Eskew Dumez Ripple designs courtyard pavilion for Burden Center in Baton Rouge
New Orleans architecture studio Eskew Dumez Ripple has unveiled plans for a welcome centre at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge that will feature a sloped roof, glass walls and a sunken central courtyard.
Plans for the pavilion in Baton Rouge – the capital city of Louisiana – show a square building with roofs that slope inward towards an expansive courtyard.
The Burden Center will serve as a welcome centre for various biology-oriented spaces on the campus including the Botanic Gardens, Rural Life Museum, and the Louisiana State University (LSU) AgCenter.
Renderings show a continuous roof that covers a walkway and connects a collection of enclosed structures surrounding a sunken courtyard.
Sloped at the rear and front of the structure, the roof will level out on the sides, mirroring the decrease in elevation at the centre of the project.
The structures will be clad in light-coloured wood and have expansive glass walls facing the courtyard.
Totalling 28,625 square feet (2659 metres), the Burden Center will have a stepped entry that leads to a patio space. Wooden louvres will reach from the roof edge and connect to the ground, creating a screen between the facade and the exterior.
Located between forest, wetlands, pastures and a garden, the structure was designed to open up to its surroundings.
"In honoring this conception of the center as a contemplative retreat to nature, the design team looked to create a liminal space that would provoke curiosity and excitement for the surrounding scenery while simultaneously providing a legible point of arrival and orientation," said Eskew Dumez Ripple.
"As such, the design of the center will unfold from the landscape – a welcome center not so much sitting on the land but embedded in it."
According to the studio, the structure will also have an accessible green roof.
Inside, the building will hold an events space, exhibition spaces and offices for the staff of the botanical gardens. A small cafe will also be included in the program and the spaces will take advantage of the extensive covered areas created between the enclosed structures.
Eskew Dumez Ripple was founded in Louisiana in 1989. The studio recently designed master plan for the Thaden School in Arkansas, which teaches students about sustainability in structures based on vernacular architecture.
Other projects in Baton Rouge include international architecture studio Perkins+Will's Water Center, which sits on pylons that hold it above the water, making it fully functional during the floods common in the area.