Beyer Blinder Belle to Design Schwarzman Center

Yale University is pleased to announce that the firm of Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners LLP has been selected to design the new Schwarzman Center.
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The 84,000-square-foot complex was constructed for Yale’s Bicentennial in 1901, and now will be reimagined for students of this century.

Yale University is pleased to announce that the firm of Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners LLP has been selected to design the new Schwarzman Center, which will transform the current Commons and Memorial Hall into Yale’s first university-wide student center. This project provides the opportunity to take the 84,000-square-foot complex, constructed for Yale’s Bicentennial in 1901, and reimagine it for students of this century.

Founded in 1968, Beyer Blinder Belle is widely acclaimed for renovating and revitalizing landmark buildings and sites, as exemplified by its 25-year involvement in the restoration and ongoing stewardship of Grand Central Terminal in New York City. More recently the firm completed master planning for the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a comprehensive building plan for the Kennedy Center, a major renovation of New York City Hall, and is designing ongoing House Renewal projects at Harvard University. In addition to its work on historic buildings, the firm has designed new buildings and adaptive reuse projects for a number of colleges and universities. 

The selection of Beyer Blinder Belle followed an extensive RFP process conducted during the course of the summer.

“Steve Schwarzman’s visionary philanthropy has enabled us to undertake a project that will transform student and campus life at Yale, and Beyer Blinder Belle is an ideal partner for us in this endeavor,” said Yale University President Peter Salovey. “I was impressed by the firm’s ability to take distinguished buildings and renovate them for imaginative new uses while preserving their architectural heritage, and I am confident that they will help us create an exceptional university-wide student center.”

The Schwarzman Center will be transformative for Yale in providing, for the first time, a center dedicated to cultural programming and student life at the center of the university. It is being designed to draw together students and faculty from all of Yale’s schools and colleges, and with the help of state-of-the-art technology, enable virtual engagement with the outside world in a dynamic way never regularly undertaken at Yale. The goals include creating an exciting intellectual and social center where students across schools and disciplines share ideas, collaborate, and find inspiration with a vibrant set of activities going on each day.

“We are excited to be partnering with Yale on the creation of the Schwarzman Center and by the opportunity to guide the transformation of Commons and Memorial Hall into a vibrant new center for student life,” said Elizabeth Leber, Partner-in-Charge for Beyer Blinder Belle. “We look forward to getting to know the Yale community and their vision for the project, and to translating that vision into an extraordinary architectural reality.”

The entire Yale community is being invited to participate in imagining how the goals for the center can best be realized. President Salovey appointed a committee of 12 students, four deans, and 11 other faculty and senior administrators to advise him on the project. Members of the committee are currently engaged in extensive outreach to all parts of the campus to solicit ideas.  Input from the student body is critical, and the committee is holding approximately fifty student “Listening Tours” this month, with visits to every residential college and professional school. 

The Center is expected to open in 2020.

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Media Contact

Tom Conroy: tom.conroy@yale.edu, 203-432-1345

Christina Mathews: cmathews@bbbarch.com, 212–353–6776