Azure

Climb to the top

Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s medical school uses a grand set of stairs to connect students with students

- BY David Sokol ⁄ photograph­y BY Nic lehoux

Inside Diller Scofidio + Renfro’s Jenga-like medical centre in New York

STANDING INSIDE columbia University Medical center’s Roy and Diana Vagelos Education center, school chief executive Lee Goldman reports fielding two kinds of comments about the 9,290-square-metre building. “one: ‘It’s beautiful.’” the second? “People ask whether it will fall down.”

It’s natural that such a physics-defying form would be the source of both intrigue and trepidatio­n. Diller Scofidio + Renfro, working in collaborat­ion with Gensler, won the competitio­n for the project in 2010, envisionin­g it as an extension of the campus where Haven Avenue overlooks the Hudson River from atop a steep rise. Seen from the south, the sidewalk seems to disappear into the structure’s lobby and exterior stairs; on the second floor, lobby and stairs merge, winding up from there to the building’s crown like a charmed snake. Weaving in and out through walls of clear and fritted glass, this concrete ribbon looks as if it might be holding up the entire 14 storeys, albeit wobblingly.

In fact, the centre derives its strength from a site-formed reinforced concrete core, while the external ribbon is the building’s stairwell. A New York high rise’s structural and circulatio­n systems are usually entwined, says DS+R co-founder Elizabeth Diller, but she also notes that burying stairs within the building core dissuades people from using them. By stacking classrooms and offices to the north, cantilever­ing the facility’s stairwell outward so that it seems to emerge through the southern facade, “We created an opportunit­y to encourage students’ movement, and to make that an event for the public to see.”

Diller explains that her team “pushed and pulled” at the stair and its oversized landings – known collective­ly as the “study cascade” – to change their size, shape and orientatio­n from floor to floor. At the building’s tapered top, for instance, the landing forks into a sun-drenched student lounge and a glass-enclosed conference room that overlooks the George Washington Bridge. Below this aerie, the cascade penetrates the envelope to become an enclosed balcony; elsewhere, it expands into an amphitheat­re, shrinks into intimate zones for focused work, and spreads out across the floor plane to accommodat­e the student commons – a double-height space with a café and lounge at the heart of the building.

Space dictates program in DS+R’S scheme, and just like the public street that inspired it, the cascade also leaves nooks and crannies open to individual uses. By eschewing the standard switchback stair, DS+R has provided graduate and medical students with a university quadrangle’s worth of experience­s.

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 ??  ?? A 275-seat auditorium, bordered by glass curtain walls on two sides, exits directly onto a second-floor terrace overlookin­g the Hudson River.
Highly visible from the street, the centre’s public zones are stacked along the southern facade.
The...
A 275-seat auditorium, bordered by glass curtain walls on two sides, exits directly onto a second-floor terrace overlookin­g the Hudson River. Highly visible from the street, the centre’s public zones are stacked along the southern facade. The...
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