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November 16, 2007|Volume 36, Number 11


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This photo of Paul Rudolph's Art & Architecture Building was taken shortly after the building opened in 1963.



Restoration of iconic Rudolph building
is key step in creation of Arts Complex

With major support from Sid Bass, Yale has undertaken the comprehensive renovation and restoration of Paul Rudolph’s historic Art & Architecture Building.

In keeping with Bass’ wishes, the architectural landmark is being renamed as “The Rudolph Building.”

This is a key step in the creation of the University’s major new arts complex, a single structure that will include, in addition to The Rudolph Building, a new facility for the Department of the History of Art, to be called the Jeffrey Loria Center for the History of Art in honor of its chief benefactor, and an expanded arts and architecture library, to be named the Robert B. Haas Family Arts Library.

The project has been designed by Charles Gwathmey, of Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects, who received his Master of Architecture degree from Yale in 1962, while Rudolph was chair of the Department of Architecture.

The arts complex, scheduled for completion in 2008, is part of the Master Plan for the Yale Arts Area, an initiative to expand and improve the University’s arts facilities.

“Yale’s extraordinary arts programs have enabled students in all subjects to expand their capacity for independent and creative thinking,” said President Richard C. Levin. “When complete, Charles Gwathmey’s arts complex will provide unprecedented opportunities for meaningful interchange between Yale’s esteemed history of art department and School of Architecture. The Jeffrey Loria Center for the History of Art will provide the Department of the History of Art with a magnificent new home, and the Haas Family Arts Library that will link the two buildings will serve as both a physical and intellectual meeting place.

“The arts complex is thus a critical element of the Master Plan for the Yale Arts Area and will contribute to the University’s continued leadership in the arts,” added Levin.

Robert A.M. Stern, dean of the Yale School of Architecture, noted: “Paul Rudolph was one of the most talented, inventive and important architects of the last century, and the Art & Architecture Building is among his greatest achievements. Thus, the restoration of this building is crucial not only to Yale, but to the history of modern architecture in America. Moreover, Charles Gwathmey’s design, carried out with both great sensitivity and a deep knowledge of Rudolph’s aesthetic intentions, provides a valuable example to others who plan to restore modernist structures, a subject of increasing importance today.”

Charles Gwathmey noted: “Working on a project as important as the renovation and restoration of Paul Rudolph’s iconic Art & Architecture Building is a privilege — one that carries with it enormous responsibility, not only to the building itself and the people who will use it, but also to its rich history and its architect’s vision. I have tried to honor that history and vision by returning the building to Rudolph’s original intention. Additionally, the design for the arts complex as a whole represents an expansion and enrichment of the organizing principle of the Art & Architecture Building, while at the same time establishing a separate and unique identity for the new Jeffrey Loria Center for the History of Art.”


Creating the arts complex

In creating the arts complex, Gwathmey Siegel & Associates was charged with several tasks. Primary among these were to restore Rudolph’s historic building — considered a masterpiece of space, light and mass — to its original intention, and to introduce state-of-the-art technology, air conditioning and LEED standards to it; to design a new facility to serve Yale’s art history department, ensuring a building with its own signature identity; to create an expanded arts and architecture library with a street-level presence and entry; and to maintain a harmonious relationship both among the elements of the arts complex and between that multifaceted structure and the surrounding streetscape.

The resulting design calls for the Jeffery Loria Center for the History of Art to be added to the north side of The Rudolph Building, with the Haas Family Arts Library bridging both buildings.

Work on the Art & Architecture Building will include a mix of literal restoration, interpretive renovation and sensitive intervention — all the while keeping clear sight of Rudolph’s vision. Gwathmey’s design will restore open spaces that have been fractured, revive vertical views that have long been blocked by prior renovations and ill-placed partitions, recapture Rudolph’s concept for the building’s fenestration and restore the exterior walls. The renovation will also include complete restoration of the penthouse and rooftop terrace; creation of an easily accessible entrance to the main lecture theater, Hastings Hall; and installation of replacement windows that use contemporary technology and materials. In addition, new lighting and furnishings will be introduced throughout the building.

Other essential changes to the Art & Architecture Building will not be visible. These include the introduction of air conditioning, for which the architects are installing a state-of-the-art system, in keeping with the University’s commitment to energy efficiency and sustainable construction. (The project has a LEED rating of silver.)

The arts and architecture library will be vastly expanded and transformed, as the University’s art-and-architecture and drama libraries and its arts of the book collections — currently located in separate buildings across campus — are integrated into a single, comprehensive resource. The new Haas Family Arts Library will straddle the two buildings of the arts complex at the ground-floor level.

Gwathmey has used the tower that once marked the north end of the Art & Architecture Building to create a “fulcrum” between The Rudolph Building and the Jeffery Loria Center for the History of Art. The design thus bridges old and new literally, functionally, aesthetically and figuratively, notes the architect. The addition will house the elevators, circulation, reception and lobby spaces for both buildings.

The 87,000-square-foot, limestone-and-zinc-clad Jeffery Loria Center for the History of Art will include expanded teaching and lecture spaces and student and faculty support facilities that will serve the department for generations to come. Also included will be new gathering spaces for students and faculty, including a street-level café that will be open to the public, and outdoor terraces on the fourth and seventh floors, each offering previously unavailable views of The Rudolph Building, as well as panoramic views of the campus and city. One of the chief improvements provided by the new facility is that — for the first time — the Department of the History of Art will be housed in the same building as the arts library.


Upcoming projects

Other projects currently in the design stage as part of the Master Plan for the Yale Arts Area include the following: renovation and addition to the Department of Music’s Stoeckel Hall (Charney Architects LLC); renovation of the School of Music’s Hendrie Hall (Kuwabara Payne McKenna Blumberg Architects); and renovation of the Yale University Art Gallery’s Swartwout Building and expansion into Street Hall, former home of the history of art department (Polshek Partnership Architects).

Plans are also being formulated for new facilities to house the Yale School of Drama and Yale Repertory Theatre.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Restoration of iconic Rudolph building is key step in . . . Arts Complex

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A conversation in China leads to successful research collaboration

Junior faculty earn second terms in endowed posts

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE NEWS

Four decades of readers in Yale libraries are featured in exhibition

Video installations by Ori Gersht on view at British Art Center

Reception will celebrate United Way donors as campaign continues

Yale Books in Briefs

Benefit event to feature noted neurosurgeon

Workshop to feature Ohio State law professor

Reminder: Open enrollment period ends Nov. 18

Campus Notes


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