Robert A.M. Stern Returns to His Alma Mater to Transform Iconic Buildings into a New Social Hub

1.12.23
Interior Design | Athena Waligore

A long journey sometimes brings us back to our beginnings. Robert A.M. Stern, who graduated from the Yale School of Architecture in 1965, has returned to his alma mater many times, both as a dean and for numerous architectural projects as founding principal of RAMSA. Most recently, his firm transformed the university’s iconic Commons and adjoining Memorial Hall—components of Carrère & Hastings’s 1910 Bicentennial Buildings—into the Schwarzman Center, a 123,000-square-foot social hub for the university’s undergraduate, graduate, and professional students. The makeover retains and restores the historic interior architectural features, such as the original brickwork and decoratively painted wood trusses in the Commons dining hall, where eight oversize chandeliers have been refurbished and rehung on motorized winches from the 66-foot-high ceiling. 

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