flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Research Facility Breaks the Mold

Research Facility Breaks the Mold

The Center for Life Science | Boston is a rare building, a speculative high-rise research facility that offers tenants—a who's who of the city's leading researchers and medical institutions—a plug-and-play framework for setting up individual lab and research space.


By By Jay W. Schneider, Senior Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 200912 issue of BD+C.
A 12th floor footbridge connects the Center for Life Science | Boston to Children’s Hospital


In the market for state-of-the-art biomedical research space in Boston's Longwood Medical Area? Good news: there are still two floors available in the Center for Life Science | Boston, a multi-tenant, speculative high-rise research building designed by Tsoi/Kobus & Associates, Boston, and developed by Lyme Properties, Hanover, N.H., and BioMed Realty Trust, San Diego.

The 777,600-sf private-sector research complex at 3 Blackfan Circle is 95% leased, but the second floor (45,000 sf) and the 18th (25,000-sf ) are open, and you'll be in good company. Tenants include a who's who of the Boston medical and research community: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Children's Hospital Boston, the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, the Immune Disease Institute, and the Kowa Company. Oh, and to sweeten the deal, the building earned LEED Gold certification.

A high-rise research lab? And a wet lab facility with LEED Gold certification? In downtown Boston, rather than Cambridge, MIT's and Harvard's backyard?

Inside, lab-ready research spaces were fit out by tenants, including the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.


“We've done a number of spec properties before, mainly in the Cambridge market,” says David Clem, managing director of Lyme Properties, the project's original developer before BioMed Realty Trust purchased the building during construction. “This was our first significant building in Boston, and I'd been looking for the right site for about 15 years.”

What took so long was that Clem was adamant the project be located in the Longwood Medical Area—specifically, in the Blackfan Research District, one of nation's hottest centers of research activity. “My strategy was to locate within 500 yards of all the institutions driving the research,” says Clem, who knew the area's numerous research and medical institutions were anxious for additional research space.

Unfortunately, the Longwood Medical Area was so densely built that available land was basically nonexistent, so when Clem learned through social connections that a private school smack dab in the middle of Longwood was relocating, Lyme Properties quickly snapped up the one-acre site and began developing the project back in 2001.

Tsoi/Kobus & Associates designed the building’s public spaces, including the two-story entrance lobby, and about half the tenant fit-outs. The firm also designed a second-floor footbridge (not visible in this photo) connecting the second floor with neighboring Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.


There was one problem, however: no one on the Building Team had worked on a project quite like this one. “We've all done spec lab buildings before,” explains Rick Kobus, FAIA, senior principal at Tsoi/Kobus & Associates, of the Building Team's collective experience, “but we hadn't done a high-rise spec lab building, we hadn't built one over 750 parking spaces, and we hadn't built one using an up-down construction technique.”

Other unknowns: how many tenants would occupy the building, how large or small their spaces would be, and how their spaces would be used. “This market hadn't been tested,” says Kobus. The process of figuring out the physical dimensions of the what, why, and how of the project resembled a jigsaw puzzle, as architect and developer pieced together various combinations. Would there be multi-floor tenants? What about half-floor occupancies? What were the implications of the many lease configurations for mechanical space and shaft space?

In they end they concluded that, for the building to work, tenants would have to lease a minimum of a full floor. To accommodate a mix of tenants requiring smaller or larger spaces, the building was designed with two basic shell floorplates: floors 2-12 are L-shaped plans offering roughly 45,000 sf, while floors 14-18 are rectangular plans offering roughly 25,000 sf. (Only two tenants occupy a single floor, and those who do lease the larger floors.)

This lounge is part of the Immune Disease Institute’s lab space. IDI is a nonprofit research and educational institution that’s affiliated with Harvard Medical School and receives about $38 million in annual support.


The fact that there even are 18 floors to configure is unusual because building codes typically limit the use of high-hazard materials above 65 feet. “There's a strong motivation to keep research buildings lower, so there probably won't be another high-rise building like this, at least not in Boston,” says Kobus.

