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Yale Art + Architecture Building, New Haven, Connecticut

Architect : Paul Rudolph

Presented By:
Charu Kumari
Vikram Bengani
Year Three
B. Architecture
School Of Planning & Architecture
New Delhi

Disclaimer
This is not an academic paper.
This is a case study performed as part of a campus design
project.
The authenticity of the data/information cannot be guaranteed
with certainty. However, the information is fairly accurate and
has been collected from the internet while spatial analysis has
been performed by the authors. The various sources have been
cited in the Bibliography page.
This presentation is a condensed version of the authors
learnings and all the information available on the internet.

Pa ul Rudolph
In June of 1957, it was announced that he had accepted the chairmanship of the Department of Architecture at Yale
University. During his years at Yale he began receiving commissions for monumental structures from throughout the
Northeast including the Art and Architecture Building at Yale, the Government Services Centre in Boston and the SMTI /
UMass Dartmouth campus. By this time he had adopted a distinctive style, mostly in concrete, that drew from many
sources including Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier as well as his own prodigious imagination.

October 23, 1918 August 8, 1997

Architectural Style & Design Approach


One of the earliest known examples of Brutalist architecture in
America is Paul Rudolph's Yale Art and Architecture Building in New
Haven, Connecticut, an imposing, fortress-like building that
juxtaposes masses of textured concrete with layers of steel-framed
glazing.
Brutalism historically frequently used to build educational building,
high rise housing and shopping malls
Completed in 1963, the building is formed of intersecting
volumes of bush-hammered concrete. Smooth concrete and
glass horizontal elements are supported by a sequence of
towers that protrude above the roof in a series of turrets.
Its powerful forms, textured surfaces, complex spaces, sensitive urban presence,
and many allusions to the past demonstrated how to recover the things that
Rudolph said the debased functionalism of the 1950s and the International Style
had 'brushed aside', namely monumentality, urbanism, symbolism, and
Massive piers of concrete rise. Projections are over-emphasised
decoration.

throughout. Heavy slabs are crossed by thin slabs. Spaces inside cross
too and offer sequences of most dramatic effects by unexpected vistas
inside the building and even out of it

LOCATION- 180 York Street, New Haven, CT 06511, United States

CONNECTICUT, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


(COAST OF ATLANTIC OCEAN)

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT

COORDINATES 41.3123 N, 72.9240 W

YALE SCHOOL OF ART AND ARCHITECTURE

CLIMATE HUMID CONTINENTAL CLIMATE, WITH COLD WINTERS AND HOT SUMMERS.
SUMMERS- HIGH- 82F TO 77F, 66F TO 60F
WINTERS- HIGH- 42F TO 37F, LOW- 28F TO 23F
PRECIPITATION- The annual average precipitation at New Haven is 52.73 Inches. Rainfall in is fairly evenly distributed throughout the year. The
wettest month of the year is May with an average rainfall of 4.70 Inches.
LANDSCAPE- Yales semi- urbanized campus covers over 1,100 acres of maintained and natural landscapes that range from college courtyards,
quadrangles, and designated garden areas to sports elds, a golf course, and a nature preserve.

YALE ART AND ARCHITECTURE BUILDING

YALE UNIVERSITY CAMPUS

Yales campus is divided into eight distinct and


interrelated planning precincts:
1. Core Campus
2.
Broadway/Tower Parkway
3.
Hillhouse
4.
Science Hill
5.
Upper Prospect
6.
Medical Center
7.
Athletic Fields
8.
West Campus

YALE ART AND ARCHITECTURE BUILDING


CORE CAMPUS

Immediate Context
Although Rudolphs design had its defenders,

many saw the buildings hulking forms and rough


textures as abrasive. Since its completion, the
iconic building has dominated the downtown
Public caf on the
extension building on
the ground floor

commercial district over which it presides

Yale Art Gallery (Louis Kahn ) on the


opposite side across the road.
Building around the corner of the
street at the L-Junction

YALE ART AND ARCHITECTURE BUILDING


YALE BUILDINGS

PUBLIC BUILDINGS
GARDEN
ROADS

Climatic Conditions [New Haven, Connecticut]


TEMPERATURE- Over the course of a year, the temperature
typically varies from -4C to 28C and is rarely below -12C or above
31C.

CLOUDS- The median cloud cover ranges from 49% (partly cloudy) to
70% (partly cloudy). The sky is cloudiest on April 27 and clearest on
August 9. The clearer part of the year begins around June 18. The
cloudier part of the year begins around December 7.

