Need to Know

A Resurfaced Mies van der Rohe Design Has Finally Been Built

A $20 million grant helped bring the German architect’s 1952-designed fraternity house to life
Mies van der Rohe building
New York City–based architecture firm Thomas Phifer and Partners oversaw the building of Mies van der Rohe’s newly rediscovered schematics, originally designed in 1952.Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture and Design, Indiana University. © Hadley Fruits

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe has been dead for more than half a century. Yet on the campus of the Indiana University (IU), the German-born architect—whose works are among modernism’s most outstanding landmarks, including New York’s Seagram Building and Chicago’s Lakeshore Drive Apartments—is coming back to life, thanks to a combination of some unusual circumstances and one very dedicated group of collaborators.

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“It was designed to be a fraternity house,” says architect Thomas Phifer, of New York–based firm Phifer and Partners. The improbable story of the modernist frat house—and of how Phifer became involved with it—begins in 1945, when two Indiana businessmen reached out to Mies (then only recently arrived in the U.S.) to design a bowling alley. That idea never moved past the planning stage, but when the businessmen—both I.U. alumni and former Pi Lamda Phi brothers—learned that their former campus home had been condemned by the local fire marshal, they turned again to the architect to build a new one.

Seven years later, in 1952, Mies had a design plan. Yet, just as work was set to begin in Bloomington, Indiana, bureaucratic difficulties brought construction to a halt. The delay dragged on for over a decade, and, when the designer died in 1969, the project fell into near total obscurity. “Mies’s grandson had worked with him, and he told us he had never heard of it,” says Adam Thies, I.U.’s vice president of capital planning and the school’s manager on the project.

The structure was designed by Mies van der Rohe in 1952.

Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, Indiana University. © Anna Powell Denton

Phifer and Partners had to make minor revisions to the original design, including adding an elevator and fire stair.

Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, Indiana University. © Anna Powell Denton

Only happenstance led to the project’s resurrection: Sidney Eskenazi, also an I.U. graduate and erstwhile Pi Lambda Phi member, found the original schematics and presented them to the University president in 2013. After mulling the proposal for another few years, the administration decided to press forward, repurposing the building into a learning and event space for the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture Design, so named for the patron who stepped forward with the plans as well as a $20 million grant to help build it.

As it happened, Phifer’s office was already under contract with I.U. for the nearby Ferguson International Building. “We could have done a search, but we already had them right there,” Thies says. The choice seems a natural one for reasons other than convenience: Known for elegant and exacting work such as the Glenstone Museum in Potomac, Maryland, and the Federal Building in Salt Lake City, Phifer has long practiced a brand of highly refined modern design that clearly echoes that of Mies himself. Stepping into the shoes of a bygone legend might have intimidated some, but Phifer relished the opportunity. “I just loved it,” the architect says. “It was a chance to get inside his head.”

Originally designed as a fraternity house, the 10,000-square-foot building has been repurposed as a learning and event space for the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture Design.

Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, Indiana University. © Hadley Fruits

Lucky for Phifer and company, they had one major clue as to what exactly the original architect had in mind. The long-lost blueprints were amazingly detailed, and they gave the team almost everything they needed. “We had to add an elevator so it would be ADA compliant,” Phifer says, “Also a fire stair.” And then there was the lack of air conditioning: Given the precision for which Mies was famous, there was little room to squeeze in a modern mechanical plant. With an assist from consultants at SOM, the designers found a way to embed a state-of-the-art HVAC system inside the building’s slender beams, hiding it from view while keeping the climate properly controlled. 

Modern updates to the design also included an air-conditioning system, which had to be embedded inside the building’s slender beams.

Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, Indiana University. © Hadley Fruits

Besides that, the building seems every inch a Mies project. Its white steel frame floats over a masonry base and open-air understory, with an atrium piercing the center of the structure and affording views of the plaza-like space below. The resemblance to the architect’s other projects of the period is undeniable: the Indiana University building seems particularly close to his breakthrough 1951 Farnsworth House, except on a far larger scale and with a more varied program.

The Mies van der Rohe building officially opened in February for the students’ spring semester.

Image courtesy the Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design, Indiana University. © Hadley Fruits

Lectures and meetings are already underway at the new facility, and, by all accounts, it’s been a hit with users since its official debut last month. “We’re finding students in those rooms all day and into the evening,” says Peg Faimon, dean of the Eskenazi School. “It’s just a really welcoming space.”