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The central 'living room' tying the spaces together is sure to become a new arena for both expressing and witnessing the student experience at Johns Hopkins.”

Leon Rost — Partner, BIG

The Bloomberg Student Center is encircled by a 270-ft-diameter brick staircase that connects to a series of terraces and green spaces designed by MVVA.

Shaped through in-depth research into the students’ needs, the building is transparent by design, welcoming daylight from all sides and offering views into the ever-changing mosaic of student life within.

 

Photovoltaic panels topping the roofs generate more than half of the center’s electricity, while the careful avoidance of materials on the Living Building Challenge Red List ensures a healthier environment for users.

Stone pavements from the park continue into the main foyer, which acts as an urban living room, where two central timber staircases lead visitors through the building. The result is a three-dimensional public park open and accessible from all sides, with expansive views in all directions – to the old city and the new, to Lohse Park and the industrial port.

THE SAIL — The building integrates with the site through fluid connections between inside and outside, fostering spaces for movement and gathering. Paving patterns flow seamlessly from the exterior plaza to the interior, connecting the spaces – literally and figuratively – to the university’s historical past.

The topping out, celebrated during Salone del Mobile Milano, marks a significant milestone in the evolution of one of Europe’s most ambitious redevelopment projects.

 

Designed by BIG–Bjarke Ingels Group with Atelier Verticale, CityWave is constructed on the last two plots of the CityLife masterplan, a major new business district in a prestigious area of Milan, within walking distance from the Duomo.

A mix of more than 20 different plants that blossom at different times of the year turn the south façade into a living hillside changing with the seasons. Perforated plates cast dappled shadows, imitating the pattern of leaves while providing optimal thermal performance, blending poetic beauty with functionality."

Catherine Huang — Partner, BIG

Drawing the surroundings into the pavilion, the roof structure features two layers of perforated shading elements – an outer layer integrated into the glass assembly and an inner layer forming the ceiling.

In doing so, it frames the contemporary gardens, making them an integral part of the exhibition, as significant as the artwork within.

Catherine Huang — Partner, BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group

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The Suzhou Museum of Contemporary Art was recognized as a national landmark in China in June 2024, when it was featured on an official postage stamp issued by China Post to celebrate the successful development of Suzhou Industrial Park and the urban landscape around Jinji Lake.

Bjarke IngelsFinn NørkjærCatherine HuangOle Elkjær-LarsenHaochen YuShane DalkeZhonghan HuangAileen KohAmanda Lima Soares Da CunhaAndrea HektorAthena MorellaBjarke Koch-ØrvadChristian Vang MadsenDora Jiabao LinEddie CanEric LiFederica FogazziFilip FotCris Guoyu LiuMolly Hsiao Rou HuangIzabella BanasJakub KulisaJan MagasanikJonathan RussellKekoa CharlotMathis Paul GebauerMatteo PavanelloMiles TreacyPaula DomkaSarkis SarkisyanShu DuTyrone CobcroftXavier ThankiYunus Alperen BasakSøren Dam MortensenAndreas BakMike MunozNarisara Ladawal SchröderMaria CapuozzoFederico Martínez De Sola MonereoFilippo CartapaniYihan LiuYanis Amasri SierraGwanghyeon ParkDesislava GeorgievaZuzana FaskovaTim ChristensenJulia WilkoszWill Chuanrui YuRiad TabbaraBianca de Lira SilvaPhoebe CowenCristina MinguelaOliver SteenJiawen HuangJurica PajicAlexander Gale HeiedeEleonora NiccoliSimone ParigiMie EusebiJanis BronkaKonstantinos KoutsoupakisThomas LejeuneTseng-Hsuan WeiAdele ScampoliRomain ThijsenYingying GuanIngrid Albina Oliva LampaChih-Han ChenSol Anaid Chacon LevinPhilip KaeferJana SemaanMegan Nhat Xuan DangPei HuangJonathan Christian ChinCaroline SenyszynJens Max JensenJesús Fernández FraileMaximilian FriedmannHuiyao FuKannan SelvarajTarek ShaterPip de ConinckArda ÇinçinZahra KhademiZhiyuan ZhangFabio SalaTomasz JakubowskiJason Cheuk Hei LeePauline RytterTodor Todorov RusevJiaqi YangTaulant Haxhiu

AWARDS

MIPIM Asia, Best Cultural, Sports and Education Project, Silver, 2025


COLLABORATORS

ARTS Group Co.

