flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Columbia University dedicates its new campus with great fanfare

University Buildings

Columbia University dedicates its new campus with great fanfare

Transparency to the surrounding community played a big role in the campus’s design.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | October 25, 2016

The 450,000-sf Jerome L. Greene Science Center, which opens officially next spring, is the centerpiece of Columbia University's 17-acre, $6.3 billion Manhattanville campus in New York. This campus's design and programming emphasize the university's connection to the surrounding neighborhood.  Image: BD+C

On Monday, Columbia University held a dedication ceremony for its 17-acre Manhattanville campus in the West Harlem section of New York City. This $6.3 billion campus, which when completed will comprise 6.8 million sf of new academic space, is the university’s most ambitious expansion since it relocated to its current campus at Morningside Heights in Harlem 119 years ago.

The new campus, which was master planned by Skidmore Owings & Merrill and Renzo Piano Building Workshop, has been in the works since 2003, roughly around the time Lee C. Bollinger became the university’s president. “We knew that Columbia had to have new space to fulfill its mission as a great university,” said Bollinger during the dedication’s luncheon, held inside the 450,000-sf Jerome L. Greene Science Center, Manhattanville’s first building to open.

The Center, which should be fully occupied by next spring, is home to the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute. (The publisher and philanthropist Mort Zuckerman; Christina McInerney, president and CEO of the Jerome L. Greene Foundation; three Nobel Prize laureates and two Pulitzer Prize winners were among the dignitaries in attendance.)

Over the next two years, the Manhattanville campus will open the 60,000-sf Lenfest Center for the Arts, which will feature the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, a 150-seat screening room, and a 4,300-sf presentation space; and the 56,000-sf University Forum, with a 430-seat auditorium.

Eric Kandel, MD, co-director of the Zuckerman Mind Brain Institute (and a Nobel Laureate in 2002 for the category physiology or medicine), proclaimed this project “historically important” to the university’s stature as well as for accentuating the symbiosis on campus between “bioscience and the arts.”

By 2021, the Ronald O. Perlman Center for Business Innovation and the Henry Kravis Building—492,000 sf across two buildings designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro in collaboration with FXFowle Architects—will be the new home for the Columbia Business School.

 

Architect Renzo Piano describes the Jerome L. Greene Science Center in relation to its surrounding environment, which includes New York City's West Side Highway and the Hudson River. Image: BD+C

 

Architect Renzo Piano spoke at the dedication, at which he referred to the Jerome L. Greene Science Center as both a “palace” and a “factory that explores the secrets of the mind.” Piano also talked about the “urban layer” that will connect the campus to the community via reversed ground-floor setbacks, widened sidewalks, the absence of walls or gates (which is in marked contrast to the fortress-like Morningside Heights campus), height limitations (the Center is nine stories above ground), and a custom-glazed curtainwall.

His firm designed the Center to be as transparent as possible. The facility’s first floor, in fact, is open to the public. And its offices, labs, and other workspaces are organized on an open floor plan, divided into quadrants along North-South/East-West axes that expose workers and visitors to ample daylight.

Jerome L. Greene Science Center is across the street from an elevated subway line whose noise level measures 88 decibels. To mitigate that noise, the building was designed with a double-pane glass wall system whose 16-inch-wide air cavity in between exhausts air from the HVAC system and lets occupants open windows and glass doors from the inside. Open-air staircases connect the floors and encourage interaction between departments.

A 75,000-sf central energy plant, beneath the Greene and Lenfest buildings, will deliver electricity, chilled water, and high-pressure steam to nearly all of the buildings on campus.

The exterior bracing is visible to call attention to Greene’s “industrial” affinity with surrounding buildings in the neighborhood. That connection is reinforced by Columbia’s adaptive reuse of existing buildings on Manhattanville’s campus—specifically a one-time Studebaker auto-manufacturing plant and milk processing plant—that now serve, respectively, as university administration offices and Columbia’s center for the study of jazz and computer-generated music.

Manhattanville was the original name of this neighborhood, and Columbia and its AEC partners are at great pains to position this campus expansion as integral to a community that in the past has been wary about the university’s growth intentions. Bollinger, in his comments, went so far as to state that the new campus “is the best thing that could happen to upper Manhattan.”

Outdoor plazas within the campus will be accessible to the general public. The Jerome L. Greene Science Center will include a 1,920-sf Wellness Center that conducts free programs to raise awareness about stroke and related risk factors, and trains local residents to become community health workers. The Wellness Center will also be home to Mental Health First Aid, a program dedicated to improving the quality of mental health services in Upper Manhattan.

