Rolex Learning Center
SANAA
Lausanne, Switzerland
The Rolex Learning Center is above all a library and learning space devoted to the cultivation of knowledge by an array of different methods.
It has one of the largest collections of scientific literature
in Europe, with over 500,000 volumes. In addition, an exciting
range of new pedagogical technologies in the building, as well as
the layout itself, are innovations to the public's approach to
texts and learning.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
Located centrally on the EPFL campus, and its new hub, the
building is essentially one continuous structure spread over the
site. The building is rectangular in plan, but appears to be more
organic in shape because of the way that its roof and floor
undulate gently, always in parallel. With few visible supports, the
building touches the ground lightly, leaving an expanse of open
space beneath, which draws people from all sides towards a central
entrance.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
The most audacious aspect of the new library is its lack of
physical boundaries. The large open space is defined by its
artificial geography. It groups silent and calm zones along its
hills and slopes, rather than offering traditional cloistered study
rooms. As well as providing social areas and an impressive
auditorium, the building lends itself to the establishment of quiet
zones and silent zones, acoustically separated areas created
through changes in height.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
The slopes, valleys and plateaus within the building, as well as
the shapes made by the patios, all contribute to these barrier-free
delineations of space. In addition, clusters of glazed or walled
"bubbles" make small enclosures for small groups to meet or work
together in.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
Inside, the hills, valleys and plateaus formed by the undulation
often make the edges of the building invisible, though there are no
visual barriers between one area and the next. Instead of steps and
staircases, there are gentle slopes and terraces.
Clearly, but without dividing walls, one area of activity gives
way to another. Visitors stroll up the gentle curves, or perhaps
move around the space on one of the specially designed "horizontal
lifts," elegant glass boxes, whose engineering is adapted from
everyday lift design.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
The topography lends an extraordinary fluidity to the building's
flexible open plan - a flow that is emphasized by fourteen voids in
the structure, of varying dimensions. These are glazed and create a
series of softly rounded external 'patios', as the architects
describe them. The patios are social spaces and provide a visual
link between the inside and the outside. They are very much part of
the building.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
We did not make a normal one-room space but incorporated patios and topography to organize the program such that each is separated and connected at the same time. The large one-room space undulates up and down creating an open space under the building so that people can walk to the center of the building. This enabled us to make one main entrance at the center of the building./SANAA
The Rolex Learning Center is a highly energy-efficient building
which, for its low energy consumption, has received the coveted
Minergie label - the standard used in Switzerland for measuring
environmental excellence in buildings.

Model photo courtesy
SANAA

Model photo courtesy
SANAA

Rendering courtesy SANAA

Rendering courtesy SANAA
Facts about Rolex Learning Center
Site Area:
288,714 ft2
Footprint: 66,273 ft2
Floor Area: 121,391 ft2
Architects:
Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa
Project Team:
Yumiko Yamada
Rikiya Yamamoto
Osamu Kato
Naoto Noguchi
Mizuko Kaji
Takayuki Hasegawa
Louis-Antoine Grego
Contractor:
Losinger Construction SA
Project Management:
Botta Management Group AG
Local Architect:
Structural Base Concept:
SAPS / Sasaki and Partners
Structural Engineers:
B+G Ingenieure Bollinger
Grohmann GmbH
Photographed by Iwan Baan
Last updated: January 14, 2013
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