flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Movers + Shapers: The social connector

Architects

Movers + Shapers: The social connector

Studio Gang gains fans with buildings that unite people and embrace the outside world.


By John Caulfied, Senior Editor | May 9, 2017

Chicago native Jeanne Gang, the daughter of an engineer, cut her design teeth at OMA/Rem Koolhaas before launching her firm in 1997. Studio Gang’s widely praised exhibits and design portfolio includes a range of buildings, and its recent work has been exploring new typologies and materials. Photo: Studuio Gang

In its 20th year, Studio Gang is enjoying its moment in the sun.

Jeanne Gang, the firm’s 53-year-old Founding Principal, who has garnered a MacArthur Fellowship and a passel of design accolades, is among a small handful of architects—and even more rarefied band of female architects—whom the press tags with the adjective “star.” 

Studio Gang’s design work is much in vogue these days. Its offices in Chicago and New York are currently juggling 14 projects in various stages of design or construction (see box, page 38). To keep up with rising demand, it has steadily increased its workforce to 91 people, from 19 a decade ago.

The firm’s impact on the built environment stems from Jeanne Gang’s ecologically tinted design
aesthetic that views buildings as “social connectors” for people and their surrounding environments. And her firm’s approach to arrive at a design solution is through rigorous and detailed investigations of its clients’ project goals.

Internally, Studio Gang, despite its growth, still operates like a “collective,” where associates are encouraged to chime in freely on projects. As such, the company seems less cultish than some other high-profile design firms. And the firm’s leadership is making sure that the projects it takes on don’t overload its staff’s capacity.

“We could have gotten larger quicker, but we pace ourselves,” says Design Principal Juliane Wolf, who started working for Studio Gang while she was a student and has been with the firm full time since 2001.

 

A large, open “living room” with a fireplace, kitchen, and lots of daylight stimulates encounters and discussions at The Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership at Kalamazoo (Mich.) College. Photo: Steve Hall/Hedrich Blessing.

 

Making contact

At a TED Talk in San Francisco last October, Gang explained that, in a world whose urban habitat is “out of balance,” her firm strives to design buildings as “relationships, where people can come together.”

Studio Gang has applied this concept to a wide range of structures: firehouses, civic buildings, theaters, offices, and residential projects. Case in point: The three-building, 394,000-sf Campus North Residence Commons it designed for the University of Chicago is probably best known for its “house hub,” which over three floors creates a home-like environment with communal spaces for cooking, studying, and relaxing that allow students to interact and collaborate.

Wolf says Studio Gang’s design philosophy has remained consistent through her years there. She points to two cultural projects she’s worked on—the Bengt Sjostrom Starlight Theatre, built in 2003, and the Writers Theatre, built last year—that had similar design goals of becoming community and regional destinations with an emphasis on facilitating audience interaction and enjoyment.

Studio Gang doesn’t have a recognizable style, per se. Boldness often jockeys for position with common sense. “Sometimes, just tweaking slightly can make something special happen,” says Wolf. But the firm’s design intent never strays too far from connecting a building with its surrounding environs. For example, Studio Gang’s designs for two boathouses in Chicago are distinguished by “V” and “M” roof shapes that are meant to “reflect the movement and rhythm of rowing,” says Gang.

 

Deep Research

The starting point for each of Studio Gang’s projects, says Wolf, is an extensive “research and discovery phase, and a thorough investigation of the client and the project.”  

Take one of Gang’s favorite recent projects: Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership at Kalamazoo (Mich.) College, built in 2014. Prior to putting Sharpie to paper, her firm assembled a book-size compendium of documents and notes that included details about a nearby 100-year-old farmhouse made from “log brick”—a mixture of two-foot-long logs and cementitious material. That became the architectural model for Arcus’s cordwood masonry exterior walls, whose construction, says Gang, is “super low tech—anyone can do it, and the act of making it is a social activity.”

Gang the environmentalist also likes the fact that the wood’s carbon is “trapped” within the wall.

The 10,000-sf Arcus Center is designed to “break down traditional barriers” among its occupants and visitors, says Wolf. The open “living room” at its center, activated by daylight, features a kitchen and fireplace. This space creates the potential for “informal meetings and casual encounters,” says Gang.

