Building 140 CERN
Located on the French-Swiss border, CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics, is home to cutting-edge accelerators, including the renowned Large Hadron Collider. Since the 1950s, CERN has evolved into a vibrant campus and is now entering a transformative phase under the CERN Master Plan 2040, with Building 140 playing a central role in redefining the Meyrin site.
Building 140 is a state-of-the-art, sustainable facility designed to enhance the campus’s urban identity by bringing together key activities in a single hub. It will house laboratories, workshops, learning spaces, and offices, fostering collaboration and innovation. Positioned prominently near the main entrance of the campus, the building will serve as a highly visible landmark, strengthening connections across the campus while symbolising its architectural evolution.
Spanning approximately 15,600 sqm, the design is compact and pragmatic, optimising the layout for each function while accommodating future growth. The building’s facades harmonise with the surrounding landscape, incorporating a modular grid system that ensures flexibility and adaptability. Building 140 represents a significant step forward for the Meyrin campus, combining innovation, sustainability, and functionality to support CERN’s mission of advancing scientific excellence and fostering knowledge exchange.
Info
- Location
- Geneva, CH
- Date
- 2024–
- Size
- 15,560 sqm
- Client
- CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research
- Team
- Aida Jalili, Aleksandar Hrib, Amir Shokouhi, Bo Kuiper, Dikkie Scipio, Jan Teunis ten Kate, Jannik Niewiadomski, Javier Cuartero, Joeri Spijkers,, Kees Kaan, Marco Lanna, Narine Gyulkhasyan, Renata Gilio, Sebastian van Damme, Sophie Ize, Vincent Panhuysen, Yinghao Lin
- Photography
- Visualizations by Filippo Bolognese
- Landscape
- B + B, Amsterdam