Project Details
- Project Name
- Toulouse School of Economics
- Architect
- Grafton Architects
- Client/Owner
- Université Toulouse 1 Capitole
- Project Types
- Education
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 193,752 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2019
- Shared by
- Madeleine D'Angelo
- Project Status
- Built
Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara, founding partners of Grafton Architects, are the 2020 Pritzker Architecture Prize Laureates and the winners of the 2020 RIBA Gold Medal.
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
World Without Limits:
The breach in the historic city wall is seen as an opportunity, to see boundaries not as limits, but as ‘thresholds’ to be crossed and held. Positioned on this key site, at the break in the wall, at the turning of the canal, at the junction with the Garonne, this location for the new Toulouse School of Economics is a pivotal one, both for the University and for the city.
Elements of Toulouse
For us, Toulouse is a city of bridges, quay walls, city walls, ramps, promenades, brick buttresses, brick and stone towers, mysterious cool interiors and cloisters, archways and courtyards. The big space of the meandering Garonne provides the wide horizon, the sense of connection with the landscape beyond. The linear manmade, tree-lined canal cuts through the city and sets up framed , axial, linear spaces . Historically and intellectually, Universities are the life-blood of Toulouse. We have made a composition of the re-interpreted elements of Toulouse: the buttresses, the walls, the ramps, the cool mysterious interiors, the cloisters and the courtyards.
The Pleasures of Place
The new TSE building draws in the social space of St.Pierre des Cuisines and closes the vista from that Square. The brick façade of St.Pierre des Cuisine Church combines with the two beautiful mature plane trees, which stand close by, to form the immediate eastern enclosure of this new city space.
Intrigue and Mystery: Light, Shadow and Shade
In order to provide places of research and education which are pleasurable to work in, we have devised a building strategy, where the individual office ‘bars’ are 10.8 m deep, thus providing natural air, light and ventilation to each office. Each office ‘bar’ is considered for its particular orientation and each given a particular profiled elevation to protect the rooms within. This methodology is also used at the large scale, where the ‘specials’ - for example, the Seminar Rooms and terraces- are strategically placed, both symbolically on the public / city wall edge, and to the south environmentally , allowing us to position these large volumes with very little fenestration, to act as a ‘deep wall’, controlling light, shadow and shade.
Project Credits:
Project: Toulouse School of Economics
Architects: Grafton Architects
Local Architect Vigneu Zilio Architectes
M&E Engineer Chapman BDSP
M&E Engineer (Subconsultant) OTEIS
Quantity Surveyor Gleeds
Fire Safety Vulcaneo