Renewal-Zone:前沿医学的迭层意象︱亚利桑那大学健康科学创新大楼
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由CO建筑事务所设计的健康科学创新大楼 (HSIB),坐落于亚利桑那大学位于图森市的医学科学园,是一座多学科跨专业的前沿医疗健康教育设施。项目耗资1.28亿美元,占地23万平方英尺,为医疗、护理、药学和公共卫生领域的专业人士、学生和教师团体的教育及跨专业合作提供融合空间。建筑中27000平方英尺的临床技能模拟中心,配备有宽敞的教学空间、创新科技及学习项目,适用不同的团体和团队规模。为了促进行业内的合作,这里同时提供干湿研究实验室和学生协作空间。

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
赤陶色的东立面与校园中的红砖建筑相呼应,其设计灵感源于亚利桑那州柱状仙人掌上明暗交替的条纹。建筑师重视工艺价值,通过定制成型工艺折叠扭转每一条陶板,呈现出精致优美的造型图案。巧妙布局的陶板提供了策略性的遮阴效果,将自然光过滤引入高使用频率的活动空间。外立面两个双层高的壁龛处,粘土条疏朗退让,让自然光更通畅地洒向专为学生打造的区域:学习区、休息区和专注空间。露台让建筑的使用者与周边环境及校园进一步相融。折边的屋顶鳍片让充足的光线畅通无阻地进入所有室内空间。

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
叠层的概念推动了混凝土玻璃钢结构的整体设计。沿东侧的赤陶外立面,这个高达七层、25英尺宽的建筑元素成为了建筑的“门廊”,将所有以学生为主的功能容纳其中。在门廊之后,建筑以两个独立的九层高混凝土核心筒接地,其间跨度90英尺。主建筑系统的所有基础设施元素(楼梯、竖井和管道立管)都在西侧由混凝土和折叠金属复合核心筒加固,为九层高的无柱开放空间提供支撑,以满足大学未来灵活教学和弹性使用的需求。南北均为附遮阳罩的玻璃幕墙立面,有助于减少建筑内部的热量吸收。

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
用于交互学习的组合式研习工作室,可以转换为容纳300名学生的大型空间,中型房间可容纳最多120名学生同时使用。黑盒剧院打造了沉浸式模拟环境,模拟出逼真的多感官体验,同时设有观景廊。地面层以玻璃围合出四层“论坛”空间,设有用于社交互动及展示的座椅区及咖啡区,能够容纳50至400人。特色活动论坛区装有三个高30英尺的玻璃机库门,为毕业典礼等大型活动提供扩展空间。

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
HSIB是CO建筑事务所为亚利桑那大学设计的第三座建筑,此前事务所于2017年完成的生物医学科学合作大楼屡获殊荣,并在2012年打造了健康科学教育大楼。这两座建筑并排伫立于大学位于亚利桑那州凤凰城中心的生物医学研究园。

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

CO建筑事务所总部位于洛杉矶,事务所在高等教育、科技、医疗健康领域的建筑设计、规划和设计作品在美国广受赞誉,与东西海岸的一流机构开展合作。专业领域涵盖变革性医学卫生专业学校、高级研究教学实验室,以及高等教育、医疗健康和城市校园的创新临床设施。由于出色的设计和项目呈现,事务所收获了美国国内和国际上的高度认可,荣获超过175个美国国内和国际设计奖项,其中包括美国建筑师协会加州分会颁发的年度公司奖项。


Photographer: Bill Timmerman

The Health Sciences Innovation Building (HSIB), designed by CO Architects, provides a state-of-the-art multi-disciplinary, interprofessional medical and health education facility at the University of Arizona's Health Sciences campus in Tucson, AZ. The $128-million, 230,000-square-foot facility integrates education and transdisciplinary collaboration among teams of health professionals, students, and faculty in medicine, nursing, pharmacy, and public health. The building features an expansive 27,000-square-foot clinical skills and simulation center with a broad spectrum of instructional space, innovative technology, and learning applications to accommodate varying groups and team sizes. In addition, it offers wet and dry research laboratories and student collaborative spaces to support industry partnerships.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
The east-facing, terracotta façade nods to the existing campus vernacular of red brick buildings and draws inspiration from Arizona's saguaro cactus, which features alternating light and dark bands along its spine. Placing importance on the value of craft, the architects created a delicate pattern by twisting and folding each individual clay piece through a custom molding process. The terracotta panels are strategically placed to afford shade while allowing natural light to filter into the high activity spaces. The clay strips thin out in front of two double-height niches that welcome natural light into and views out of the student-focused study spaces, including study areas, lounges, and focus rooms. Terraces further integrate the building's users with the surroundings and the campus. Folding roof fins yield ample daylight throughout interior spaces.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
A concept of lamination drove the overall design for the concrete, glass, and steel structure. Along the east side's terracotta exterior, a seven-story, 25-foot-wide building element serves as the "porch" to house all the student-focused functions. Behind the porch, the building is grounded by two separate nine-story-tall, concrete support cores with a 90-foot-wide span between them. All of the major building-system infrastructure elements (stairs, shafts, and pipe risers) are consolidated on the west in concrete and folded metal-clad cores. This enables the structure to support nine floors of open, column-free program space to meet the university's needs for flexible teaching and future adaptability. The north and south façades feature glazed curtainwalls with sunshades to reduce heat gain inside the building.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Combinable learning studios for interactive learning may be converted to accommodate up to 300 students in large rooms and 120 students in medium rooms. A black-box theater creates space for immersive, simulation environments to mimic realistic, multi-sensory experiences, and is supplemented by a viewing gallery. The ground level provides a four-story, glass-enclosed "forum" with seating spaces for social interaction, presentation areas to accommodate 50-400 people, and café. The special events forum allows space to be expanded for white-coat or graduation ceremonies by opening the three 30-foot, glazed hangar doors.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman
HSIB is CO Architect's third building design for the University of Arizona. The firm previously completed the award-winning Biomedical Sciences Partnership Building in 2017 and the Health Sciences Education Building in 2012, both located side-by-side at the university's biomedical research campus in downtown Phoenix, AZ.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Los Angeles-based CO Architects is nationally recognized for architectural planning, programming, and design in the higher education, science and technology, and healthcare sectors, and works with leading institutions from coast to coast. CO Architects' specialized expertise includes transformative schools of medicine and health professions, advanced research and teaching laboratories, and innovative clinical facilities on higher education, healthcare, and urban campuses. The firm has been nationally and internationally recognized with more than 175 awards for design and project delivery, including the American Institute of Architects, California Council's Architecture Firm of the Year Award.

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Photographer: Bill Timmerman

Architect/Interior Designer: CO Architects
Scott Kelsey, FAIA, managing principal, principal in charge; Arnold Swanborn, AIA, LEED AP, design principal, design director; Jonathan Kanda, FAIA, LEED AP BD+C, principal, project director; Alex Korter, AIA, RIBA, LEED AP BD+C, principal, project manager
Client: University of Arizona, Tucson
Size: 230,000 square feet; 9 floors
Budget: $128 million
Affiliates:
Associate Architect: Swaim Associates
Construction Manager: Kitchell
MEP: Affiliated Engineers
Structural Engineer: John A. Martin & Associates
Civil Engineer: EEC Engineering & Environmental Consultant
LEED: Atelier Ten
Lighting: KGM Architectural Lighting
AV/IT: NV5
Cost: Rider Levett Bucknall
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