Architecture in Ascendance: innovative staircase design
Staircases are overdetermined things. A highly functional element in the internal circulation of a building, they are also laden with cultural and psychological symbolism. We may live in the age of the lift and escalator, but this hasn’t stopped architects using the staircase as a means of adding value to spaces, be it through their aesthetic or engineering virtuosity. It’s not the destination that counts but the getting there.
December 14, 2013 | 11:00 pm CUT

The eye-catching, high-gloss staircase at UN City, the UN’s new regional HQ in Copenhagen, inspires employees to use the stairs and have informal meetings; photo Adam Mørk courtesy of 3XN


Launched at the last London Design Festival, the surreal Endless Stair, designed by London-based architects drMM, has the potential to be re-erected in other cities; photos Jonas Lencer (top) and Judith Stichtenoth (above)


Multifunctional, auditorium-style steps in New York’s co-working space Neuehouse, designed by Rockwell Group, are used for meetings, lectures and concerts; photos Eric Laignel



These stairs in the office of data storage firm Evernote in California, designed by architects O + A, are part of a growing trend for dual-functional staircases



Studioninedots conceived this staircase at mixed-use building De Burgemeester in the Netherlands as a ‘vertical lobby’ that brings people together; photos Peter Cuypers

Rick Mather Architects’ radical redesign of the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford nevertheless has a light touch, exemplified by its ethereal, glass-balustraded staircase; photo Andy Matthews



This staircase by Dutch architects Onix in the medieval Uitwierde Tower is designed to give visitors different perspectives of its interior as they climb it; photos Peter van der Knoop


Encouraging interaction between its staff, UN City’s staircase echoes the UN’s broader commitment to international dialogue; photos Adam Mørk courtesy of 3XN


A spiral staircase with Art Deco overtones is the flamboyant focal point of Caruso St John’s recent renovation of part of Tate Britain; photos Hélène Binet

This boxy, wooden staircase twists up the interior of furniture retail outlet Design Collective near Shanghai, designed by Neri & Hu, offering visitors intriguing, contrasting views; photo Shen Zhonghai

An ornate staircase connects the ground and second floors in WOHA’s glamorous hotel-cum-office, Parkroyal on Pickering, in Singapore; photo Patrick Bingham-Hall
Project Gallery









































