The new Yale School of Management (SOM) Campus will unite the SOM’s faculty departments together at a single location for the first time. The building has been designed in response to an integrated curriculum that has the potential to reinvent business school education.

 The four-storey, highly transparent building contains dynamic, flexible teaching and social spaces, arranged around an open central courtyard to reinforce the interactive quality of the educational ethos. The building is characterised by its glazed facades that encourage a direct interface between break-out and formal teaching spaces.

Memory of project

From Whitney Avenue, two classroom drums and spiral staircases are visible between the slender columns that support the roof canopy, while the social spaces and café are placed at the heart of the building, facing inward to the central courtyard.

The auditorium, with an executive meeting room above, defines one curved façade of this landscaped square, directly opposite the library and main entrance. Encouraging a sense of cohesion, the design establishes visual connections between levels by varying the stacked undulating floorplates.

The ground floor contains the public space, cafes and auditorium, with the classrooms and study areas on the upper floors. The classrooms are contained within eight double-height oval drums, visible through the glazed façade. These curved spaces facilitate the integrated teaching methods of the curriculum – more than one lecturer can address the class at once, while still allowing every student a clear view and encouraging free interaction.

At the nexus of each classroom drum, smaller lounges provide informal spaces for meetings, study groups and social interaction. The new campus will incorporate a 350-seat auditorium and state-of-the-art media library, with faculty offices and administration placed at the rear. A number of sustainable measures will be implemented, including banners that rise up the full height of the facades to shade the south and west-facing elevations.

 

Edward P. Evans Hall: Sol LeWitt Art Installation

CREDTIS

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.

Appointment.- 2007.
Completion: 2014
Area: 20 902 m²
Client.- Yale University.

Sketch. Yale School of Management  by Foster + Partners.

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Norman Foster is considered by many to be the most prominent architect in Britain. He won the 1999 Pritzker Architecture Prize and the 2009 Príncipe de Asturias de las Artes Prize.

Lord Foster rebuilt the Reichstag as a new German Parliament in Berlin and designed a contemporary Great Court for the British Museum. He linked St. Paul's Cathedral to the Tate Modern with the Millennium Bridge, a steel footbridge across the Thames. He designed the Hearst Corporation Building in Manhattan, at 57th Street and Eighth Avenue.

He was born in Manchester, England, in 1935. Among his firm’s many other projects are London’s City Hall, the Bilbao Metro in Spain, the Canary Wharf Underground Station in London and the renovated courtyard of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery in Washington.

In the 1970s, Lord Foster was one of the most visible practitioners of high-tech architecture that fetishized machine culture. His triumphant 1986 Hong Kong and Shanghai bank building, conceived as a kit-of-parts plugged into a towering steel frame, was capitalism's answer to the populist Pompidou Center in Paris.

Nicolai Ouroussoff, The Times’s architecture critic, has written that although Lord Foster’s work has become sleeker and more predictable in recent years, his forms are always driven by an internal structural logic, and they treat their surroundings with a refreshing bluntness.

Awarded the Prince of Asturias of the Arts 2009.

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Published on: January 11, 2014
Cite: "Yale School of Management by Foster + Partners" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/yale-school-management-foster-partners> ISSN 1139-6415
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