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Lessons from the Social Condensers: Form as Function in the Rubenstein Commons

Concepts of ‘intertwining’ and ‘social condenser’ drove the design of the Rubenstein Commons at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton by Steven Holl Architects.

by Anna BokovPublished on : Mar 21, 2023

The new Rubenstein Commons building at the Institute for Advanced Study, designed by Steven Holl Architects, stands in stark contrast to the explicitly functionalist forms of other modern buildings on campus: the Member housing, designed by Marcel Breuer, or even the welcoming but austere (what's known as 'brutalist’) spaces of the dining hall, designed by Robert Geddes.

The new building forms an intertwining through the landscape, connecting with pools of water on the north, south, and west, reflecting sunlight into the interiors, while natural phenomena connect with science, physics, humanities, and art—corresponding to the Institute’s mission | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
The new building forms an intertwining through the landscape, connecting with pools of water on the north, south, and west, reflecting sunlight into the interiors, while natural phenomena connect with science, physics, humanities, and art—corresponding to the Institute’s mission Image: © Paul Warchol

As an architectural historian, I think of architecture in epistemological terms. It is my second nature to question the ideas and origins that might have informed the design decisions in a given project. What temporal and cultural connections can be made? What precedents across history and geography come to mind? What design principles can be uncovered?

The geometry of the spaces is formed by “space curves” where two non-planar curves intersect | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
The geometry of the spaces is formed by “space curves” where two non-planar curves intersect Image: © Paul Warchol

Observing this project under construction brought a number of associations to the fore, from the unexplored dimensions of cubist sculptures to the colliding forms of constructivist structures. Holl’s inspiring form-finding process made me think of some of the radical explorations in art and architecture of the early twentieth century—the period that I have been working on for the past decade, looking specifically at the links between experimental pedagogy and innovative design. This topic is central to my new book, Avant-Garde as Method, Vkhutemas and the Pedagogy of Space, 1920–1930 (Park Books, 2020), published during my time here at IAS.

View of the east entrance of Rubenstein Commons, with Fuld Hall in the distance; The Rubenstein Commons connects with existing campus circulation to allow a meandering path through the open ground floor and enhance the potential for creative exchange; its main concept of ‘intertwining’ facilitates a porous open architecture between landscape and architecture, which is inviting from all sides| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
View of the east entrance of Rubenstein Commons, with Fuld Hall in the distance; The Rubenstein Commons connects with existing campus circulation to allow a meandering path through the open ground floor and enhance the potential for creative exchange; its main concept of ‘intertwining’ facilitates a porous open architecture between landscape and architecture, which is inviting from all sides Image: © Paul Warchol

Thinking of every building as an opportunity to experiment and advance the field of architecture is something that Steven Holl shares with many of the avant-garde protagonists. Like Nikolay Ladovsky (architect, educator, leader of the Rationalist movement, and one of the protagonists of my book) a hundred years ago, Holl seems to be forging deeper connections—or ‘intertwining,’ as he calls it—which go beyond mechanical programming, bringing to life the intuitive, experiential, and phenomenological aspects of architecture.

  • Types of curved light sections—In contrast with the predominately flat ceilings of the Institute, the new Rubenstein Commons has a variety of curved ceilings and natural light; white light of the sun is occasionally split into the colour spectrum through prismatic glass | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Types of curved light sections—In contrast with the predominately flat ceilings of the Institute, the new Rubenstein Commons has a variety of curved ceilings and natural light; white light of the sun is occasionally split into the colour spectrum through prismatic glass Image: Watercolour sketches by Steven Holl (L); Model: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)
  • Five ‘space curves’ define the main social spaces on the ground floor, while the spatial energy of the interiors attracts people to linger, come to the space, and look up or work on their laptops, creating the potential for spontaneous interaction with others| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Five ‘space curves’ define the main social spaces on the ground floor, while the spatial energy of the interiors attracts people to linger, come to the space, and look up or work on their laptops, creating the potential for spontaneous interaction with others Image: Watercolour sketches by Steven Holl (L); Model: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

In fact, the concept of 'intertwining' was central to the design proposal. For Holl, it has a two-fold meaning. First, it aims to intersect the sciences and the humanities, promoting exchange between different disciplinary silos. Second, intertwining fuses architecture and nature by treating light as a material and organising the entire plan in sync with seasonal changes, turning the building into a fine-tuned horological instrument that registers natural light and space through time.

