Princeton, New Jersey, USA
Located in the historic campus of Princeton University, the Rubenstein Commons at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton, NJ, established in 1930, is a new commons building, designed by Steven Holl, his design team, and Ed Hollander Landscape Architects.

The Rubenstein Commons, Institute for Advanced Study has recently been awarded a 2023 International Architecture Award and an Honorable Mention at the 2023 American Architecture Awards by The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
It is sited near the Institute’s flagship 1939 building Fuld Hall where Albert Einstein spent his last thinking years.
Exterior circulation weaves into and through the building.
The building is conceived as a social condenser with a variety of flexible meeting spaces supporting community and academic life on the IAS campus.

The new building follows the existing topography primarily in a single-level program with gradual slopes and offers views of the courtyards.
The building forms an intertwining through the landscape, connecting with pools of water on the north, south, and west.
The pools reflect sunlight into interior spaces, producing an atmosphere of reflection.
Natural phenomena connecting with science, physics, humanities, and art correspond to the Institute’s mission.
The geometry of the spaces is formed by “space curves” where two non-planar curves intersect.

The curved ceilings give space for the “thought bubbles” of the scholars.
Blackboards of natural slate, a storied tradition for intellectual curiosity and exchange at the IAS, line the interiors.
Prismatic glass breaks white light into the color spectrum, energizing the interiors with natural light and color.
Custom hand-blown light fixtures illuminate the curved ceiling geometry. Door handles inspired by knot theory and custom waterspouts greet visitors at the east and west entries to the building.
The landscape around the pools measures the time of a year’s passing through the four seasons.
Spring is marked on the east side with pink blooming redbuds emerging in clusters along branches of the grove.

Summer is marked to the south with rich green leaves of ginkgo trees, accented by Russian Sage purple flowers.
Fall is marked to the west with vibrant red maples and the golden gingko leaves provide a striking contrast around the south reflecting pool.
The north gardens are framed with a border of white pines and American hollies providing a green backdrop in the winter but also year-round.
Twenty geothermal wells powered by the cycle of the earth’s seasonal temperature heat and cool the building with radiant floors.
Natural ventilation in wood-framed windows brings light and air into all spaces.



Project: Rubenstein Commons, Institute for Advanced Study
Architects: Steven Holl Architects
Lead Architect: Steven Holl
Partner In Charge: Noah Yaffe
Project Architect Associate: Christina Yessios
Lighting Design: L’Observatoire International
Assistant Project Architect: Yun Shi
Landscape Architects: Ed Hollander Landscape Architects
General Contractor: W.S. Cumby
Client: Institute for Advanced Study
Photographers: Paul Warchol













