Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) – Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV

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Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) – Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV

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  • Project Name: Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5
  • Practice: MVRDV
  • Gross Built up Area: 27,000 m2
  • Project Location: Boston
  • Country: United States
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Nathalie de Vries, Frans de Witte
  • Design Team: Fedor Bron, Mick van Gemert, Matteo Gramellini, Aneta Rymza, Loreta Lukoseviciene, Loenne Maciel, Diego Lopez Quintana, Alberto Canton, Nicolas Garin Odriozola, Samantha Gazzolo, Claudio Zampaglione, Sean Kim
  • Clients: Thishman Speyer + Harvard University
  • Structural Consultants: Odeh Engineers
  • MEP Consultants: Cosentini
  • Landscape Consultants: SCAPE
  • Contractors: Consigli-Smoot
  • Interior + Furniture: Michaelis Boyd
  • Others: Visualizations: Antonio Luca Coco, Angelo La Delfa, Lorenzo D’Alessandro, Marco Fabri, Ciprian Buzdugan, Copyright: MVRDV Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries, Cost calculation: Consigli-Smoot, Building Physics: ARUP, Co-architect: Moody Nolan
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Excerpt: Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) – Residential buildings 3 & 5 by MVRDV is an architecture project that references the local architecture while also taking on its own sleek character – an ideal place for the students and young professionals. With 343 apartments, retail spaces for small local businesses, a green rooftop terrace, and amenities for the residents, the project contributes to the social and inclusive character of this new urban district.

Project Description

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

[Text as submitted by architect] Construction has begun on an MVRDV-designed residential complex in the Enterprise Research Campus, adjacent to the Harvard Business School in the Allston neighbourhood of Boston, Massachusetts. With 343 apartments, including 25 percent affordable units, retail spaces for small local businesses, a green rooftop terrace, and amenities for the residents, the project contributes to the social and inclusive character of this new urban district.

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV
Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

Located across from Harvard’s Business School on Western Avenue, the Enterprise Research Campus is transforming what was once an industrial site into a green and walkable neighbourhood. Developed by Tishman Speyer in partnership with Harvard, it aims to create a centre for innovation, entrepreneurship, and collaboration between different sectors.

The masterplan, designed by Studio Gang and Henning Larsen with landscape architects SCAPE and Boston-based design firm Utile, includes apartments, buildings combining offices and laboratories, a hotel, and a conference centre for Harvard University. It also incorporates part of the Greenway, which serves as the green spine of a larger masterplan that spans two acres of open space connecting historic Allston to the Charles River.

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

The design by MVRDV sits in the middle of the masterplan, bordering the Greenway. The project includes two residential blocks, one eight-storey mid-rise and a 17-storey tower that rises to 58 metres. On their ground floor, these structures – as well as a neighbouring hotel designed by Marlon Blackwell Architects – are connected by a one-storey layer of amenities such as a co-working space, a gym, a game room, and meeting rooms for use by the residents of the apartment complex.

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

These amenities will be shared by residents, while the retail spaces located in the outside edges of the ground floor are designed to target businesses that will match the character of the rest of Allston. On the roof of this single-storey connecting element is a terrace for use by the residents of the apartment buildings. With a landscape design by SCAPE – who also worked on the design of the greenway – this terrace is lined by a wide bed of plants, forming a continuation with the greenway below.

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV
Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

The project will provide apartments comprising a mixture of studio, one-bedroom, and two- bedroom apartments. Each apartment type comes in three different sizes, pushing the façade in and out and thus giving the buildings their appearance: on the outside, the design is characterised by small indentations and protrusions that lend the buildings an intriguing texture. These indentations also allow more apartments to have a corner window, maximising the views of each resident.

“Designing so close to a place like the Harvard Campus is an exciting challenge – there’s an unusual mix of tradition, quality, and future-focused thinking that takes place here”, says MVRDV founding partner Nathalie de Vries. “With these residences we hope to fit in with that identity. Using fine materials and detailing, our design references the local architecture while also taking on its own sleek character – an ideal place for the students and young professionals that will play a role in shaping the future here.”

Enterprise Research Campus (ERC) - Residential buildings 3 & 5 | MVRDV
© MVRDV

All of the buildings in the Enterprise Research Campus adopt a recognisably Bostonian colour palette; in the case of the residential buildings, the façades are clad in glossy green panels, a reference to the green copper-clad bay windows that are common in Boston. Thanks to high energy and water efficiency, consciously sourced and engineered materials, and state-of-the-art MEP systems, the project targets LEED-Gold sustainability certification.

With its cosy collection of shops and an outdoor space visually connecting it to the adjacent Greenway – which will serve as an active public space with programming and events for everyone – the residences of the Enterprise Research Centre will become a social hub within the neighbourhood.

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