SUN- The length of the day varies significantly over the course of the year. The shortest day is December 21 with 9:11 hours of daylight; the
longest day is June 20 with 15:09 hours of daylight.
PRECIPITATION- The probability that precipitation will be observed at this location varies throughout the year. Precipitation is most likely
around February 10, occurring in 45% of days. Precipitation is least likely around September 11, occurring in 34% of days.

SNOW- The likelihood of snow falling is highest around February 1, occurring in 24% of days. The season in which it is relatively likely for snow to
fall spans from November 26 to April 7.

HUMIDITY- The relative humidity typically ranges from 64% (mildly humid) to 96% (very humid) over the course of the year, rarely
dropping below 26% (dry) and reaching as high as 100% (very humid).
The air is driest around April 15, at which time the relative humidity drops below 100% (very humid) three days out of four; it is most
humid around July 24, exceeding 93% (very humid) three days out of four.

WIND- Over the course of the year typical wind speeds vary from 0 m/s to 7 m/s (calm to moderate breeze), rarely exceeding 10 m/s (fresh
breeze).
The highest average wind speed of 4 m/s (gentle breeze) occurs around March 5, at which time the average daily maximum wind speed is 7 m/s
(moderate breeze).
The lowest average wind speed of 3 m/s (light breeze) occurs around July 24, at which time the average daily maximum wind speed is 6 m/s
(moderate breeze).

Topography & Landscape

The original plan of New Haventhe Nine Square Plan of 1641gave the City a clear grid organization. Set on a plain and surrounded by two
rivers, the coastline and the rock ridges, the Citys early growth established a powerful relationship between town and natural setting. The two
prominent landmarksEast Rock and West Rockled to a northeast-southwest orientation of the City grid. Similarly, Prospect Hill abuts the
Nine Squares and greatly influences the layout of the City to the north of Downtown. The historic post roads, which follow topography and
natural stream crossings, radiate outward from the town center and shape the surrounding neighbourhoods. These natural features helped
shape the City of New Haven and the layout of the campus within the City.

One Universitythree Related Campuses

Diagram Of Existing Yale And


Related New Haven Open Space

Context
NEIGHBORHOODS- The neighbourhoods of New Haven were shaped by the development of residential areas, and accompanying commerce and
manufacturing, which grew in roughly concentric rings moving outward from the Nine-Square core.
PARKS AND OPEN SPACE- Another telling diagram is that of the park system of the City a
prominent ring of open spaces at the perimeter converging on the New Haven Green at its
center. At the regional scale, Yale Athletic Fields is part of the ring of parks and natural
features at the Citys edge.
While the New Haven Green is the symbolic center of the park network, Yales many
courtyards, quadrangles and walkways provide an intricate open space resource.

FOUR DOWNTOWN Streets- Four Downtown


streets help define both Yale and the City:

THE FOUR SIGNATURE DOWNTOWN STREETS:


COLLEGE, CHURCH, ELM AND CHAPEL

1.Chapel Street- considered by many to be


the Main Street of New Haven, is shared by
the University and the City
2.Elm Street- A majority of campus facilities
lie within a block of this north-south corridor.
3.College Street- substantial barrier between
Old Campus and Cross Campus
4.Church Street- New Havens most civic
street with its concentration of public,
government and office buildings.

A NETWORK OF PARKS AND OPEN SPACES ENCIRCLES THE CITY.

External forces dictated that

this building turn the corner and


relate to the modern building
opposite as well as suggest that
it belongs to Yale University. The
internal forces demanded an
environment suitable for ever
varying activities which will be
given form and coherence by the
defined spaces within. As the
years go by, it is hoped other
interests and activities will take
place within the spaces, but the

space itself will remain. - Paul


Rudolph. The Architecture of
Paul Rudolph. New York: Praeger
Publishers, 1970. p120.

Further thumbing his nose at


the ahistorical inclinations of
Rudolph envisioned the building as a teaching tool, peppering his
the Bauhaus, Rudolph playfully
Modernist castle with fragments of history: plaster casts of Assyrian
reliefs and Parthenon friezes; Le Corbusiers Modular measure; original decorated the A&A with bits
Louis Sullivan gates; and locally salvaged Ionic capitals. Incorporated
and pieces of history -with remarkable self-confidence despite the contemporary sway of
Assyrian reliefs in the
Bauhaus ahistoricism, many of these items have been preserved or
stairwells, Ionic capitals
restored.
perched on metal poles in the
lecture hall.
His spatial theatricality reached its climax in the building's heart, the
two-story drafting room, presided over by a marble Roman statue of the
goddess Minerva.