  • IAS Rubenstein Commons—concept sketch highlighting its concepts of ‘intertwining’ and ‘enmeshing’ | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    IAS Rubenstein Commons—concept sketch highlighting its concepts of ‘intertwining’ and ‘enmeshing’ Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl
  • IAS Rubenstein Commons—conceptual sketch of the ‘space curves’ | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    IAS Rubenstein Commons—conceptual sketch of the ‘space curves’ Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl

The other concept central to the design, according to Holl, is that of the 'social condenser.' The question that he asked was What are the ideal conditions for new thinking emerging today? What is thinking together?

While the IAS uniquely intersects the sciences with the humanities, a deep intertwining of these with natural phenomena is a core aim of Holl’s scheme—the concept fuses architecture and nature: the seasonal changes, the flora and fauna, and the smells and sounds are an enmeshed experience uniquely possible for the Rubenstein Commons—Sun bouncing off the pools of water projected on curved ceilings produces an atmosphere of reflection| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
While the IAS uniquely intersects the sciences with the humanities, a deep intertwining of these with natural phenomena is a core aim of Holl’s scheme—the concept fuses architecture and nature: the seasonal changes, the flora and fauna, and the smells and sounds are an enmeshed experience uniquely possible for the Rubenstein Commons—Sun bouncing off the pools of water projected on curved ceilings produces an atmosphere of reflection Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl

In other words, how does architectural space foster collective activity? The underlying philosophy behind the concept of a 'social condenser' is that spatial form not only affects human experience but conditions human behaviour, and can have a powerful psychological, ideological, and even educational impact: essentially, that architectural form can induce and promote social function.

Inspired by former director Robbert Dijkgraaf’s comments, the billowing ceilings allow a space for ‘thought balloons to collect’ as scholars and the community participate in academic and social exchange | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Inspired by former director Robbert Dijkgraaf’s comments, the billowing ceilings allow a space for ‘thought balloons to collect’ as scholars and the community participate in academic and social exchange Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl (L); © Paul Warchol (R)

As the building materialised it became clear, even from the outside, that Rubenstein Commons was challenging one of the most common tenets of modern architecture, that form follows function. In fact, I would argue, it is part of a different tradition in architectural thinking, where form is not a derivative of function but instead, functions as its generator. My goal is to situate some of the underlying ideas behind the Rubenstein Commons within a larger historical context—specifically by examining the notion of the social condenser and questioning the intertwined relationship between form and function that has been foundational for modern architecture for much of the twentieth century and continues to be in the twenty-first.

Working from the inside out to explore the language of space curves shaping inspiring interiors for scholarly exchange (top); Iterative process with a constant exchange between watercolour sketches and physical models (bottom)| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Working from the inside out to explore the language of space curves shaping inspiring interiors for scholarly exchange (top); Iterative process with a constant exchange between watercolour sketches and physical models (bottom) Image: Watercolour sketches by Steven Holl (L); © Paul Warchol (R)

The Architecture of Rubenstein Commons

The IAS, of course, has its own set of radical foundational principles, central among them is 'the unobstructed pursuit of knowledge' and continuous 'advancement' of its frontiers. Or as Robbert Dijkgraaf puts it, 'curiosity-driven groundbreaking research.'

"The pursuit of knowledge for its own sake is not a product that can be made to order," founding Director Abraham Flexner argued. As he keenly observed, Institute scholars are "like poets and musicians, (who) have won the right to do as they please and to accomplish most when enabled to do so." This kind of research—like artistic creativity—benefits from a 'special environment.'

Conceptual model for the Rubenstein Commons | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Conceptual model for the Rubenstein Commons Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

The Rubenstein Commons is an embodiment of the educational Institute's mission of 'bringing great minds together' (as was eloquently put by David Rubenstein at the groundbreaking ceremony on March 14, 2018), and is an interpretation of Flexner's idea of 'community' as the interconnectedness of social and physical form.

