Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center
Education
The Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg Center is a state-of-the art facility for new research, education, and public engagement, built to strengthen the university’s presence in Washington, D.C. and provide a lasting foundation for its academic legacy. The Center’s design was a collaboration between Rockwell Group (Interior Architect), Ennead Architects (Exterior Architect) and SmithGroup (Architect of Record) and breaks down the barriers between academic disciplines to create true common ground for communication and collaboration among Hopkins students, faculty, and the community.
- Client
- Johns Hopkins University
- Project Category
- Education
- Selected Awards
-
- AIA|DC Chapter Design Awards: Architecture Award
- Architecture Masterprize: Architectural Design of the Year
- Prix Versailles World Architecture & Design Awards: World's Most Beautiful Campuses List
- Selected Press
The team reimagined the building's interior, formerly the free press-dedicated “Newseum,” by creating a ten-story vertical quad to support a myriad of academic purposes and public gatherings. Adaptable classrooms, multiple lounge areas, and convening spaces rise in various configurations from within and around an open, dynamic atrium, emphasizing a flexible atmosphere to support the needs of multiple graduate schools, academic programs, and future uses.
Encouraging Spontaneous Connections
Within the soaring atrium, a central staircase winds through a series of suspended glass classrooms and open lounges reminiscent of a treehouse, encouraging interaction among students and faculty as they move through the space.
On the east side of the atrium, a large floating glass classroom hangs from a pair of steel bridge girders, supporting a lounge for sound-proof studying and meetings above.
We took a detail-oriented approach to the building’s 38 state-of-the-art classrooms, numerous study lounges, conference center, meeting rooms, faculty lounges, and landscaped roof terraces, while uniting them with a warm and varied material palette. Layered, often intimate spaces help balance the buoyant vibrancy of the atrium with peaceful, comforting environments.
Transparent connections and large landscaped terraces provide students with panoramic views, and foster a more direct connection to the national and global discourse on Capitol Hill, and in Washington D.C.
“How people move, interact, and meet is at the core of every inch of the building.”