flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

USC to debut new bioscience center next month

University Buildings

USC to debut new bioscience center next month

The building is designed to maximize recruitment and interaction of scientists and researchers.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | October 12, 2017

The 190,000-sf Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience, which opens next month on the campus of the University of Southern California, will provide research and lab space for the Engineering, Arts & Sciences, and Medical schools. This is the largest building on campus, and its construction required more than 50,000 yards of soil to be exported, 4.5 million pounds of concrete and rebar for poured-in-place floors and walls, and 2,000-plus steel embeds for a suspended clean room plenum leel and exterior masonry. Image: USC

The University of Southern California (USC) has scheduled a November 1 dedication ceremony for the Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience, which at 190,000 sf is the largest academic building on the university’s Pasadena campus.

The Center will provide lab and research facilities for USC’s engineering, arts & sciences, and medical schools. The goal of the Center, according to USC, is to “fast-track detection and cure of diseases by turning biological sciences into a quantitative and predictive science.”

Over several months following the dedication, 300 people will move in. And while only 58% of the lab space has been fitted out for specific use, the infrastructure is in place and the future costs have already been accounted for the eventual fitting out of the unoccupied space, whomever the user.

More important, Michelson is designed, engineered, and constructed with an eye toward space flexibility and the accommodation of whatever equipment might need to be installed in the future, according to Alton Parks, the senior project manager. The hope, too, is that the design provokes interdisciplinary interaction.

 

Glass walls surround the lab spaces within the Michelson Center, so that occupants can see what their coworkers are doing. The design goal is to encourage interdisciplinary “collision.” Image: USC

 

HOK is this project’s Executive Architect, Vanderweil Engineers its MEP/FP engineer, and DPR is GC. Construction costs were not disclosed, but in 2014 Dr. Gary K. Michelson—an orthopedic spinal surgeon who made his fortune developing implants, surgical procedures, and instruments—and his wife, Alya, donated $50 million to fund the Center.

The barbell-shaped building has labs at both ends. Right now, the engineering school takes up most of the lab space on the third and fourth floors of the building’s south end. But many of the Center’s unoccupied labs remain unfinished—literally no ceilings, just enough HVAC to meet code—so as not to hamstring any of the schools’ recruitment efforts.

“Fitouts are kind of a shell game, because you really don’t know who’s going to move in,” explained Parks.

Budget cutbacks did not impact the building’s infrastructure, said Parks, which includes 189 miles of wiring, 1 million pounds of ductwork, and is designed for a total of 80 fume hoods. 

The Center, which meets California’s Title 24 energy codes, includes an air-handling system that can deliver air over any area of the building, at whatever air-exchange rate is called for. The HVAC system also has the flexibility to service “the outer limits of machines themselves, to their maximum capacity forever,” said Parks.

The Center aggregates several departments that had been spread across campus, and is designed, said Parks, to encourage “collision” among different academic disciplines within the building.

“We needed to do something about silo-ing,” said Parks. So the central areas of the building include conferences rooms on the second and fourth floors. The third floor is dominated by a large central social space called “the living room” that has varied seating, huddle and meeting rooms, and a 22-ft-long community table in the middle. This central space is supported by a kitchen/pantry with refrigerators, vending machines, and sinks.

 

More than 250,000 bricks were used for the exterior facade of the Michelson Center, which also includes 312 exterior windows and doors. Image: USC

 

The goal, explained Parks, is to get people working within the building’s north and south wings to mingle and talk on a regular basis in the middle of the Center. There are lots of glass walls throughout, so people working in the building can see what’s going on along its north-south and east-west circulation axes. Interactive video screens adorn the west wall. “Monumental stairs” in front of the building’s entries are meant to stimulate human movement between floors.

Furniture can contribute to convergence, too, said Parks. Two people can work together at the rise-up desks throughout the building. And the Center is the first science building to install a new piece of furniture, designed by Herman Miller, which is kind of a pop-up office: The freestanding, conical module, stationed in the hallways, includes a round table, marker boards, and seating for four or five people. Its curved design dissipates sound.

“This furniture synchronizes with Michelson’s [convergent] intent,” said Parks.

Related Stories

| Oct 13, 2010

New health center to focus on education and awareness

Construction is getting pumped up at the new Anschutz Health and Wellness Center at the University of Colorado, Denver. The four-story, 94,000-sf building will focus on healthy lifestyles and disease prevention.

| Oct 13, 2010

Community college plans new campus building

Construction is moving along on Hudson County Community College’s North Hudson Campus Center in Union City, N.J. The seven-story, 92,000-sf building will be the first higher education facility in the city.

| Oct 12, 2010

University of Toledo, Memorial Field House

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Silver Award. Memorial Field House, once the lovely Collegiate Gothic (ca. 1933) centerpiece (along with neighboring University Hall) of the University of Toledo campus, took its share of abuse after a new athletic arena made it redundant, in 1976. The ultimate insult occurred when the ROTC used it as a paintball venue.

| Oct 12, 2010

Owen Hall, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Mich.

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Silver Award. Officials at Michigan State University’s East Lansing Campus were concerned that Owen Hall, a mid-20th-century residence facility, was no longer attracting much interest from its target audience, graduate and international students.

| Oct 12, 2010

Cell and Genome Sciences Building, Farmington, Conn.

27th Annual Reconstruction Awards—Silver Award. Administrators at the University of Connecticut Health Center in Farmington didn’t think much of the 1970s building they planned to turn into the school’s Cell and Genome Sciences Building. It’s not that the former toxicology research facility was in such terrible shape, but the 117,800-sf structure had almost no windows and its interior was dark and chopped up.

| Oct 12, 2010

Full Steam Ahead for Sustainable Power Plant

An innovative restoration turns a historic but inoperable coal-burning steam plant into a modern, energy-efficient marvel at Duke University.

| Sep 16, 2010

Green recreation/wellness center targets physical, environmental health

The 151,000-sf recreation and wellness center at California State University’s Sacramento campus, called the WELL (for “wellness, education, leisure, lifestyle”), has a fitness center, café, indoor track, gymnasium, racquetball courts, educational and counseling space, the largest rock climbing wall in the CSU system.

| Sep 13, 2010

Community college police, parking structure targets LEED Platinum

The San Diego Community College District's $1.555 billion construction program continues with groundbreaking for a 6,000-sf police substation and an 828-space, four-story parking structure at San Diego Miramar College.

| Sep 13, 2010

Campus housing fosters community connection

A 600,000-sf complex on the University of Washington's Seattle campus will include four residence halls for 1,650 students and a 100-seat cafe, 8,000-sf grocery store, and conference center with 200-seat auditorium for both student and community use.

| Sep 13, 2010

Richmond living/learning complex targets LEED Silver

The 162,000-sf living/learning complex includes a residence hall with 122 units for 459 students with a study center on the ground level and communal and study spaces on each of the residential levels. The project is targeting LEED Silver.

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