Ltd. [中衡设计集团股份有限公司]
VIA.inc
Shanghai Shuishi Landscape Design Co. Ltd. [上海水石景观环境设计有限公司]
Rdesign International Lighting [上海瑞逸环境设计有限公司]
BIG Landscape
BIG Engineering

Bloomberg Student Center at Johns Hopkins University

BALTIMORE, UNITED STATES

Bloomberg Student Center at Johns Hopkins University

BALTIMORE, UNITED STATES

2025

CLIENT

Johns Hopkins University

SIZE M2/FT2

13,935 / 150,000

The Bloomberg Student Center is a 150,000-sq-ft, cascading village of timber pavilions that stands as the new hub of student life at Johns Hopkins University.

CAMPUS LIVING ROOM — All spaces connect back to the central Campus Living Room, an inclusive melting pot for student life and a crossroad for campus connectivity.

A forest of columns supports 29 “floating” cantilevered roof planes wrapped in glass shapes an interior that blurs the boundary between indoors and out.

The building’s overhangs are optimized to block heat in the summer and capture as much sunlight as possible in winter.

“By deploying one of architecture's oldest structural principles - the timber post and beam - into a collective swarm, the Bloomberg Student Center becomes an embodiment of activity, diversity, and togetherness.

We are honored to have been chosen to imagine this key puzzle piece of the transformation of Hamburg’s HafenCity, and we are deeply grateful to Herr und Frau Kühne to be entrusted to turn their generosity into the city’s new epicenter for the performing arts.”

Bjarke Ingels — Founder & Creative Director, BIG

Whether arriving by foot, taxi, or bus, visitors can enter the opera from several directions – through the park, from the pier, or directly from the ‘opera street’ by Baakenhafenbrücke.

Pushing down the corners of the building. Rather than competing with the surrounding context, CityWave completes it.

“With CityLife, we set ourselves an ambitious goal that we believe we have achieved, that of regenerating and upgrading the area of the Milan Trade Fair, which we have fully restored to the city in a completely renewed form that can be used by everyone.

The widest facade of the office faces north, ensuring energy efficiency and year-round thermal comfort. The Domodossola axis separates and restricts the buildable area for both plots at the street level, while below ground, the tunnel for the Line 5 metro demarcates the two plots.

INDOOR LANDSCAPE — The indoor landscape - as vast as the 'Beach' next door - negotiates the grade of the site to allow direct entry from all four levels, while maintaining a friendly human scale.

The courtyard acts as a filter, softening the light that reaches the south facade. At the central axis, removing the existing concrete ramps and relocating the taxi drop-off stations allows a new park entrance to form at the heart of the public realm. The new building gently rises from the ground floor, utilizing the height difference to preserve and enhance the existing park qualities at the site while creating connections to the adjacent Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route and the Cantabrian Sea.

 

At the street level, the new building sets back to create a covered public plaza directly connected to the Camino, establishing the building as a meeting point between culture, gastronomy, and the city.

Rather than proposing two towers, we envision two courtyard buildings defined not by their height, but by connection - bridging the scale between the neighborhood and central towers. This sculpted topography offers pathways across the building, moving from the quay to elevated gardens, creating outdoor gathering spaces and a new public link between the city and the river.

“The new Hamburg State Opera inhabits an island at the heart of HafenCity bookended by the vertical landmarks of Elbturm and Elbphilharmonie.

A façade composed of the life of plants and people.

The Mountain is a hybrid combining the splendors of a suburban lifestyle: a house with a big garden where children can play, with the metropolitan qualities of a penthouse view and a dense urban location.

 

The apartments are transformed into a mountain of homes covered in green.

Anchoring both sides of the street, the twin buildings create a sense of grandeur to the axis and are commonly found throughout history, from the Spanish Walla Gates in the 1500s to post-war icons such as the twin buildings of via Turati.