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Paul Rudolph Hall (Formerly the Yale Art & Architecture Building) 

Photographer: Peter Aaron 

Architect/Designer: Paul Rudolph

Client: Elizabeth Skowronek

Shoot Date: 
October 14, 2008 
Paul Rudolph Hall (formerly the Yale Art and Architecture Building, or "A & A Building") is one of the earliest and best known examples of Brutalist architecture in the United States. The building still houses Yale University's School of Architecture (it once also housed the School of Art) and is located in New Haven, Connecticut. Originally designed by architect Paul Rudolph and completed in 1963, the complex building contains over thirty floor levels in its seven stories. The building is made of ribbed, bush-hammered concrete. The design was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright's Larkin Administration Building, in Buffalo, NY and the later buildings of Le Corbusier. Gwathmey Siegel Kaufman Architects was involved in the restoration and expansion of the building (completed in 2008), led by senior associate Elizabeth Skowronek. 
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