AN INDUSTRIAL SETTING DEDICATED TO ART AND DESIGN
With workshops, a library, film studio and vast auditorium able to host major cultural events, this campus gives HEAD – Genève the means to achieve its current and future goals for teaching and research. The superb Gustave & Léonard Hentsch Park, donated to the city of Geneva by Bénédict Hentsch and open to students and the public alike, completes this space dedicated to art and design, the home of over 700 students from 40 different countries, as well as 200 teaching staff.
BUILDING H
Developed on the industrial site of Les Charmilles in the 1910s and restructured in 1944 by architect Jean Erb, Building H (formerly known as Hippomène) housed the Tavaro factory and its assembly line for Elna sewing machines. Completely renovated in 2006, this jewel of 20th century industrial architecture in Geneva became a bustling cultural centre. In 2017 HEAD moved in and offered exhibitions, performances and fashion shows on the ground floor in Le Cube, while the floors of the building were dedicated to the Interior Architecture and Space Design Departments, and to Visual Communication and Illustration. The elevation of the building was completed in 2022.
BUILDING E
Built between 1954 and 1956, Building E (which originally bore the name Elna) initially served as the administrative headquarters of the Tavaro company and a showcase for its activities – primarily the production of Elna sewing machines – until 1995. In 2005 it was renovated to accommodate a Geneva-based private bank, before being made available to HEAD in 2017. Designed by Geneva architect Georges Addor, the building on stilts, inspired by Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer, is emblematic of the international modernist style. It was listed by the Office du patrimoine et sites in 2012. It now houses the school’s administrative offices and reception areas, the library and the Research Institute (IRAD).
BUILDING A
Built in 1938, Building A (A for Arts) was designed by Jean Erb, the same architect who designed Building H. It housed the Hispano-Suiza automobile factory founded in 1904 in Barcelona by a Geneva entrepreneur and a Spanish banker. It soon became active in the arms industry and then in the textile industry until 1985. This building, emblematic of an industrial architecture in full revival, began its transformation in 2017. Two floors were added before it was made available to HEAD in 2020. The building, which is now coloured blue, houses the school’s main technical workshops and welcomes BA and MA students in Visual Arts and Film Studies.
BUILDING D
Building D (D for Design) perpetuates HEAD’s link with its more than two-hundred-year-old history. Indeed, the building of the School of Industrial Arts dates back to 1878. Designed by architects Henri Bourrit and Jacques Simmler and erected on Boulevard James-Fazy, a stone’s throw from the Cornavin train station, the School aimed to provide craftspeople with a general professional education that they would not have acquired through apprenticeship. An inscription on the façade lists the main crafts taught there at the time: sculpture, goldsmithing, ceramics and bronze. Today, the building houses the Fashion Design and Product, Jewellery & Accessory Design Department, the Chair in Watch Design, CERCCO, the LiveInYourHead exhibition hall and the HEAD Store.
WHERE TO FIND US ?
Located in the heart of the city, HEAD - Geneva deploys its educational activities in five buildings.
Building H: Avenue de Châtelaine 7, 1203 Genève
Building E: Avenue de Châtelaine 5, 1203 Genève | Administration T. + 41 22 558 50 20
Building A: Route des Franchises 2, 1203 Genève
Building D: Bd James-Fazy 15, 1201 Genève | T. +41 22 558 53 30
Access Map Buildings H and E
Building Encyclopédie
Rue de l’Encyclopédie 5
1201 Genève
T. +41 22 558 52 77
Access Map
LiveInYourHead
Espace d'exposition | Cinéma
Bâtiment D
Bd. James-Fazy 15
1201 Genève
Wednesday to Saturday, from 2pm to 7pm.
Access map
AHEAD Foundation
C/O HEAD – Genève
Avenue de Châtelaine 5
1203 Genève
Located at Avenue de Chatelaine, the campus of HEAD – Genève consists of three industrial buildings with a prestigious past, all emblems of the 1950’s modernist architecture.
Former manufacturing and assembling factory of the famous Elna sewing machines, Espace Hippomène - avenue de Châtelaine 7 - was built in 1944 by Jean Erb for the Tavaro factories. Its aesthetics refers to the Bauhaus architecture of the 20s. Renovated by the architects Ris and Chabloz in respect of its original design, the factory becomes in 2008 a cultural space.
At Avenue de Châtelaine 5, Elna is the former administrative building of the Tavaro factories, built in 1956 by the architect Georges Addor. It is one of the most beautiful icons of modernist and rationalist architecture in Geneva. Building classified in 2012 by the Council of State, it is now registered in the Geneva heritage.
Built in 1941 by Jean Erb, one of the most prolific architects of the 1940s and 1950s in the industrial field, the building that is located at rue de Lyon 114 B, housed the Geneva-based factory of Hispano-Suiza, a pioneer in the automotive industry.
"The creation of this new campus is the result of an incredibly favourable conjunction of the planets! It will propel HEAD into the stratosphere! We have three neighbouring and emblematic buildings, simultaneously ready to house the activities of the University of Art and Design. We have two owners, Bénédict Hentsch and Swisscanto Fondation de placement, who have worked towards this move, in the hope to contribute to the development of this new neighbourhood. Finally, and above all, we have the selflessness of a foundation, which has understood what this project means for Geneva and which recognises the journey HEAD has made over the last ten years." François Abbé-Decarroux, Director General of HES-SO Genève.