The building's architecture played a key role in why the project was allowed to reach high-rise status. Before the Center for Life Science | Boston was built, virtually every building within the Blackfan Research District (which accounts for more than three million sf of biomedical research space) had a uniform 12-story building height—for no other reason than that's just the way it was always done. “When we looked at putting another 12-story building in there, we thought the urban design character of the space was pretty awful with an unbroken, 12-story-high wall of building stretching more than 1,000 feet,” says Kobus. “We all thought it would be the wrong gesture.”

Instead, they designed part of the $197.2 million building at 12 stories and added a tower portion stretching to 22 stories (18 occupied floors, and four floors of mechanical, including a boiler plant and chiller plant). The Boston Redevelopment Authority liked what they saw and gave its approval to the tower.

The Dana-Farber Cancer Institute occupies the building’s 11th floor, and this break-out space is part of its 45,000-sf of research space. The Institute’s facilities are split roughly 50/50 between wet/dry labs, with approximately 100 researchers working in the Center for Life Science | Boston.


The building's height isn't the only reason its architecture stands out. “We wanted a building that expressed the high-tech science going on inside,” says Kobus who designed a building where exterior walls slant and curve and are wrapped in a high-efficiency curtain wall. Kobus refers to the corner tower as a modern-day campanile that marks the center of research activity in the Longwood Medical Area.

Interior architecture was a different story completely. “We knew we wouldn't be the architect for all the tenant fit-outs, so we had to create a simple plug-and-play framework that other architects could easily utilize,” says Kobus. That lab-ready framework includes dedicated connections for exhaust fans, back-up emergency electric, pH neutralization systems, and dedicated shaft space, among other things. Extra-high ceiling heights of 15½ feet make it easy to accommodate individual HVAC and piping requirements. Tenants also have dedicated storage space on the ground level near the loading dock. Tsoi/Kobus & Associates wound up designing almost half of the tenant fit outs, as well as all tenant common spaces and the building's public spaces.

The Center for Life Science | Boston earned LEED Gold certification, so sustainability also figured heavily into its design, despite the Building Team's limited experience with LEED back in 2001. (See “Green Credentials” for the building's sustainable achievements.) “We had no idea where the project would wind up,” says Sara Mills-Knapp, sustainable design coordinator for Tsoi/Kobus & Associates. “In the beginning we just anticipated LEED certification, not a specific level.”

A high-efficiency curtain wall brings significant amounts of natural light inside, brightening the reception area for the Immune Disease Institute and helping the 777,600-sf high-rise earn LEED Gold. Tenants were encouraged—but not required—to pursue sustainable fit-outs .


In fact, when the project began the LEED process, it was as one of the first pilot projects for LEED Core & Shell. “Working as a pilot program was hard because there were no standards,” says Mills-Knapp, but Lyme Properties wanted to offer tenants a higher-performing lab building so the team sorted it out as they went along. Tenants themselves aren't required to build green, but it's suggested they consider it. “If you're building a base building that has such efficient systems, tenants can't help but be influenced,” says Mills-Knapp.

The Building Team applied for several innovation credits when submitting the LEED documentation, and while they didn't get points for the up-down construction, this method proved to be one of the building's key successes. According to Shawn Seaman, project executive at project manager William A. Berry & Son, Danvers, Mass., up-down construction shaved four or five months off the building's construction schedule. That's because the Building Team was able to excavate the site (six floors below-grade, mostly parking) at the same time 22 floors of steel framing were being erected. “The process resembles more of a mining operation than an actual excavation,” says Seaman, who was aided by an early-stage BIM model (this was 2001) to coordinate concrete, structure steel, curtain wall, and MEP work with the Building Team members.

Up-down construction was ideal for this project because the small site is surrounded by buildings on four sides, which severely limited excavation options, but there is a downside. “We don't use this process very often because there's a cost premium to doing it this way,” says Seaman. “In this case, however, time was money so we wanted to get the building up quickly and get tenants moved in.”