Wolf notes that since the Arcus Center opened, its applications have increased tenfold.

 

Cordwood masonry was used to construct the structure’s unique exterior walls that emphasize the building’s affinity with its surrounding environment. Photo: Iwan Baan.

 

Materials matter

Gang pays close attention to the materials her team specifies, partly with an eye toward environmental impact but also to maintain a building’s local authenticity. 

“More and more, we’re trying to find ways to use wood,” she said during a speech at the Art Institute of Chicago in March. The Writers Theatre is framed with laminated wood timbers that rest on “paws”—cedar wedges placed at the beam’s base—created by a crafts shop in Ottawa, Ill., that’s one of only two such artisans in the country doing this kind of work.

In New York, the five-story Richard Gilder Center for Science and Innovation, a 195,000-sf addition to the American Museum of Natural History scheduled to open in 2020, is designed for more efficient circulation flow with the 10 existing buildings that surround it. The sculpted walls of the center’s Exhibition Hall will be formed using shotcrete, similar to what’s used in subway construction, says Wolf.

Studio Gang is also working on an office building in Chicago for the Natural Resources Defense Fund that can meet the tough performance standards of the Living Building Challenge. That means avoiding materials with chemicals banned on the Challenge’s ever-expanding Red List, which Gang says is “the new frontier” for AEC firms.

 

Bringing human scale to skyscrapers

Gang once referred to tall buildings as “vertical social fabric.” And her firm has put that idea to work at two signature high-rise towers in Chicago: Aqua and Vista.

The 82-story Aqua tower, built in 2010, has more than 700 tenants. Each apartment opens up to a balcony whose dramatic contoured shape makes it easier for tenants to see and communicate with neighbors. That contour also “confuses the wind,” says Gang, making the balconies more comfortable.

The 95-story, 1,186-foot-tall Vista building, scheduled for completion in 2020, reflects the geometric properties of a “frustrum,” found in gemstones and crystals. In layman’s terms, the building’s curtain wall is staggered so each ascending floor is indented by a few inches from the floor below, giving tenants a better view of the outdoors. 

Vista will also allow more daylight at street level. The same is true of Studio Gang’s design for 40 Tenth Avenue on New York’s west side, whose “solar carve” form follows the movement of the sun and twists the building away from the High Line below. Gang says this design could provide up to 200 additional hours of daylight for the High Line’s vegetation during growing season.

 

Can buildings engender trust?

Gang is taking the nexus of buildings, people, and public space to a more overtly societal level at Polis Station, her firm’s ongoing reimaging of police stations away from being “scary fortresses” to centers of gravity and safety for the public they serve. 

After conducting conversations and workshops with community leaders, local neighbors, children, public officials, and the police, Studio Gang chose a police station in North Lawndale, Ill.—a town plagued by numerous shootings—for its first “intervention.” The project included helping to raise $35,000 to build a basketball half court on the station’s parking lot. (Parents now say this court is much safer than other courts in the neighborhood.)

Gang envisions a 21st-century police station as a community hub that might include a barbershop, bike shop, food market, and other public spaces “that spark conversations” between the community and the police, toward the ultimate goal of re-establishing mutual trust.

“This is not a utopian fantasy,” she insists. “But it requires engaging the public who live there.”

 

Executive Editor Robert Cassidy contributed reporting for this article. 

Related Stories

Industry Research | Mar 2, 2023

Watch: Findings from Gensler's latest workplace survey of 2,000 office workers

Gensler's Janet Pogue McLaurin discusses the findings in the firm's 2022 Workplace Survey, based on responses from more than 2,000 workers in 10 industry sectors. 

AEC Innovators | Mar 2, 2023

Turner Construction extends its ESG commitment to thwarting forced labor in its supply chain

Turner Construction joins a growing AEC industry movement, inspired by the Design for Freedom initiative, to eliminate forced labor and child labor from the production and distribution of building products. 

