Bernard
Tschumi Architects Selected for new Building at Le Rosey
Bernard Tschumi Architects has won an international invited
competition to design a new center for the performing arts at Institut
Le Rosey, the renowned boarding school in Switzerland. The new building
will be named Carnal Hall after the school’s founder, Paul Carnal.
Le Rosey is located on the shores of Lake Geneva, near Rolle. Among the
most prestigious educational institutions in Europe, the school is alma
mater to diplomats, business leaders, and royalty. The existing campus
has a cohesive, traditional architecture marked by mansard roofs and a
wedge-shaped campus plan that opens onto the site, defining an
open-ended court. The design began with the question of how to expand
the campus with a contemporary building, fostering a dialogue between
tradition and modernity, while updating the arts and performance
facilities for a new generation of students.
The winning scheme proposes a low, stainless-steel dome that defines the
site and spatially organizes the disparate parts of the program: an
800-seat concert hall, a black box theater, conference rooms, a learning
center joined to a library, a teaching center, practice rooms for music
and the arts, and several relaxation spaces featuring a restaurant, a
cafe, a student lounge, and other amenities.
A series of side openings articulates the periphery of the dome, and a
terrace is cut into the center near the apex, offering views of Lake
Geneva. The main interior space is the concert hall, with programmatic
zones around its periphery that are articulated into an architectural
promenade.
From the campus, the keystone-shaped terminus of the quadrangle forms a
ceremonial entrance to the project and the slope of the dome echoes the
undulating landscape near Rolle. The reflective steel will provide a
distinctive identity and a landmark for the school and the region.
The building’s compact shape minimizes its external surface area, acting
as a thermal shield. This provision reduces energy consumption and
shelters the large interior spaces under the dome with a minimum of
material. The reflective polished steel offers additional energy
savings over traditional cladding materials and shelters the glazed
areas from sun and inclement weather.
Source: Bustler