Thursday, May 17, 2012

The Standard




from architectmagazine.com

Designed to allow the High Line to pass beneath it, the 18-story Standard hotel was constructed using sculptural piers that raise the building 57 feet above the street grid. New York–based Ennead Architects accentuated the hotel’s distinctive presence with a central “hinge” that divides the structure’s two slabs.

Jury: “The building addresses the urban scale as a tower relating to the High Line [and the Hudson River]. … There is clarity in the choice and articulation of materials and a sense of restraint, though the end result is one of high visual impact.”

Client: “I usually renovate older buildings, and this was ground-up construction. Add to that the matter of the High Line and it was a unique challenge … We had to be sensitive to this new landmark. It tramples through our site, but it also defines it. That said, we wanted to not be overly shy or reverent toward it. Whatever we put up there would have to jump the train tracks.” —AndrĂ© Balazs, owner, as told to Vanity Fair


Ennead Architects used sculptural piers to design the Standard Hotel above the High Line, which runs underneath the building. Pedestrians on the High Line approach the building's south facade.
Image
The building's southeast corner.

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