flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Let There Be Daylight

Let There Be Daylight


By By Jeff Yoders, Senior Associate Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 200909 issue of BD+C.
40 Solatube devices (square in celing) and a central spine of skylight near the entire second floor of the Champaign Public Library.

The new public library in Champaign, Ill., is drawing 2,100 patrons a day, up from 1,600 in 2007. The 122,600-sf facility, which opened in January 2008, certainly benefits from amenities that the old 40,000-sf library didn't have—electronic check-in and check-out, new computers, an onsite coffeehouse. But, it's also drawing rave reviews from the community for its full-building daylighting strategy.

“We're one of the busiest libraries in the nation,” says library director Marsha Grove. “In 2008 we checked out 2.5 million books, and a lot of the comments we hear from patrons say they like all the sunlight in the new building.”

Chicago architect Carol Ross Barney was tasked by the library board with designing a building that would last 100 years. The old CPL had been built in the late '70s and simply didn't age well. Ross Barney's design included clerestory windows and a 115-foot skylight over the central staircase to let the sun shine in. But she also specified tubed daylighting devices instead of ceiling lights in much of the building's second story. The devices, manufactured by Solatube, Vista, Calif., have a plastic-domed, circular opening on the roof that allows natural light to travel down through a mirrored metal tube, through the plenum, and into a diffuser in the ceiling. From there, the light spreads out to the room below.

Solatube's Raybender 3000 technology intercepts low-angle light and redirects it down the tube at a steep angle so less light is lost and light is transmitted at almost any time of the day.

“We always wanted to make the library capable of being fully daylit,” says Ross Barney. “We made one concept where it had a really narrow plate of about 60 feet. Because of the space needs of the library, though, we couldn't make that design work. It was very different than what is thought of as a library.” The daylighting devices, she said, “allowed us to make a more beautiful building. The lighting really is striking.”

Most of the library is lit during the day by the devices and the central skylight. The building is organized on two patron levels; administration offices on the third floor cover only a small portion of the second-floor roof. Glass curtain wall covers three sides of the library. Local general contractor PKD installed 40 of the tubed daylighting devices on the second-floor roof to deliver light directly to the main reading areas of the library. Lighting levels are controlled by an automated sensing system that balances the natural light with supplied light. Panelite glass in the south curtain wall is designed in a honeycomb pattern that reflects most of the direct sunlight that enters the building from the south to minimize solar heat gain.

Public spaces in the LEED Silver-certified library are served by a low-velocity displacement HVAC system with underfloor air distribution to save energy. The building's exterior is clad in limestone. Bamboo was used for flooring, wall, and ceiling finishes. Service desks, end panels, and other interior furnishings are also crafted from bamboo and limestone.

Ross Barney says the building was purposely sited so that the parking lot could someday be converted to a park. “It's all a part of the strategy to make a building that's not just designed for today, but for tomorrow as well,” she says.

Related Stories

| Dec 10, 2011

BIM tools to make your project easier to manage

Two innovations—program manager Gafcon’s SharePoint360 project management platform and a new BIM “wall creator” add-on developed by ClarkDietrich Building Systems for use with the Revit BIM platform and construction consultant—show how fabricators and owner’s reps are stepping in to fill the gaps between construction and design that can typically be exposed by working with a 3D model.

| Dec 9, 2011

BEST AEC FIRMS 2011: EYP Architecture & Engineering

Expertise-Driven Design: At EYP Architecture & Engineering, growing the business goes hand in hand with growing the firm’s people.

| Dec 8, 2011

HOK elevates the green office standard

Firm achieves LEED Platinum certification in New York office that overlooks Bryant Park.

| Dec 7, 2011

Autodesk agrees to acquire Horizontal Systems

Acquisition extends and accelerates cloud-based BIM solutions for collaboration, data, and lifecycle management.

| Dec 7, 2011

ICS Builders and BKSK Architects complete St. Hilda’s House in Manhattan

The facility's design highlights the inherent link between environmental consciousness and religious reverence.

| Dec 6, 2011

Mortenson Construction completes Elk Wind Project in Iowa

By the end of 2011, Mortenson will have built 17 wind projects in the state generating a total of 1894 megawatts of renewable power.

| Dec 6, 2011

New office building features largest solar panel system in New Orleans

Woodward Design+Build celebrates grand opening of new green headquarters in Central City.

| Dec 5, 2011

New York and San Francisco receive World Green Building Council's Government Leadership Awards

USGBC commends two U.S. cities for their innovation in green building leadership.

| Dec 2, 2011

What are you waiting for? BD+C's 2012 40 Under 40 nominations are due Friday, Jan. 20

Nominate a colleague, peer, or even yourself. Applications available here.

| Dec 2, 2011

Legrand joins White House initiative to spur energy efficiency in commercial buildings

Company agrees to aggressive energy savings and reporting.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Contractors

Contractors expect to spend more time on prefabrication, according to FMI study

Get ready for a surge in prefabrication activity by contractors. FMI, the consulting and investment banking firm, recently polled contractors about how much time they were spending, in craft labor hours, on prefabrication for construction projects. More than 250 contractors participated in the survey, and the average response to that question was 18%. More revealing, however, was the participants’ anticipation that craft hours dedicated to prefab would essentially double, to 34%, within the next five years.

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