Multifamily Housing | Mar 1, 2023

Multifamily construction startup Cassette takes a different approach to modular building

Prefabricated modular design and construction have made notable inroads into such sectors as industrial, residential, hospitality and, more recently, office and healthcare. But Dafna Kaplan thinks that what’s held back the modular building industry from even greater market penetration has been suppliers’ insistence that they do everything: design, manufacture, logistics, land prep, assembly, even onsite construction. Kaplan is CEO and Founder of Cassette, a Los Angeles-based modular building startup.

Airports | Feb 28, 2023

Data visualization: $1 billion earmarked for 2023 airport construction projects

Ninety-nine airports across 47 states and two territories are set to share nearly $1 billion in funding in 2023 from the Federal Aviation Administration. The funding is aimed at help airports of all sizes meet growing air travel demand, with upgrades like larger security checkpoints and more reliable and faster baggage systems.

Seismic Design | Feb 27, 2023

Turkey earthquakes provide lessons for California

Two recent deadly earthquakes in Turkey and Syria offer lessons regarding construction practices and codes for California. Lax building standards were blamed for much of the devastation, including well over 35,000 dead and countless building collapses.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Feb 27, 2023

New 20,000-seat soccer stadium will anchor neighborhood development in Indianapolis

A new 20,000-seat soccer stadium for United Soccer League’s Indy Eleven will be the centerpiece of a major neighborhood development in Indianapolis. The development will transform the southwest quadrant of downtown Indianapolis by adding more than 600 apartments, 205,000 sf of office space, 197,000 sf for retail space and restaurants, parking garages, a hotel, and public plazas with green space.

Architects | Feb 27, 2023

Hord Coplan Macht announces retirement of Founder/CEO Lee Coplan, FAIA, and names successor

Hord Coplan Macht, an award-winning integrated architecture, interior design, landscape architecture, and planning firm, announces the retirement of Founder and Chief Executive Officer Lee Coplan, FAIA. Lee leaves behind a long and celebrated career leading the practice over the last four decades while bringing innovative design strategies and leadership to the architecture and design community.

Libraries | Feb 26, 2023

A $17 million public library in California replaces one that was damaged in a 2010 earthquake

California’s El Centro community, about two hours east of San Diego, recently opened a new $17 million public library. With design by Ferguson Pape Baldwin Architects and engineering services by Latitude 33 Planning & Engineering, the 19,811-sf building replaces the previous library, which was built in the early 1900s, damaged by a 7.2 earthquake that struck Baja California in 2010, and demolished in 2016.

Architects | Feb 24, 2023

7 takeaways from HKS’s yearlong study on brain health in the workplace

Managing distractions, avoiding multitasking, and cognitive training are key to staff wellbeing and productivity, according to a yearlong study of HKS employees in partnership with the University of Texas at Dallas’ Center for BrainHealth.

University Buildings | Feb 23, 2023

Johns Hopkins shares design for new medical campus building named in honor of Henrietta Lacks

In November, Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Medicine shared the initial design plans for a campus building project named in honor of Henrietta Lacks, the Baltimore County woman whose cells have advanced medicine around the world. Diagnosed with cervical cancer, Lacks, an African-American mother of five, sought treatment at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in the early 1950s. Named HeLa cells, the cell line that began with Lacks has contributed to numerous medical breakthroughs.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Construction Costs

Data center construction costs for 2024

Gordian’s data features more than 100 building models, including computer data centers. These localized models allow architects, engineers, and other preconstruction professionals to quickly and accurately create conceptual estimates for future builds. This table shows a five-year view of costs per square foot for one-story computer data centers. 


Sustainability

Grimshaw launches free online tool to help accelerate decarbonization of buildings

Minoro, an online platform to help accelerate the decarbonization of buildings, was recently launched by architecture firm Grimshaw, in collaboration with more than 20 supporting organizations including World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), RIBA, Architecture 2030, the World Green Building Council (WorldGBC) and several national Green Building Councils from across the globe.



Healthcare Facilities

Watch on-demand: Key Trends in the Healthcare Facilities Market for 2024-2025

Join the Building Design+Construction editorial team for this on-demand webinar on key trends, innovations, and opportunities in the $65 billion U.S. healthcare buildings market. A panel of healthcare design and construction experts present their latest projects, trends, innovations, opportunities, and data/research on key healthcare facilities sub-sectors. A 2024-2025 U.S. healthcare facilities market outlook is also presented.

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