Conceptual model showing how the dimensions of the project are all shaped by a proportional fine tuner based on the Fibonacci sequence | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Conceptual model showing how the dimensions of the project are all shaped by a proportional fine tuner based on the Fibonacci sequence Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Holl proposed an open, one-level plan, which combines several loosely defined zones with clear visual connections. This type of spatial organisation allows one to use the space in multiple ways—from individual repose to collaborative interaction, and, of course, for a variety of collective events. With its picturesque aggregation of billowing roofscapes (for those percolating thought bubbles) and the cluster of intersecting (or intertwining) spaces, the new commons building seems to invite one inside for further inquiry.

Inside IAS Rubenstein Commons, where one level is intertwined with gardens | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Inside IAS Rubenstein Commons, where one level is intertwined with gardens Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl

The playful geometry of its forms lets the mind wander and search for associations with manmade and natural phenomena around it. If you are a mathematician, you might be reading into the patterns of light dancing across the ceiling (reflected from the pools through the prismatic glass). For a historian, its complex forms might bring a sense of wonder but also connections with patterns of the past. Ultimately, its architecture inspires the experience both within and outside one’s field of knowledge.

Watercolor studies for custom carpets in the living room interior (top); The ‘elemental language’ of the Rubenstein Commons (bottom)| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Top: Watercolour studies for custom carpets in the living room interior; Bottom: The 'elemental language' of the Rubenstein Commons Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl

Echoing the founding tenet of the Institute about the usefulness of useless knowledge (in this case, one might say the usefulness of unscripted space) in Holl’s project, each area does not necessarily have a prescribed use or set of activities. Here, space is not a passive agent but a “material of architecture,” to quote Ladovsky, which facilitates human experience and inspires social interaction.

Workers' Club as Social Condenser

The term 'social condenser' was coined by Constructivist architects in the late 1920s, about a decade after the Bolshevik revolution. They sought to construct a new 'social type,' where 'all the elements and parts of a building, without exception, stem from their social and technical function.1 Constructivists applied this concept to a range of architectural and urban structures, including 'communal housing, workers' clubs, palaces of labour, administrative buildings, and even factories.' All of these were supposed to become 'conductors and condensers of socialist culture.'2

There are 49 precast concrete panels on the exterior of the building, which are both structure and exterior finish (L); Ground floor plan (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
L: There are 49 precast concrete panels on the exterior of the building, which are both structure and exterior finish (L); R: Ground floor plan (R) Image: © Paul Warchol (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

Most consistently, the concept of a social condenser was tested and interpreted in the typology known as the workers’ club. This group of projects, both built and unbuilt, tended to have a characteristically expressive dynamic form meant to ‘conduct and condense’ a host of collective activities. While public assembly, performance, and education were historically the major functions of a workers’ club, it was neither a city hall, a theatre, nor a school; rather, it was a new hybrid typology, hence requiring the new term.

  • There are 21 lites of prismatic glass at the south, east, and west elevations to mark the path of the sun through the different seasons (L); Mezzanine floor plan (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    There are 21 lites of prismatic glass at the south, east, and west elevations to mark the path of the sun through the different seasons (L); Mezzanine floor plan (R) Image: © Paul Warchol (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)
  • Roof study (L); Roof plan (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Roof study (L); Roof plan (R) Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

Starting with the workers’ club prototype designed by Alexander Rodchenko for the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts in Paris in 1925, designers sought to graft the emerging forms of collective life through these new environments, treating them as showcases of the new lifestyle. The most prolific contribution to the new typology belongs to architect Konstantin Melnikov, who designed half a dozen workers’ clubs in the late 1920s.

13 interior walls of the building are slate blackboard—field-tested by IAS Faculty prior to installation (L); Section (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
13 interior walls of the building are slate blackboard—field-tested by IAS Faculty prior to installation (L); Section (R) Image: © Paul Warchol (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

His iconic Rusakov Club, constructed in 1927–28, offered an inventive design solution to the relationship between the three primary programmatic components of the club: assembly, performance, and education. The club inverted the traditional relationship between the inside and outside by directly pushing the entry sequence outside and celebrating public procession. This idea was further manifested through the spatial and organisational structure of the entrance, foyer and auditorium zones. The auditorium component here becomes visually active, shaping the exterior as if turning the building inside out. Melnikov conceived the club as a system of auditoriums of different sizes separated by moveable partitions. According to his plan, when needed, these auditoriums could be combined into a composite performance and meeting space. Here, programmatic transformation manifests itself through spatial re-combination in two major ways: the auditorium subdivision and the expandable foyer.

