Alfred Newton Richards Medical Research Laboratories and David Goddard Laboratories Buildings
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Richards Medical Research Laboratories in 2010
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Location | 3700-3710 Hamilton Walk, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
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Coordinates | 39°56′59″N 75°11′53″W / 39.94972°N 75.19806°WCoordinates: 39°56′59″N 75°11′53″W / 39.94972°N 75.19806°W |
Area | 2.8 acres (1.1 ha) |
Built | 1965 |
Architect | Louis Kahn |
Architectural style | Modern |
Part of | University of Pennsylvania Campus Historic District (#78002457) |
NRHP Reference # | 09000081 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | January 16, 2009 |
Designated NHL | January 16, 2009 |
Designated CP | December 28, 1978 |
The Richards Medical Research Laboratories, located on the campus of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, were designed by architect Louis Kahn and are considered to have been a breakthrough in his career. The building is configured as a group of laboratory towers with a central service tower. Brick shafts on the periphery hold stairwells and air ducts, producing an effect reminiscent of the ancient Italian towers that Kahn had painted several years earlier.
Rather than being supported by a hidden steel frame, the building has a structure of reinforced concrete that is clearly visible and openly depicted as bearing weight. Built with precisely-formed prefabricated concrete elements, the techniques used in its construction advanced the state of the art for reinforced concrete.
Despite observable shortcomings, this building helped set new directions for Modern architecture with its clear expression of served and servant spaces and its evocation of the architecture of the past. The Richards Laboratories, along with the associated Goddard Laboratories, which were also designed by Kahn and are treated by architectural historians as the second phase of the Richards project, have been designated a National Historic Landmark.
When the University of Pennsylvania decided it needed a new medical research building, the dean of fine arts recommended Louis Kahn, a highly regarded professor of architecture on the faculty there who had been exploring new approaches for Modern architecture. Kahn received the commission for the building in 1957, and it was completed in 1960. It was named the Alfred Newton Richards Medical Research Laboratories Building in honor of a noted researcher and former chairman of the Department of Pharmacology. It quickly received widespread acclaim from the architectural community but also criticism from the scientists who occupied it.
Completed when Kahn was almost 60, this was his first work to achieve international acclaim. In 1961 the Museum of Modern Art sponsored an exhibition devoted exclusively to it, describing it in a brochure as "probably the single most consequential building constructed in the United States since the war." In 1962, Vincent Scully, an influential professor of architecture, called it "one of the greatest buildings of modern times."