Construction Update Field Condition Construction Update Field Condition

Columbia University Manhattanville Campus

Southeast corner of the Science Center.

Construction is wrapping up at Renzo Piano's Jerome L. Greene Science Center, the first building for Columbia University's Manhattanville Campus expansion. Set to open Spring 2017, the 9-story, 450,000 square-foot building will bring together researchers from across the University including the Columbia University Medical Center, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science. The ground floor will house the Center for Education and Outreach, a public education center focused on brain science that will serve the general public and K-12 schools.

Looking east towards the Manhattanville Expansion campus.

Work is also wrapping up on the Lenfest Center for the Arts, the smaller structure located adjacent to the Science Center.  Also designed by the Renzo Piano Building Workshop (RPBW), the Center for the Arts houses galleries, performance spaces, a screening room, and offices in an eight-story structure.  A unitized panel system of white metal and glass clads the exterior, a similar look to the firm's new Whitney Museum at the High Line.

Southeast corner of the Science Center.

The third RPBW building in Columbia University's master plan for the Manhattanville campus, the Academic Conference Center, has reached ground level. Located south of the Science Center, it will house a 400-seat auditorium and state-of-the-art seminar and meeting rooms inside a five-story structure.

The site of the Academic Conference Center (center) and the Science Center (right).

South facade of the Science Center(center) and Center for the Arts (left) from the 125th Street subway station.

Southeast corner of the Science Center at West 129th Street.

Ground floor façade of the Science Center.

Architects: Renzo Piano Building Workshop with Davis Brody Bond LLP (Science Center and Center for the Arts), RPBW with Dattner Architects (Academic Conference Center); Structure: WSP; MEP Engineer: Jaros, Baum & Bolles; Facade Consultant: IBA; Landscape Architect: James Corner Field Operations; Program: Education; Location: Manhattanville, New York, NY; Completion: 2017 (Science Center and Center for the Arts), 2018 (Academic Conference Center).

 
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Construction Update Field Condition Construction Update Field Condition

Spring Street Salt Shed

Dattner Architects and WXY's Spring Street Salt Shed had its first real test this past weekend, helping to dig out from New York City's second largest snowfall on record.

The onslaught of snow storm Jonas, New York City's second largest snowfall on record, brought the first real test for the city's new salt shed at Spring Street and the West Side Highway. Designed by Dattner Architects and WXY Architecture + Urban Design, the faceted concrete salt shed houses 4,000 tons of salt to combat the wintry precipitation. The form tapers towards the bottom, with glass pavers and lights installed along the periphery for dramatic uplighting of the structure at night. Entry gates along the Spring and Canal Street access points feature the "DSNY" identifier rendered in twisted vertical metal pickets, providing a graceful touch of design to what is often mundanely treated.

As a companion piece with the recently opened sanitation garage, the salt shed serves as a contemporary precedent for how urban infrastructure can serve to echo the values and aspirations of a city's architectural character.  

Sanitation trucks head into the Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage after a long day of plowing the aftermath of snow storm Jonas.

Looking south along the West Side Highway towards the Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (left) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (right).

The Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (left) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (right).

The Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (left) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (right).

The Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (left) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (right).

Looking north along the West Side Highway towards the Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (left) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (right).

Southeast corner of the Spring Street Salt Shed. 

Southeast corner of the Spring Street Salt Shed. 

Southeast corner of the Spring Street Salt Shed. 

East facade of the Spring Street Salt Shed.

Close up of the sidewalk uplighting.

North facade of the Spring Street Salt Shed.

Northeast corner of the Spring Street Salt Shed.

Northeast corner of the Spring Street Salt Shed.

Looking west along Spring Street towards the Manhattan Districts 1/2/5 Garage (right) and the Spring Street Salt Shed (left).

ArchitectDattner Architects and WXY Architecture + Urban DesignClient: New York City Department of Sanitation; Program: Infrastructure; Location: Hudson Square, New York, NY; Completion: 2015.

 
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