Seona Reid Building, Glasgow School of Art
25. May 2015
In 2009 Steven Holl Architects won a two-stage competition for a building to house the Glasgow School of Art's design department. Located across the street from Charles Rennie Mackintosh's 1909 Arts and Crafts landmark, Holl responded through contrast – glass instead of stone – and an inward plan oriented about "driven voids of light." Holl's office sent us some images and text on the building, which opened in spring 2014.
The Seona Reid Building is in complementary contrast to Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s 1909 Glasgow School of Art – forging a symbiotic relation in which each structure heightens the integral qualities of the other. A thin translucent materiality in considered contrast to the masonry of the Mackintosh building – volumes of light which express the school’s activity in the urban fabric embodying a forward-looking life for the arts.
This project’s unique interior and exterior forces on the design are the catalysts for creating a new 21st century model for the art school. Working simultaneously from the inside out – engaging the functional needs and psychological desires of the program – and the outside in – making connections to the city campus and relating to the Mackintosh building opposite – the design embodies the school’s aspirations in the city’s fabric.
Mackintosh’s amazing manipulation of the building section for light in inventive ways has inspired our approach towards a plan of volumes in different light. The studio/workshop is the basic building block of the building. Spaces have been located not only to reflect their interdependent relationships but also their varying needs for natural light. Studios are positioned on the north façade with large inclined north facing glazing to maximize access to the desirable high quality diffuse north light. Spaces that do not have a requirement for the same quality of natural light, such as the refectory and offices, are located on the South façade where access to sunlight can be balanced with the occupants needs and the thermal performance of the space through application of shading.
“Driven voids of light” allow for the integration of structure, spatial modulation and light. The “Driven Void” light shafts deliver natural light through the depth of the building providing direct connectivity with the outside world through the changing intensity and color of the sky. In addition, they provide vertical circulation through the building, eliminating the need for air conditioning.
Along the South elevation, at the same height as the Mackintosh main studios, a landscape loggia in the form of a Machair gives the school an exterior social core open to the city. The natural vegetation with some stone work routes the water into a small recycling water pond which will reflect dappled sunlight onto the ceiling inside.
A ‘Circuit of Connection’ throughout the new GSA encourages the ‘creative abrasion’ across and between departments that is central to the workings of the school. The open circuit of stepped ramps links all major spaces – lobby, exhibition space, project spaces, lecture theater, seminar rooms, studios, workshops and green terraces for informal gatherings and exhibitions.
Daylight diagram
Sustainability diagram
Seona Reid Building, Glasgow School of Art
2014Glasgow, Scotland
Client
The Glasgow School of Art
Architect
Steven Holl Architects
New York, NY, USA
Design Architects
Steven Holl, Chris McVoy
Partners in Charge
Chris McVoy, Noah Yaffe
Project Architect
Dominik Sigg
Assistant Project Architect
Dimitra Tsachrelia
Project Team
Rychiee Espinosa, Scott Fredricks, JongSeo Lee, Jackie Luk, Fiorenza Matteoni, Ebbie Wisecarver
Competition Team
Dominik Sigg, Peter Adams, Rychiee Espinosa
Associate Architects
JM Architects
Project Manager
Turner & Townsend
General Contractor
Sir Robert McAlpine
Engineer
Ove Arup & Partners
Quantity Surveyor
Turner & Townsend
Landscape Architect
Michael Van Valkenburgh and Associates
CDM Coordinator
Cyril Sweett
Planning
Turley Associates
Photographs
Iwan Baan
Models/Drawings
Steven Holl Architects
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