Yale University New Residence Hall
New Haven, Connecticut
Yale University
124,000 square feet
Because
this was a design-build project, its budget was about half the cost of a typical
residence hall at a private university. We chose simple vernacular forms to
express continuity with its residential neighbors and to act as a foil for the
monumental Payne Whitney Gym and the University Power Plant.
The new residence hall continues the Yale residential college tradition of low
buildings with towers defining courtyards, vistas and portals. It is brick with
a lead-coated copper roof and a mass defined by gables, chimneys, bay windows
and dormers. A central courtyard planted with American Elms serves as an outdoor
"living room" with informal paths, terraces and seating. The design solves Yale
University's dilemma of undertaking extensive renovations to its twelve residential
colleges without disrupting the lives of the students who inhabit them. It allows
Yale to begin the renovations systematically, one by one, while providing interim
housing for the students of each college under renovation. It is the first new
residence hall to be built on the campus since 1961.
