| Biodesign Boom
By K. Robert Wendel Bio is big and getting
bigger as the second phase of the new Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University
in Tempe takes shape.
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The second building - Biodesign B - is part of a larger strategy to create a biotechnology
campus at ASU. Plans call for two more buildings, after the second phase is completed.
The first phase, the Bio A building, finished in January.
The new, $53
million Biodesign B features 172,000 sq. ft. on four levels, with one level below
grade. The building is designed to be the headquarters of the Biodesign Institute,
so it features more office space than Biodesign A.
"The Biodesign
Institute represents the state's largest investment to date in biotech research
facilities," said George Poste, the institute's director. "It's the
fulfillment of a public trust, because this project would not have been possible
without voter-approved funding in 2000 and legislative support for research infrastructure
appropriations in 2003."
The project is just one of a flurry of new
biotech construction efforts taking place in Arizona. Other projects include the
downtown Phoenix TGen/IGC facility, a new bioscience center at the Mayo Clinic
in Scottsdale and a new chemistry building dedicated to bioengineering in Tucson
at the University of Arizona.
At ASU, the two biodesign buildings will
form a new gateway on the east side of campus. There also are plans for an extensive
desert garden.
Working under a construction manager at-risk contract, the
Arizona firms Gould Evans Associates, Sundt/DPR, a joint venture and Atlanta-based
Lord Aeck and Sargent Architecture will complete the project in the fall. Work
started in April. The construction team is shooting for L.E.E.D. Silver designation,
with plans to use waterless urinals and to recycle condensate from mechanical
systems for landscaping. Contractors are also recycling at the site near Rural
Road on Terrace Street, although that has not been easy.
"It's such
a tight site we don't have places to put all the dumpsters we need," said
DPR project manager Brett Helm.
"And if a contractor sees an empty
dumpster, he's going to use it for whatever, even though the dumpster sign may
say 'cardboard only.'"
Like other biotechnology projects, programming
the new biodesign building is difficult. Scientists conduct a wide array of experiments,
so one type of lab won't meet everybody's needs.
"The labs are designed
to be as flexible and adaptable as possible for a variety of uses," said
architect Barbara Hendricks in the Phoenix office of Gould Evans Associates. "All
of the benches are on wheels and the various systems are systematically laid out
to maximize the lab's flexibility."
Both Biodesign A and B increase
interaction between the sciences.
"The thing that makes this sort
of building unique is an environment based on research collaboration," said
design principal Jay Silverberg of the Phoenix office of Gould Evans. "We
are creating spaces for researchers to cross paths."
Although Biodesign
A and Biodesign B share similar architecture, Biodesign B will be the key entryway
onto the campus's east side. The building's eastern and northern sides feature
an extensive glass curtain wall. Designers created a complex shading system that
will echo a strand of DNA.
"We wanted high-tech things for high-tech
people, and part of that is showing through the architecture," said architect
Craig Peavy of Lord Aeck and Sargent Architecture. "In the morning when sun
comes up, the shades start tracking the sun and automatically adjust to allow
light. Then the louvers track back to full open in the evening."
As
the new face of bio technology, the project features upscale finishes, with architects
using the context of the Tyler Mall as a starting point. The new building is also
near the eventual light rail station. The building also functions as the Biodesign
Technologies administration center, so more space is dedicated to offices than
in Biodesign A.
The project also features gallery space and an auditorium.
"This
project has more of a public component to it," Silverberg said. "This
building really dovetails back into the campus and the community at the same time."
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