Additional Consultants: Buro Happold, Arup, Piers Heath Associates
Area: 20 902 m2
Year: 2014
Client: Yale University
Photo: ChuckChoi, Toni Rinaldo
Architect: Foster + Partners
Collaborating Architect: Gruzen Samton
Structural Engineer: Buro Happold
Quantity Surveyor: Davis Langdon
M+E Engineer: Buro Happold
Landscape Architect: Olin Partnership
Lighting Engineer: Claude Engel Lighting Design
Additional Consultants: Buro Happold, Arup, Piers Heath Associates
Area: 20 902 m2
Year: 2014
Client: Yale University
Photo: ChuckChoi, Toni Rinaldo



















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