Hand blown lighting fixtures conceived by Steven Holl in watercolors stemmed by SHA’s research on non-euclidean geometry—pendants with one, two, and three intersecting forms were implemented and influenced by the space curves seen in the building’s geometry (L); Section (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Hand blown lighting fixtures conceived by Steven Holl in watercolors stemmed by SHA’s research on non-euclidean geometry—pendants with one, two, and three intersecting forms were implemented and influenced by the space curves seen in the building’s geometry (L); Section (R) Image: © Paul Warchol (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

Formalists and Functionalists

Finding a perfect solution for the architecture of a social condenser became a subject of intense polemic in the design studios at the higher art and technical studios, known as Vkhutemas, a multidisciplinary design school active in Moscow in the 1920s. This intense process of experimentation resulted in buildings that vary greatly in terms of their compositional and organisational configurations. Perhaps more than other building typology, the workers’ club reflected the difference in approaches between the two major camps in Russian avant-garde architecture of the 1920s—Constructivists and Rationalists. The main point of contention between these groups was the relationship between function and form.

Every room has natural light and an operable window, except the basement (L); Section (R) | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Every room has natural light and an operable window, except the basement (L); Section (R) Image: © Paul Warchol (L); Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects (R)

For Constructivists, form was a derivative of function. The visible was less significant than (and, in fact, subordinate to) the invisible forces, like circulation patterns and technological processes. In other words, form was bound by the pragmatic approach articulated by their Western-European contemporaries, most notably Walter Gropius—the first director of the Bauhaus—and his successor Hannes Meyer, who thought of building as pure organisation, in every aspect: social, technical, economic and physical.

And, of course, Le Corbusier, who looked at architecture through the ‘criteria of economy’ and famously treated buildings as ‘machines-for-living,’ equivalent to mass-production objects. (Though, later in life, right around the time he visited Einstein’s home in Princeton in 1946,3 he embraced what I would call a more mediated approach, focusing on the human body instead of machines.)

The door pulls, conceived in watercolours by Steven Holl were inspired by Knot Theory, was prototyped in Steven Holl Architects’ workshop and were ultimately produced by local Princeton-based metal artist, Francois Gullemin | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
The door pulls, conceived in watercolours by Steven Holl were inspired by Knot Theory, was prototyped in Steven Holl Architects’ workshop and were ultimately produced by local Princeton-based metal artist, Francois Gullemin Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

The modern buildings on campus, up until this point, can be attributed to this functionalist influence and, in fact, were designed by the disciples of Gropius. Robert Geddes, who designed the dining hall, was a student of Gropius at Harvard Graduate School of Design. Breuer followed Gropius from the Bauhaus to Harvard and was hired to design the Institute Members’ housing in 1955.

By contrast, for the Rationalist architects form was not exhausted by the notions of use, structure, or technology, as it was for their colleagues. Instead, architecture was grounded in the timeless and universal properties, ostensibly present in spatial form and manifested in its perception. These formal properties included (according to them) geometry, size, position in space, mass, texture, relations and proportions, rhythm, and various types of composition.

Watercolor sketches during the design competition in the search for an architectural language for Rubenstein Commons | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Watercolor sketches during the design competition in the search for an architectural language for Rubenstein Commons Image: Watercolour sketches by Steven Holl

This approach echoed, I would argue, the work of expressionist architects, such as Erich Mendelsohn, manifested in his famous Einstein Tower, the astrophysical observatory completed in Potsdam in 1921. Mendelsohn made numerous sketches with an attempt to create a structure that would reflect Einstein’s groundbreaking theories, letting it emerge from what he called the mystique around Einstein’s universe.

