flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

A building designed by architects, for architects

University Buildings

A building designed by architects, for architects

Kansas State University’s new College of Architecture Planning and Design places students at the center of the experience.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | October 23, 2018
Aerial view of APDesign

Photo: Timothy Hursley

The new Kansas State University College of Architecture Planning and Design, designed by Ennead Architects + BNIM, is an interdisciplinary facility that hopes to train future designers by placing a focus on collaboration and direct fabrication.

The building will house the architecture, landscape architecture/regional and community planning, interior architecture, and product design departments. The design maximizes opportunities for communication of ideas between these departments and showcases the fabrication-based research of the school’s design community.

 

Workshop space in APDesignPhoto: Timothy Hursley.

See Also: Chapman University opens new science and engineering center

 

The new APDesign building includes studios, crit spaces, exhibition areas, collaboration pods, and faculty offices that are arranged around an axial three-story atrium. Also included are new classrooms, a wood laboratory, a metal laboratory, an upholstery and finishing shop, a 3D print lab, and a model making and exterior fabrication lab.

The build team included Walter p. Moore and Associates Inc. (structural engineer), Henderson Engineers Inc. (MEP), BG Consultants Inc. (civil engineer), and Confluence (landscape).

 

APDesign collaboration spacePhoto: Timothy Hursley.

 

APDesignPhoto: Timothy Hursley.

 

Workspace in APDesignPhoto: Timothy Hursley.

Related Stories

University Buildings | May 30, 2015

Texas senate approves $3 billion in bonds for university construction

For the first time in nearly a decade, Texas universities could soon have some state money for construction.

University Buildings | May 19, 2015

Special Report: How your firm can help struggling colleges and universities meet their building project goals

Building Teams that want to succeed in the higher education market have to help their clients find new funding sources, control costs, and provide the maximum value for every dollar.

University Buildings | May 19, 2015

Renovate or build new: How to resolve the eternal question

With capital budgets strained, renovation may be an increasingly attractive money-saving option for many college and universities. 

University Buildings | May 19, 2015

KU Jayhawks take a gander at a P3 development

The P3 concept is getting a tryout at the University of Kansas, where state funding for construction has fallen from 20% of project costs to about 11% over the last 10 years.

University Buildings | May 5, 2015

Where the university students are (or will be)

SmithGroupJJR's Alexa Bush discusses changing demographics and the search for out-of-state students at public universities.

BIM and Information Technology | Apr 9, 2015

How one team solved a tricky daylighting problem with BIM/VDC tools, iterative design

SRG Partnership's Scott Mooney describes how Grasshopper, Diva, Rhino, and 3D printing were utilized to optimize a daylighting scheme at Oregon State University's new academic building.

University Buildings | Apr 8, 2015

The competitive advantage of urban higher-ed institutions

In the coming years, urban colleges and universities will outperform their non-urban peers, bolstered by the 77 million Millennials who prefer to live in dense, diverse, and socially rich environments, writes SmithGroupJJR's Michael Johnson.

University Buildings | Mar 18, 2015

Academic incubators: Garage innovation meets higher education

Gensler's Jill Goebel and Christine Durman discuss the role of design in academic incubators, and why many universities are building them to foster student growth.

Retail Centers | Mar 10, 2015

Retrofit projects give dying malls new purpose

Approximately one-third of the country’s 1,200 enclosed malls are dead or dying. The good news is that a sizable portion of that building stock is being repurposed.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021