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Pennington Basic Science Building,
Baton Rouge
| Owner:
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge
Contractor: Milton
J. Womack Inc., Baton Rouge
Cost: $30.1 million
Architect: Washer-Hill
& Lipscomb/Post Architects, A Joint Venture, Baton
Rouge
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The newest addition to the Pennington Biomedical Research
Center Campus, the 180,000-sq.-ft., five-story Basic Sciences
Building, is a state-of-the-art means to assist the research
facility in its quest to stay on the national forefront of
metabolic and dietary research well into the future.
The new building, designed by Washer-Hill & Lipscomb/Post
Architects, A Joint Venture, houses the ever-expanding Basic
Sciences division of the campus, offering scientists and researchers
ample space for their projects, experiments and meetings,
with future expansions in mind.
Due to the sensitivity of many of the experiments performed
here, the design called for a poured-in-place concrete structure
utilizing 954 tons of reinforced steel and a waffle-slab floor
system that assists in keeping vibration and other interference
to a minimum.
The 25-month project hinged on the concrete structure, which
was begun in January 2002 and topped out in mid August 2002.
Once the structure was complete, the building's shell began
to take shape. Predominantly made of architectural precast
concrete, the new building's exterior reflects the existing
campus, while new elements include insulated metal panels
and large window walls, a design feature to be used in future
projects.
Due to the large amount of mechanical, electrical and plumbing
systems necessary in a laboratory building of this size, it
was necessary to retain a coordinator to oversee the intricate
aspects and planning of these systems throughout installation.
Working with the project manager and superintendent, careful
planning and foresight enabled seamless integration of all
systems into the building.
At the same time, these systems also had to be coordinated
in unison with the large amount of laboratory casework that
filled the eight large laboratories and all of their support
labs on the two main laboratory floors. Directly above the
main laboratories on the second and fourth floors are eight
individual interstitial ceilings consisting of a grid of structural
steel beams and 8-in.-thick insulated metal panels.
Clearly the signature of the campus, the new building connects
to the existing structure through the terrazzo and stone-clad
five-story atrium. In an effort to keep sprinkler and mechanical
modifications in the existing building to a minimum, a smoke
removal system was engineered for the atrium space to protect
both the new and existing structures in the event of a fire.
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