If you want to make this easier to change all at once. Perhaps you could just set it as a view bag variable and pass it in on the controller. To make it even easier you could create a base controller that the other controllers inherit from and have it assign the layout to the view bag there.
Not sure why routing would need to change or perhaps I am not understanding. Hope this helps :)
And edit the file to point to the root layout like this:
@{
Layout = "~/Views/Shared/_Layout.cshtml";
}
In order for this to work, you do not have to specify a value in the view's layout property, if you do, you would be overriding the global layout
Note: As Tony mentioned, you could edit each view's layout property to point to the root layout, however this is not the recommended way to do it since you would be coupling your views with your layout and change it would be painful
Edit 1
If you would like to use code to set the default view's layout, perhaps you should consider writing a custom view engine.
Try to google about custom RazorViewEngine and RazorView
At least in VS2013, the _ViewStart.cshtml file is added by default when creating the area, so it's already there, and you can change the contents as he notes to point to the root _Layout.cshtml. You can then remove the _Layout.cshtml in the area, since it is no longer used (and a potential source of confusion now)
However, by so doing any routing performed in that root _Layout.cshtml will need to consider areas.
The default _Layout.cshtml has a number of ActionLink helpers that need a slight modification:
Add the RouteValueDictionary param to any ActionLink calls by setting Area="". Note that empty string refers to the root level. This will allow these links to work correctly when invoked from within an area, still work when invoked from the root.
e.g.:
<li>@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home", new { Area = "" }, null)</li>