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The BYU Life Sciences Building draws inspiration from tectonic forms

Sponsored Content Building Materials

The BYU Life Sciences Building draws inspiration from tectonic forms

Strong, lightweight ALPOLIC materials honor the rugged Wasatch Mountains while standing up to the forces that created them.


May 19, 2015
ALPOLIC¼ materials echo nature’s colors.

ALPOLIC¼ materials echo nature’s colors.

Rising from the slope of a large bluff on the foothills of Utah’s imposing Wasatch Mountains, Brigham Young University’s new Life Sciences Building reveals the inspiration of its remarkable setting.

Multiple facets and elevations climb dramatically as if shaped by the same tectonic and erosional forces that have created massive escarpments and deeply incised canyons on the surrounding landscape. From inside, the expansive windows reveal that landscape while flooding learning, meeting and research spaces with natural light.

It’s a perfect metaphor for the College of Life Science’s mission to reveal the natural world to the human intellect.

This video gives a good sense of all the building has to offer. The camera “flies” through varied interior spaces – including teaching and research labs, auditoriums, corridors and common areas, a rooftop greenhouse and a massive central atrium. Exterior shots show how the complexly terraced profile echoes the mountainous landscape overlooking the BYU campus. From both inside and outside the building, you can see a prominent “spine” rising in stages through the center of the building, much like a ridgeline defining the center of a mountain’s mass.

Architectural Nexus, the firm selected to design the building, asked LCG Façades to get involved in the project early, providing design engineering expertise for the glass curtain wall and metal panel systems that would serve as the building envelope.

Ted Derby, business development manager at LCG Façades, says that a strong, lightweight cladding material was needed to meet the building’s seismic requirements: The massive Wasatch Fault that created the rugged setting is still active today. At the same time, a pressure-equalized rainscreen was required due to Utah’s adoption of the 2012 IBC Building Code.

To meet these needs, LCG Façades designed its exclusive SL-2200 rainscreen system and chose ALPOLIC¼ aluminum composite materials, fabricated at LCG’s 40,000 square-foot facility in Salt Lake City.

One of the key factors in achieving the project’s budgetary and quality goals, Derby says, was that “We could control most of the materials that were going on the job through our fabrication facility that allows us to fabricate curtain wall systems as well as metal composite panel systems.”

The central “spine” towers above like an alpine peak.

ALPOLIC¼ materials are most visible on the building’s “spine,” rising in a stepped fashion to tower above lower elevations on either side. Here, panels finished in a silver mica evoke the great blue limestone formation that caps the spine of the Wasatch Mountains. The same fire-retardant ACM panels in a custom blue mica bring hues of a summer sky to window openings and other reveals.

If you can’t be hiking or skiing the Wasatch, studying their flora and fauna in this evocative building may be the next best thing. In the new BYU Life Sciences Building, ALPOLIC¼ materials are truly helping to do nature proud.

Contact Information:

Phone Number: 1.800.422.7270
Fax Number: 757.436.1896
Email: info@ALPOLIC.com
Website: www.alpolic-americas.com

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