Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University

Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University is a women’s university in Saudi Arabia and largest women-only university in the world. It is composed of 32 campuses across the Riyadh region and a new library capable of holding 4.5 million volumes. The university was founded as Riyadh University for Women in 1970. King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz launched the building of the world’s largest and most modern women’s institution of higher education in a self-contained higher education city. A new campus dedicated May 2011 can accommodate 40,000 students and 12,000 employees. It has a 700‑bed teaching hospital and research centers for nanotechnology, information technology, and bioscience.

 

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Description

Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University is a women’s university in Saudi Arabia and largest women-only university in the world. It is composed of 32 campuses across the Riyadh region and a new library capable of holding 4.5 million volumes. The university was founded as Riyadh University for Women in 1970. King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz launched the building of the world’s largest and most modern women’s institution of higher education in a self-contained higher education city. A new campus dedicated May 2011 can accommodate 40,000 students and 12,000 employees. It has a 700‑bed teaching hospital and research centers for nanotechnology, information technology, and bioscience.

 

Princess Nora Bint Abdulrahman University
Site Area: 2,000 Acres (800 Hectares) about 87,120,000 square ft.

Perkins+Will, in collaboration with Dar Al-Handasah (Shair and Partners) (Dar), designed the campus of Princess Nora Bint Abdulrahman University (PNU) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The campus offers state-of-the-art educational facilities in all major academic disciplines to as many as 60,000 female undergraduate students. The largest university designed for women in the world and comprised of 32 million square feet (three million square meters), PNU is a global leader in 21st-century learning. Unlike most campuses, which often take decades to take shape, all the facilities at PNU were built concurrently.

The academic core is oriented on a north-south axis, an approximately three-kilometer-long linear commons that is equal to the length of New York City’s Central Park. Regional architecture and cultural tradition inspired the use of latticework partitions or mashrabiy’yah throughout the campus to strategically screen students for privacy in exterior spaces and allow more visibility within the campus.

The campus includes a Health Sciences and Research Campus, Academic Medical Campus, Academic Campus, K-12 schools, and Sports and Recreational facilities. The majority of the PNU campus buildings are registered with the USGBC’s LEED® rating system, with certification goals of LEED Gold and LEED Certified. At the time the projects were registered, they doubled the number of LEED projects in Saudi Arabia.

Princess Nora University Documentary

Health Science and Research Campus at Princess  Nora Abdulrahman University for Women

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Princess Nora Bint Abdulrahman University (PNU) is a world class university campus for 40,000 full-time undergraduate women. At 2,000 acres (800 hectares) and 30 million total square feet, PNU is the largest facility of its kind in the world, symbolizing that education, creativity and innovation are fundamental to building a better society. The design challenge was to respond to culture, context and region and create a sense of place and sanctuary for women seeking higher education while bringing 21st century education and building technology to Saudi Arabia and the Middle East.

The Master Plan

This linear commons, at approximately 3 kilometers long, is equal to the length of New York City’s Central Park. The individual colleges are organized around intimate courtyards and significant common buildings (such as libraries, student unions, dining halls and grand lecture rooms.) Prayer halls are dispersed throughout the academic core. Gateways and portals lead into the central commons and the hospital from an elevated Automated People Mover (APM) that surrounds the academic core. Recreational and K-12 facilities are located outside of the academic core in close proximity to residential areas.

The cultural requirements surrounding the separation of sexes is a central tenet of the design. Within the academic core, only the hospital and research components are co-ed. Traditional Islamic architectural screen elements (mashrabiy’yah) not only provide an outer layer of shade and protection from the sun but also allow women visual access to exterior spaces without being viewed. The arid conditions and intense heat of the region promoted innovative sustainable concepts including solar power, water re-use, regional planting, and wind towers that naturally cool outdoor courtyards. The campus is remarkable not only for its size and speed of design, but is exemplary in that all major buildings are pursuing LEED certification.

The Health Sciences and Research Campus 

The Health Sciences campus provides female students at PNU a diverse field of educational opportunities for those interested in the medical field. The campus includes individual professional Schools of Medicine, Nursing, Clinical Skills, Applied Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy, Physiotherapy, and Basic Sciences in addition to a Research Center and a Student Amenities building. Student Amenities space is the social hub shared by all the schools and is a place of engagement for students, faculty, administration and researchers alike. The built up area comprises approximately 2.5M square feet about 20% of the entire educational facilities at PNU.

Overall the architecture at PNU explores ideas of separation, threshold, transparency, pattern, and sequence and makes metaphor between the concept of the building screen and the women’s veil, the symbolic, visible indication of the transition from childhood to womanhood. As part of the formal sequence through the campus, young female students cross a clear threshold between mixed-gender public spaces and private places for women, establishing the academic core as a place not only of learning but as a symbolic unveiling of opportunity.

The details are a narrative of culture, tradition, religious beliefs, civic space and environmental response.

The Health Sciences and Research Campus component,

by Allison Grace Williams FAIA while Design Principal with Perkins+Will

http://www.agwms.com/