Despite all the unknowns the Building Team figured out along the way, they created a state-of-the-art research facility that opened in 2008 and is 95% leased, earned LEED Gold, and sold for a record price of more than $1,000 per sf when BioMed Realty Trust purchased the property from Lyme Development soon after construction began.

Related Stories

| Nov 3, 2010

First of three green labs opens at Iowa State University

Designed by ZGF Architects, in association with OPN Architects, the Biorenewable Research Laboratory on the Ames campus of Iowa State University is the first of three projects completed as part of the school’s Biorenewables Complex. The 71,800-sf LEED Gold project is one of three wings that will make up the 210,000-sf complex.

| Nov 3, 2010

Park’s green education center a lesson in sustainability

The new Cantigny Outdoor Education Center, located within the 500-acre Cantigny Park in Wheaton, Ill., earned LEED Silver. Designed by DLA Architects, the 3,100-sf multipurpose center will serve patrons of the park’s golf courses, museums, and display garden, one of the largest such gardens in the Midwest.

| Nov 3, 2010

Public works complex gets eco-friendly addition

The renovation and expansion of the public works operations facility in Wilmette, Ill., including a 5,000-sf addition that houses administrative and engineering offices, locker rooms, and a lunch room/meeting room, is seeking LEED Gold certification.

| Nov 3, 2010

Sailing center sets course for energy efficiency, sustainability

The Milwaukee (Wis.) Community Sailing Center’s new facility on Lake Michigan counts a geothermal heating and cooling system among its sustainable features. The facility was designed for the nonprofit instructional sailing organization with energy efficiency and low operating costs in mind.

| Nov 3, 2010

Seattle University’s expanded library trying for LEED Gold

Pfeiffer Partners Architects, in collaboration with Mithun Architects, programmed, planned, and designed the $55 million renovation and expansion of Lemieux Library and McGoldrick Learning Commons at Seattle University. The LEED-Gold-designed facility’s green features include daylighting, sustainable and recycled materials, and a rain garden.

| Nov 3, 2010

Recreation center targets student health, earns LEED Platinum

Not only is the student recreation center at the University of Arizona, Tucson, the hub of student life but its new 54,000-sf addition is also super-green, having recently attained LEED Platinum certification.

| Nov 3, 2010

Senior housing will be affordable, sustainable

Horizons at Morgan Hill, a 49-unit affordable senior housing community in Morgan Hill, Calif., was designed by KTGY Group and developed by Urban Housing Communities. The $21.2 million, three-story building will offer 36 one-bed/bath units (773 sf) and 13 two-bed/bath units (1,025 sf) on a 2.6-acre site.

| Nov 3, 2010

Virginia biofuel research center moving along

The Sustainable Energy Technology Center has broken ground in October on the Danville, Va., campus of the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research. The 25,000-sf facility will be used to develop enhanced bio-based fuels, and will house research laboratories, support labs, graduate student research space, and faculty offices. Rainwater harvesting, a vegetated roof, low-VOC and recycled materials, photovoltaic panels, high-efficiency plumbing fixtures and water-saving systems, and LED light fixtures will be deployed. Dewberry served as lead architect, with Lord Aeck & Sargent serving as laboratory designer and sustainability consultant. Perigon Engineering consulted on high-bay process labs. New Atlantic Contracting is building the facility.

| Nov 3, 2010

Dining center cooks up LEED Platinum rating

Students at Bowling Green State University in Ohio will be eating in a new LEED Platinum multiuse dining center next fall. The 30,000-sf McDonald Dining Center will have a 700-seat main dining room, a quick-service restaurant, retail space, and multiple areas for students to gather inside and out, including a fire pit and several patios—one of them on the rooftop.

| Nov 2, 2010

Cypress Siding Helps Nature Center Look its Part

The Trinity River Audubon Center, which sits within a 6,000-acre forest just outside Dallas, utilizes sustainable materials that help the $12.5 million nature center fit its wooded setting and put it on a path to earning LEED Gold.

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