Model studies complemented this process and provoked further design explorations | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
Model studies complemented this process and provoked further design explorations Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Instead of precisely defining the activities inside it, the Rubenstein Commons creates a space between—not just between walls, but between life and architecture. Like a hadron collider, the building smashes atoms (or, to paraphrase David Rubenstein, collides great brains together), in order to expand the horizon of our knowledge and collective human consciousness. It is not simply about giving form to life but rather allowing life to unfold in its most unpredictable form. As one of the greatest architects of our time, the late Paulo Mendes da Rocha, told Hashim Sarkis,4 “architecture is the art of delineating life’s unpredictability.”5

The verdigris copper roofs connect to Fuld Hall putting the Commons in dialogue with the past while presenting a vision for the future of the Institute | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
The verdigris copper roofs connect to Fuld Hall putting the Commons in dialogue with the past while presenting a vision for the future of the Institute Image: Watercolour sketch by Steven Holl; © Paul Warchol; Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Indeed, the language of architecture is not verbal. Rather, it is visual and spatial. Unlike other languages—mathematics, to name one—the language of architecture is accessible to all. Perhaps it is comparable to music in that sense; it is universal. Architecture speaks to us through its volumes and spaces, through structure and tectonics, texture and materials, through scale and proportions, through literal and phenomenal transparency. So much is communicated and understood through bodily experience and perception—without words and, as with any text, in between the lines.

  • Layout plan of Rubenstein Commons | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Layout plan of Rubenstein Commons Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects
  • Elevations | Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Elevations Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects
  • Diagram of geothermal heating and cooling—20 geothermal wells powered by the cycle of the earth’s seasonal temperature heat and cool the building with radiant floors, while natural ventilation in wood framed windows bring light and air into all spaces| Rubenstein Commons by Steven Holl Architects | STIRworld
    Diagram of geothermal heating and cooling—20 geothermal wells powered by the cycle of the earth’s seasonal temperature heat and cool the building with radiant floors, while natural ventilation in wood framed windows bring light and air into all spaces Image: Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects

Originally published in 'The Institute Letter Fall 2021', Anna Bokov was an IAS visiting scholar focusing on Vkhutemas history. She wrote this text during the design and construction period of the Rubenstein Commons.

References

1.The Resolution on the Reports of the Ideological Section of the OSA, ratified at the First Conference of the Society of Contemporary Architects in Moscow April 25, 1928. In Sovremennaya Arkhitektura [Contemporary Architecture], Issue No. 3. Eds. Gan Alexey, Moisey Ginzburg. Moscow, 1928, 78. Author’s translation.
2.Ibid.
3.“Albert Einstein, Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, and the Future of the American City” by Milton Cameron, Institute Letter, Spring 2014
4.Hashim Sarkis is Dean of the School of Architecture and Planning at MIT and founding principal of Hashim Sarkis Studios.
5.Sarkis, Hashim. “Precisely Unpredictable: On the Architecture of Paulo Mendes da Rocha (1928–2021).” Facebook. May 25, 2021.

Project Details

Name: Rubenstein Commons
Location: Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Area: 1,595.60 sqm
Building Footprint: 893.72 sqm
Year of completion: 2022
Architect and Interior Designer: Steven Holl Architects
Design team: Steven Holl (Design Architect, Principal), Noah Yaffe (Partner in Charge), Christina Yessios (Project Architect), Yun Shi (Assistant Project Architect), Marcus Carter, Alessandra Catherina Calaguire, Michael Haddy, Magdalena Naydekova (Project Team), Xi Chen, Carolina Cohen Freue, Michael Haddy (Competition Team)
Construction: W.S. Cumby Construction - Michael O’Brien (Vice President), Brett Heisey (Project Manager), Kyle Gordon, Mike Bonacci (Project Superintendent), Josh Garnant, William Ruben (Project Engineer)
Structural Engineers: Guy Nordenson & Associates
Mechanical Engineers: ICOR Associates
Landscape Architects: Hollander Design
Facade Consultant: Knippers Helbig
Civil Engineers: Van Note-Harvey Associates
Owners Commission Agent: Aramark
Lighting Design: L’Observatoire International
Food Service Design: JME Hospitality Marketing
Water Feature Design: Aqua Design International
Geothermal Design: Wellspring Geothermal
Climate Engineers: Transsolar Inc.

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