Cultural Aspects

PAINTING
DESIGN
SCULPTURING
GRAPHICS AND DRAWING
EXHIBITION AND LIBRARY

SECTION BB

Thirty-seven changes of level accommodate functional and circulation


areas, and since walls are de-emphasized these levels are defined
principally by floor and ceiling planes
Terraced Levels, An Open Plan Core And Plays On Light And Shadow Although
Externally It Features The Raw Concrete Of Brutalist Architecture.

SECTION AA

UNLOADING AND LOADING DOCK

MECHANICAL SERVICES
CIRCULATION SPACE
ELEVATORS
STAIRCASE

EXTERNAL
EXIT
STARICASE

MAIN ENTRANCE TO THE BUILDING TO THE FIRST FLOOR


ENTRANCE TO THE PUBLIC CAFE
PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT FOR SERVICES

GROUND FLOOR PLAN

FIRST FLOOR PLAN

ELEVATORS
CIRCULATION SPACE
STAIRCASE
MECHANICAL SERVICES
PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT FOR SERVICES

SECOND FLOOR PLAN

THIRD FLOOR PLAN

ELEVATORS
CIRCULATION SPACE
STAIRCASE
MECHANICAL SERVICES
PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT

FOURTH FLOOR PLAN

FIFTH FLOOR PLAN

ELEVATORS
CIRCULATION SPACE
STAIRCASE
MECHANICAL SERVICES
PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT FOR SERVICES

SIXTH FLOOR PLAN

SEVENTH FLOOR PLAN

ELEVATORS
CIRCULATION SPACE
STAIRCASE
MECHANICAL SERVICES
PEDESTRIAN MOVEMENT
MOVEMENT FOR SERVICES

BASEMENT FLOOR PLAN

HASTINGS HALL

SECOND BASEMENT FLOOR PLAN

Pre - 2008 Renovation Scenario

series of unsympathetic renovations, which split and reconfigured its soaring double-height drafting room and obstructed light and views.
The external facade was scarred and barely recognizable after Rudolphs vast fenestrations were filled in with double-glazed windows
that were disrespectful of the original geometries.
Interior volumes lost their definition not only through unwelcome intrusions and divisions but, more importantly, by removal of the
ceiling planes and the signature linear lighting system

For the project team in 2006, the task was imposing: restore a controversial, commanding piece of American architectural heritage while
introducing new infrastructure and sustainability measures. To honour the Modernist cult figure Rudolph had become after he designed this
monument to the architecture department that defined them

A large fire on the night of June 14, 1969 caused extensive damage. Some
have claimed that the fire was the result of arson committed by a
disgruntled student, but this charge has remained unproven.

As the National Trust for


Historic Preservation has
argued,

the greenest
building is the
one that already
exists
Applying todays design
and energy standards to
existing buildings
without compromising
the original project
vision.

Renovating the old Architecture building


& the new Loria Art Center

Though the Loria interior pales beside the


architecture schools spatial invention, Gwathmey,
following Rudolphs cues, wisely retains an internal
courtlike separation between the two structures,
enriched by constant views back to the A&A. A
new, skylit reading room, extending the original
library across the ground floor, connects the two
wings, forming a visually, but not physically,
accessible courtyard.

Restoring Rudolph's original plan, removing the


levels added in its post-fire reconstruction, inserting
historically accurate glazing and restoring the
concrete work. Rudolphs orange and grey colour
scheme was honoured with the refitting of a
vibrant orange carpet that runs throughout, and
new furnishings.

The design results from the integration of


programmatic, structural and mechanical needs. It
includes the restoration of exterior walls; the
installation of historically correct windows; and
upgrades to all building facilities including the
exhibition gallery, jury and studio spaces; study
areas; and administrative and faculty offices. It also
introduces new lighting and furnishings throughout
and brings the structure into compliance with
current building and fire code regulations.

Double Height Spaces creating a


visual connection between
adjascent functions.

Design Approach

The 2008 renovation restored the original


linear lighting system wjich beautifully
juxtaposed into the vertical concrete
texture

Meeting current disability friendly


requirements by the codes was a difficult
task. The original plan had 37 level on 9
floors rendring incorporation disability
access automatic

Interiors as grey [dull/neutral] concrete vs.


earthy orange [bright and exciting] Carpets
and furniture

Natural light bounces on the carpet and


illuminates the entire space as warm
interiors imprinting warth on the lifeless
concrete

Like every brutalist buildings, this one


retains all the joints and holes caused by
the casting of concrete in place. Rudolph
utilised this as an opportunity to create
texture.

