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Seamans Center-College of Engineering

Completion Date June 2001
Published March 2001

The Seamans Center includes a 103,000-sf addition and a 58,000-sf renovation. The addition will house research and teaching laboratories, state-of-the-art computer classrooms, a Student Learning Center, and a Student Commons. The renovation will improve and modernize the outdated existing facility, and will increase access to modern electronic learning facilities.

The goal of the project is not only to upgrade the technical functioning of the building, but also to bring a physical sense of community to the College of Engineering.

The existing facility, constructed as a series of additions over many years, is fragmented and disorienting, and lacks any significant public social space. The renovation and addition provides an opportunity to remedy these circumstances by reorganizing the primary circulation and public spaces to unite the various parts of the building into a coherent whole.

Two program elements, the Learning Center and the Student Commons, are seen as the public hearts of the project with the addition organized around them. The Student Commons is the building's "living room," intended to give the College a new social focal point. Its atrium location physically and symbolically joins together the otherwise separate floors of the five-story building. The Learning Center represents the academic core of the College. In contrast to both the library and the laboratory environments, this space is dedicated to teamwork areas and is envisioned as a vital, energized hub for project-related student interchange.

The new laboratories are organized in a five-story block extending from the north wing of the existing building to the south edge of the site. The corridor serving these laboratories forms the new primary circulation spine connecting the addition to all wings of the existing building.

The laboratory addition is zoned with dry laboratories in the north portion of the block, and wet laboratories in the south. Teaching labs, research labs, and student common areas are intermixed on each floor to increase interaction between students, and between faculty and students.

Project Information
Building Owner: University of Iowa
Owner Contact: Richard Gibson, Associate VP/Director
Building Location: Iowa City, IA UNITED STATES
Project Type: Expansion,Renovation
Principal Building Function: College of Engineering
Project Timeline
Dec 1995Planning Start
Mar 1996Design Start
Dec 1997Construction Start
Jun 2001Completion
Last known status: Completed
Construction Cost: $21,822,000
Cost Per Sq. Ft: $183
About These Cost Figures
Building Information
Project Includes: Computers
Education
Education: Classroom
Education: Student Center
Engineering
Laboratory: Dry And Wet
Laboratory: Research
Laboratory: Teaching
Library
Total GSF: 162,619
Total NSF: 94,310
Efficiency: 54%
Building Population: 1600
Building Services: Lab gas, industrial water, lab vacuum, and steam
Planning Module: 30' x 21'
Office Size: 112 NSF
Structure/Foundation: Reinforced cast-in-place concrete strut
Laboratory Parameters
Lab Module: 30' x 21'
Casework Mat'l: Modular wood veneer with epoxy resin countertops
Fume Hoods: 15 @ 4' to 8' 6" in length
Biosafety Cabinets: 5' long
Project Team
Architect CO Architects
Consultant - Laboratory Planner Research Facilities Design (RFD)
Profile Created 03/31/2001
Last Updated 04/04/2006
About the Reported Cost Figures
The cost figures reported are supplied by the firms that submitted these projects for publication, which in most cases are the designers or builders. Whereas these sources are intimately familiar with their projects, they may not be fully aware of the owners' finally-realized and recorded costs. In some cases, costs are truly and completely accounted for, and in others they represent a near approximation of the final costs. Costs have not been adjusted for year of construction, nor has any attempt been made to make regional cost adjustments.

Further, costs are not comparable on any kind of detailed standard costing model. Hence, it is possible for the cost of one building to include a steam boiler, while the cost of a comparable building might not include the boiler, if steam is being supplied from an already existing campus grid. Or, in another case, a building might include excess boiler capacity to supply steam to another building. Some submittals include fees or unusual site improvements as part of the construction costs, which others do not.
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Seamans Center

Photo courtesy of CO Architects

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