Larry David, Maria Menounos, and Sofia Vergara are among the Hollywood elites scheduled to attend a star-studded gala March 8 to celebrate the opening of Emerson College's new $85 million Los Angeles campus building.
Located on Sunset Boulevard, in the heart of LA's entertainment and communications industry, the 10-story, 107,000-sf multipurpose campus can house up to 217 students and includes wired classrooms, an open-air screening and live-performance space, a Dolby Surround 7.1 audio post-production suite, a 4K screening room, computer labs, mixing suites, and a planned green screen motion capture stage.
Design architect Thom Mayne of Morphosis said the building's form, which takes the shape of a massive, shimmering aircraft hangar, housing a sculptural, glass-and-aluminum base building, is designed to "expand the interactive, social aspect of education. We focused on creating with the broader community in mind—both in terms of public space and sustainable design.”
The building’s exterior features a dynamic sun shading system that adapts to changing weather conditions to maintain optimal indoor temperature and natural light levels. Heating and cooling of the building is further optimized through an innovative passive valence system developed by Buro Happold.
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Additional green design initiatives include: the use of recycled and rapidly renewable building materials; installation of efficient water-saving fixtures; a high-performance glass curtain-wall to minimize heat gain; landscaping and a living green wall; and a central management infrastructure to monitor overall building efficiency.
Morphosis' design statement:
Bringing student housing, instructional facilities, and administrative offices to one location, ELA condenses the diversity of a college campus into an urban site. Evoking the concentrated energy of East-Coast metropolitan centers in an iconic Los Angeles setting, a rich dialogue emerges between students’ educational background and their professional futures.
Fundamental to the Emerson Los Angeles experience, student living circumstances give structure to the overall building. Housing up to 217 students, the domestic zones frame a dynamic core dedicated to creativity, learning, and social interaction. Composed of two slender residential towers connected by a helistop, the 10-story square frame encloses a central open volume to create a flexible outdoor “room.”
A sculpted form housing classrooms and administrative offices weaves through the void, defining multi-level terraces and active interstitial spaces that foster informal social activity and creative cross-pollination. Looking out onto the multi-level terrace, exterior corridors to student suites and common rooms are shaded by an undulating, textured metal scrim spanning the full height of the towers’ interior face.
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Looking to the local context, the center finds a provocative precedent in the interiority of Hollywood film studios, where outwardly regular façades house flexible, fantastical spaces within. With rigging for screens, media connections, sound, and lighting incorporated into the façade’s metal framework, this dynamic visual backdrop also serves as a flexible armature for outdoor performances. The entire building becomes a stage set for student films, screenings, and industry events, with the Hollywood sign, the city of Los Angeles, and the Pacific Ocean in the distance providing added scenery.
Anticipated to achieve a LEED Gold rating, the new center champions Emerson’s commitment to both sustainable design and community responsibility. Wrapping the building’s northwest corner, a green wall underscores the towers’ actively changing exterior skin. Connected to weather stations that track the local climate, temperature, and sun angle, the automated sunshade system opens and closes horizontal fins outside the high-performance glass curtain-wall to minimize heat gain while maximizing daylight and views.
Further green initiatives include the use of recycled and rapidly renewable building materials, installation of efficient fixtures to reduce water use by 40%, energy savings in heating and cooling through a passive valence system, and a building management and commissioning infrastructure to monitor and optimize efficiency of all systems.
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Building Team
Architect: Morphosis Architects (Thom Mayne)
Structural engineer: John A. Martin Associates, Inc.
MEP engineer: Buro Happold
General contractor: Hathaway Dinwiddie Construction Company
Development consultant: Robert Silverman
Civil engineer: KPFF
IT/BIM implementation: Synthesis
Lighting consultant: Horton Lees Brogden Lighting Design, Inc.
Specifications: Technical Resources Consultants, Inc.
Theater consultant: Auerbach Pollock Friedlander
Acoustic consultant: Newson Brown Associates LLC
Audiovisual/IT consultant: Waveguide Consulting Inc.