Structural System

Internally the building is organized around a


central core space defined by four large
concrete slab columns that, similar to the
external towers, are hollow to accommodate
mechanical services.
Cast-in-Place Concrete [RCC]
Bush Hammered Finish to the face of the
exposed concrete

Gwathmey
Siegels Addition History of Art
Building

Axis

RCC Shear walls


Section showing hollow columns used as service and storage area

Original Yale Art + Architecture Building


Cross-Courtyard Axis Plan By Paul Rudolph

Hollow RCC Columns

Building Construction

The strong vertical striations of the corduroy-textured surfaces are obtained by


pouring concrete into vertically-ribbed wood forms, that are then stripped away,
and concrete edges hand-hammered to expose the aggregate. it controls staining
and minimizes the effect of discoloration inherent in concrete.
To reproduce the original surface texture, 2 + 1/4-inch-wide tongue-and- groove red
oak flooring planks, unfinished and unsanded, were used for the formwork.

BUILDING CONSTRUCTION SYSTEM


Completed in 1963, the building is
formed of intersecting volumes of
bush-hammered concrete. Smooth
concrete and glass horizontal
elements are supported by a
sequence of towers that protrude
above the roof in a series of turrets.

The 114,000 sf Brutalist building, which


is constructed of cast-in-place concrete,
has a total of 37 different levels on nine
floors, two below grade, and is a
cornerstone of Yales vibrant arts
campus.
Slabs of ribbed concrete run in
vertical sections on the interior and
exterior of the 11,000-squaremetre building.
Inside, the complex floor plan is made up of 37 terraced levels spaced
across seven main storeys and two basement floors. Each level overlooks
a central atrium that features a sunken pit and is topped by a series of
skylights, while narrow concrete walkways connect the spaces on either
side of the well.
The main entrance is set back from the street, accessed through a chute
and stairwell between two concrete columns.

Massive piers of concrete


rise. Projections are overemphasised throughout.
Heavy slabs are crossed
by thin slabs. Spaces
inside cross too and offer
sequences of most
dramatic effects by
unexpected vistas inside
the building and even out
of it,"

Mechanicals
Electricals
Services
Workshops
Main Hall
Woodshop
Digital Media

Noisy & Private Areas

Entry Through
Staircases & Elevator
Use of Sky lights to
light interior reading
room space.
Drawing Studio
Double height
Hastings Hall
Classrooms
Lecture Room
Offices
Storage for the
above functions

Relatively Queiter & Semi Private Areas

Back Entry
Library
Department Offices
Aministration
Public Caf
Storage & Teraching
Labs
Quiet zone near
Library, Noisier Zone
near the office half

Quiet & Public Areas

Back Entry
Public Zone
Thwo Storeyed
Exhibition Space &
related prefunctions
Seminar Rooms
Conference Rooms
Lecture Halls
Unhindered entry
from the Road
outside

Noisy & Public Areas

High Crowd Density


Mass student
gathereing
Departmental &
Faculty rooms
Seminar room
Lecture room
Interlocking planes
emphasising
solid/Void
Relationship
Administrative
offices on mezzanine
Overlooking
exhibition space
Access from 2nd and
4th floor via Elevator
or staircase

Quiet & Semi-Private Areas

4 Studios
Terrace to sketch&
Hangout space
Threshold achieved
by changing levels
Green roof
Natural lighting for
all studios NSEW
Common Double
height Jury Space
Print + Laser Cutiing
Room

Quiet & Private Areas

Jury space remained


delineated through a
change in flooring
material.

Painting and graphic art studios are on the top


two levels, with an open terrace for sketching.

Finally, there is a penthouse apartment for guest critics, that also


has its own terrace

Faade system
The 2008 restoration specified vast glass sheets developed to reduce heat
gain and energy consumption. After mock-ups were evaluated for
aesthetics and performance. The project team selected a glazing product
that provided suitable insulating properties, low-emissivity (low-e), and
glare reduction, while reproducing, as closely as possible, the look of the
original windows. Fabricated by Viracon, the 8-by-12-foot panels were
some of the largest single sheets of insulating glass ever made in the
United States.

