Field Architecture clads Silicon Valley synagogue in salvaged-wood lattice

Field Architecture Kol Emeth

A photovoltaic array and a lattice made of salvaged wood are among the sustainable features of Congregation Kol Emeth, a Palo Alto synagogue designed by local studio Field Architecture.

The synagogue complex is located on a triangular site bordered by houses, a highway and a cemetery.

Synagogue with wooden lattice and wildflower
Field Architecture designed Congregation Kol Emeth, a synagogue in Northern California

Established in the 1960s, the congregation had outgrown its original building and commissioned Palo Alto’s Field Architecture to rethink its property.

“The synagogue commissioned us to transform its property into an ever-evolving spiritual refuge that would embrace ecological responsibility and foster its community’s spiritual practice in everyday life,” the team said.

Wooden lattice on the exterior of a synagogue
The exterior is covered in salvaged-wood lattice

The architects conceived a series of single-storey buildings – framed with timber and steel – that are interspersed with courtyards and gardens. Larger volumes are clad in stucco.

Together, the structures form an L-shaped plan and total about 17,850 square feet (1,658 square metres).

One volume holds the main sanctuary and is flanked by a children’s area, a library and restrooms. Another contains a social hall, a kitchen, a classroom and a lounge. A third building encompasses offices, classrooms and a small sanctuary.

Wildflowers and synagogue facade
The parking was put underground and the property was covered in wildflowers to collect rainwater

There also is an underground parking garage that measures 41,500 square feet (3,855 square metres).

A rooftop photovoltaic array generates all of the needed power for the campus, which the architecture studio said has achieved net-zero-energy, and collected rainwater is used for irrigation.

The project is the first synagogue to earn LEED Platinum certification from the US Green Building Council, the team said.

Sanctuary with wooden canopy
The sanctuary has a wooden canopy

Several elements were used to visually unite the buildings.

On the west-facing perimeter of the complex, where a single front connects the main sanctuary and social hall buildings, the team created a timber lattice in front of the ample glazing.

Each piece of salvaged wood was carefully mounted to the structure’s steel frame to produce specific lighting conditions inside.

Synagogue with courtyard
A courtyard is adjacent to the main sanctuary

“Designed using parametric tools to optimize spacing, alignment and rotation, the lattice imbues a centuries-old tradition with contemporary meaning,” the team said.

Another connective element is an undulating canopy found in the sanctuary and an adjoining courtyard.

Worship room synagogue in Palo Alto
Simple and natural materials were used for the furnishings

The canopy – made of birch plywood – has symbolic meaning, as it refers to the traditional canopy structure – a chuppah – that a bride and groom stand under during Jewish weddings.

Throughout the complex, the team used earthy materials such as wood and stone. The sanctuary features travertine ark stones with a curtain hung between them, as well as oak flooring and seating.

To provide daylighting and a link to the outdoors, the team incorporated “simple but impactful” elements such as skylights, clerestories and sliding glass walls.

“The airy, welcoming spaces easily flow between indoors and outdoors, connecting congregants both physically and visually to the natural world,” the team said.

Landscaping was a significant factor in the design. Along the front facade, the team incorporated a “living habitat” with native plants.

During times of low rainfall, gardens are irrigated with rainwater that was previously collected and stored on-site.

Light comes into the sanctuary via skylights and clerestory windows

Congregation Kol Emeth won a 2022 design award from the San Francisco chapter of AIA.

Other synagogues include a building in Ulm, Germany, by Kister Scheithauer Gross that features limestone walls and patterned windows, and a pop-up synagogue in Ukraine by Manuel Herz Architects that was built to mark the 80th anniversary of a massacre that occurred during the Holocaust.

The photography is by Joe Fletcher.


Project credits:

Architect: Field Architecture
Architecture team: Stan Field, Jess Field (design principals)
Architect of record: EID Architects
Civil engineer: Lea and Braze
Structural engineer: Mar Structural Design
MEP: Fard Engineers
Lighting: Loisos + Ubbelhode
Accoustics: Charles M. Salter Associates, Inc.
LEED commissioning: Green Building Services
Landscape: GLS Landscape Architecture
Fabrication: Spearhead
General contractor: Smith Hyder Construction
Client: Congregation Kol Emeth

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