A 1,500-sf Education Lab within the Center will provide programs about brain science for the community and K-12 schools. Columbia has contracted with BioBus, an independent nonprofit, to run this program, and to bring learning into the community.

“This campus puts Columbia into the world,” observed Marilyn Jordan Taylor, a consulting partner with SOM (where she spent 33 years) and the former dean of the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Design.

Columbia|Manhattanville’s buildings are targeting LEED Platinum ND certification. Lendlease and McKissack Construction are the construction managers on the Greene and Lenfest buildings, Skanska and Velez Organization are the CMs on the University Forum building. And Turner will be the CM on the business school.

Related Stories

| Aug 11, 2010

University of Florida's traditionally modern graduate building

The University of Florida's Hough Hall Graduate Studies Building was designed by Rowe Architects, Tampa, and Sasaki Associates, Boston, to blend with the school's traditional collegiate gothic architecture outside, but reflect a 21st-century education facility inside. Tallahassee-based Ajax Building Corporation is constructing the $19 million facility, which will have traditional exterior detai...

| Aug 11, 2010

Construction under way on LEED Platinum DOE energy lab

Centennial, Colo.-based Haselden Construction has topped out the $64 million Research Support Facilities, located on the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) campus in Golden, Colo. Designed by RNL and Stantec to achieve LEED Platinum certification and net zero energy performance, the 218,000-sf facility will feature natural ventilation through operable ...

| Aug 11, 2010

Stimulus funding helps get NOAA project off the ground

The award-winning design for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s new Southwest Fisheries Science Center replacement laboratory saw its first sign of movement last month with a groundbreaking ceremony held in La Jolla, Calif. The $102 million project is funded primarily by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

| Aug 11, 2010

New Jersey's high-tech landscaping facility

Designed to enhance the use of science and technology in Bergen County Special Services' landscaping programs, the new single-story facility at the technical school's Paramus campus will have 7,950 sf of classroom space, a 1,000-sf greenhouse (able to replicate different environments, such as rainforest, desert, forest, and tundra), and 5,000 sf of outside landscaping and gardening space.

| Aug 11, 2010

Florida International University's cantilevered design

Suffolk Construction's Miami-Dade business unit is serving as GC for the $14 million School of International and Public Affairs building at the University Park Campus of Florida International University. Designed by Arquitectonica, Miami, the five-story, 58,408-sf building will have a café and three auditoriums on the ground level; the largest auditorium will have a 40-foot cantilever abov...

| Aug 11, 2010

Research Facility Breaks the Mold

In the market for state-of-the-art biomedical research space in Boston's Longwood Medical Area? Good news: there are still two floors available in the Center for Life Science | Boston, a multi-tenant, speculative high-rise research building designed by Tsoi/Kobus & Associates, Boston, and developed by Lyme Properties, Hanover, N.

| Aug 11, 2010

Precast All the Way

For years, precast concrete has been viewed as a mass-produced product with no personality or visual appeal—the vanilla of building materials. Thanks to recent technological innovations in precast molds and thin veneers, however, that image is changing. As precast—concrete building components that are poured and molded offsite—continues to develop a vibrant personality all it...

| Aug 11, 2010

Living and Learning Center, Massachusetts College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences

From its humble beginnings as a tiny pharmaceutical college founded by 14 Boston pharmacists, the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences has grown to become the largest school of its kind in the U.S. For more than 175 years, MCPHS operated solely in Boston, on a quaint, 2,500-student campus in the heart of the city's famed Longwood Medical and Academic Area.

| Aug 11, 2010

Giants 300 University Report

University construction spending is 13% higher than a year ago—mostly for residence halls and infrastructure on public campuses—and is expected to slip less than 5% over the next two years. However, the value of starts dropped about 10% in recent months and will not return to the 2007–08 peak for about two years.

| Aug 11, 2010

Team Tames Impossible Site

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, the nation's oldest technology university, has long prided itself on its state-of-the-art design and engineering curriculum. Several years ago, to call attention to its equally estimable media and performing arts programs, RPI commissioned British architect Sir Nicholas Grimshaw to design the Curtis R.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Student Housing

The University of Michigan addresses a decades-long student housing shortage with a new housing-dining facility

The University of Michigan has faced a decades-long shortage of on-campus student housing. In a couple of years, the situation should significantly improve with the addition of a new residential community on Central Campus in Ann Arbor, Mich. The University of Michigan has engaged American Campus Communities in a public-private partnership to lead the development of the environmentally sustainable living-learning student community.

halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021