Laboratories Building for Columbia University in New York

Architect: Rafael Moneo, Belén Moneo, Jeffrey Brock

Year: 2010

Location: New York, United States

Category: Laboratory / University

Status: Built

Laboratories Building for Columbia University in New York

About

The plot on which these laboratories are located was the last one available at Columbia University’s Morningside campus, and therefore the new gateway to the campus from its Manhattanville expansion. From the start it was decided that the new building should complete the campus and follow the formal parameters established by McKim, Mead & White, rather than stand as an iconic building. However, the building had to literally jump over a 1970s gymnasium, so the facades had to be arranged as resistant elements, because this made it possible to maintain the integrity of the building. Accepting the structure’s design as the expression of its architecture became the project’s leitmotif. The difference in level between Morningside and 120th Street gave way to a public space, a café, which underlines the building’s role as a new gate from the city to the campus. Here again is a building that proves that the challenges raised by a program and its location do not have to become a hindrance and can, in fact, foster architectural innovation. This structural challenge of ‘jumping’ over the existing building became the defining gesture of this architectural project, and is expressed in the transparency of the library, which suggested a new way of understanding the perimeter of the campus. The seven floors of open laboratory spaces required stiff slabs spanning more than 12 meters, which demanded a sophisticated structural project. With the help of the engineers from ARUP it was possible to develop a resistant facade in which the tension elements are particularly important.

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