Code/life safety consultant: Arup
Facade consultant: A. Zahner Architectural Metals; JA Weir Associates
Cost consultant: Davis Langdon
Vertical transportation: Edgett Williams Consulting Group, Inc.
Curtain wall consultant: Walters & Wolf
LEED consultant: Davis Langdon
Graphics: Follis Design
Waterproofing consultant: Independent Roofing Consultants
Geotechnical consultant: Geotechnologies Inc.
Sustainability: Davis Langdon
Landscape consultant: Katherine Spitz Associates
Architectural specifications consultant: Technical Resources Consultants, Inc.
Architectural visualization: Kilograph
Smoke control: Exponent
Exterior building maintenance: Olympique
Project Information
Cost: $85 million
Total size: 107,000 sf (70,500 sf residential; 30,100 sf instructional/administrative; 6,400 sf retail for Emerson kitchen)
Lot size: 37,351 sf
Building height: 130 feet; 10 stories
Parking: three levels of subterranean parking with 239 parking spaces
Housing: capacity for 217 students: 159 single rooms (eight are designated for resident assistants), 29 double rooms, and four faculty/staff apartments
Instructional spaces: six general purpose classrooms; computer lab; editing lab; audio lab; distance learning room; two performance studios; two dressing rooms; two study rooms; 4K screening room; large assembly room; audio post mixing suite
For more information, read Emerson's article on the Emerson LA grand opening and the LA Times report.
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Photo: Iwan Baan - www.iwan.com / Courtesy Emerson College
Related Stories
| Jul 1, 2014
Winning design by 3XN converts modernist bathhouse to university library
Danish firm 3XN's design wins competition for a new educational facility for Mälardalen University in Sweden, which will house a library, communal spaces, and offices for 4,500 students and staff.
| Jul 1, 2014
Zaha Hadid's flowing Heydar Aliyev Center named Design of the Year for 2014
The Design Museum's Design of the Year award has been awarded to Zaha Hadid's Heydar Aliyev Center. Hadid is not only the first woman to win the top prize, but the center is the first architectural project to win the overall competition.
| Jun 30, 2014
Autodesk acquires design studio The Living, will create Autodesk Studio
The Living, David Benjamin's design studio, has been acquired by Autodesk. Combined, the two will create the Autodesk Studio, which will "create new types of buildings, public installations, prototypes and architectural environments."
| Jun 30, 2014
San Antonio green lights multimodal transit center
The new 90,000-sf development will principally service San Antonio’s growing network of city bus and VIA PRIMO bus rapid transit service, including real-time arrival updates, as well as become an iconic public plaza for the city.
| Jun 30, 2014
Philip Johnson’s iconic World's Fair 'Tent of Tomorrow' to receive much needed restoration funding
A neglected Queens landmark that once reflected the "excitement and hopefulness" at the beginning of the Space Age may soon be restored.
| Jun 30, 2014
Research finds continued growth of design-build throughout United States
New research findings indicate that for the first time more than half of projects above $10 million are being completed through design-build project delivery.
| Jun 30, 2014
Narrow San Francisco lots to be developed into micro-units
As a solution to San Francisco’s density and low housing supply compared to demand, local firms Build Inc. and Macy Architecture each are to build micro-unit housing in a small parcel of land in Hayes Valley.
| Jun 30, 2014
Arup's vision of the future of rail: driverless trains, maintenance drones, and automatic freight delivery
In its Future of Rail 2050 report, Arup reveals a vision of the future of rail travel in light of trends such as urban population growth, climate change, and emerging technologies.
| Jun 30, 2014
4 design concepts that remake the urban farmer's market
The American Institute of Architects held a competition to solve the farmer's markets' biggest design dilemma: lightweight, bland canopies that although convenient, does not protect much from the elements.
| Jun 30, 2014
Harvard releases the State of the Nation’s Housing 2014
Although the housing industry saw notable increases in construction, home prices, and sales in 2013, household growth has yet to fully recover from the effects of the recession, according to a new Harvard University report.