Aluminium + Glass [Gwathemey]


Reinforcing Integration and
articulation of structure.

Zinc + Limestone [Gwathemey]


Exposed Concrete [Rudolph]

This Monumentality had been lost in the early 1950s due to the debased
functionalism as quoted by Rudolph himself. However this Shear Honest Brutalism era
building achieves balance by using large Fenestration covered with glass. Faade is
divide furthermore by vertical columns suplimented with the vertical hammered
textured concrete and Beams in the horizontal direction. The same principle develops
inside as interlocking vertical and horizontal planes,

Entry Between two massive


hollow columns resembling
turrents to a fortress making
this structure monumental

Building Services

Stacked Staircase

Custom fixtures with metal halide lamps replicated the


appearance of the original incandescent lights,
consume only 39 watts, rather than 150. Aluminum
reflective paint, vernal lenses, and prismatic lamps
result in a scattered-light

Lighting control
All inside fixtures are positioned to shine toward the building interior,
rather than out through windows. Lighting power densities are kept at
low levels to minimize light pollution, while maintaining the look of the
historic Rudolph lamps with a new, more energy-efficient fixture.

Between the four central piers two skylights


rise as giant clerestories, intensifying natural
light in the center of the space that receives
it on all four sides through peripheral glazing

Void In The Middle


providing Light wells
& sky lighting for
basement floors

Second
Basement where
all mechanical
room & services
are located

The A&As notorious lack of climate control, or even airflow, has been tackled with modern mechanical systems, largely
housed in the addition, and thermally efficient windows. Historically accurate but inefficient elements, such as oversized glazing or
low-insulating concrete walls, were offset by innovations in low-e insulating glass units, high-efficiency HVAC systems and controls,
daylighting and occupancy sensors, air handling, storm-water management, non-potable water reuse systems were deployed.

Air-handling units in the lecture hall and classrooms are equipped with enthalpy heat exchangers, which salvage energy from
returned building air and transfer it to incoming fresh air. To respond dynamically to building usage, Aircuity, an air-quality system,
monitors carbon dioxide levels and reduces ventilation rates when rooms are unoccupied.

Water-saving fixtures, Old staircase modified to be storage room

To support the local economy, the project team utilized local labor and materials wherever possible.
The original building did not employ any sprinklers. Fire sprinklers with exposed pipes and sprinkler heads were added over the last
20 years, contributing to the overall run-down look of the building. As part of the 2008 work, a new sprinkler system, which
employed wall sprinklers to create fire separations between spaces, was added. With care- fully selected, discreet locations for
the piping, the system brought the building into full compatibility with current fire codes.

Visual Quality

Carefully placed History of art building


against the A+A building results in no
hindrance to the views from the
architectural sections of the building
which start from the fourth floor, also
permitting usable north light.

"Rudolph has been criticized for the serious functional shortcomings of the
building: that he put the areas he cared least about in the basement; that
the painters are very disturbed by south light; that the sculptors are in the
low-ceiling 'caves'; that the best spaces are reserved for architectural
activity. Functionally, Rudolph's building is a studied, politically
architectural statement. Architecturally, it tends to extened beyond its
own urban context. It cleverly establishes a general urban scale and a
particular internal scale, both compatibly and expressively related.
- Paul Heyer, Architects on Architecture: New Directions in America.
p300-301.

Restrained use of lively colours mainly orangeand


cleverly built-in furnishings enhance the architecture,
which is intended 'to excite and challenge the occupants,'
says Rudolph
The orange works remarkably well in softening the
Brutalist architecture and in reinforcing the importance of
these spaces of presentation

Bibliography
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/28/arts/design/28yale.html?_r=0
https://weatherspark.com/averages/30535/New-Haven-Connecticut-United-States
http://www.dezeen.com/2014/09/26/yale-art-and-architecture-building-paul-rudolph-brutalism/
http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Art_and_Arch_Building.html
https://www.yalealumnimagazine.com/articles/2241?page=2
http://www.world-architects.com/pages/insight/spaces-for-learning
http://www.buildings.com/article-details/articleid/9990/title/yale-university-s-intelligent-design.aspx
http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Art_and_Arch_Building.html
http://archrecord.construction.com/projects/portfolio/archives/0902yale-1.asp
http://www.dezeen.com/2014/09/26/yale-art-and-architecture-building-paul-rudolph-brutalism/
Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects
Sustainable Restoration of Yale Universitys Art + Architecture Building, RUSSELL M. SANDERS et All

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