flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Central utility power plant takes center stage at UC San Diego Jacobs Medical Center

Building Team Awards

Central utility power plant takes center stage at UC San Diego Jacobs Medical Center

An undulating roof, floor-to-ceiling glass, and façade scheme give visual appeal to a plant that serves the 10-story medical center.


By David Barista, Editorial Director | June 1, 2016
Central utility power plant takes center stage

UCSD Medical Center Central Plant in La Jolla, Calif. Photo: Kevin Turner. Click here to enlarge.

Central plants are the hot trend in commercial architecture. Traditionally an afterthought design-wise on healthcare, university, corporate, and city campus developments, power plants are being designed as showcase buildings with fanciful façades, daring forms, and prominent locations—anything but the 100% utilitarian structures of the past.

HONORABLE MENTION
UCSD Medical Center Central Plant, La Jolla, Calif.

The latest example is the new central utility plant that serves the $860 million, 245-bed UC San Diego Jacobs Medical Center. Since the 40,000-sf plant would be visible to staff, patients, and visitors in the 10-story medical center, the Building Team developed an undulating roof and façade scheme that masks the plant’s mechanical infrastructure and helps the facility blend in with the vegetated canyon beyond. Its floor-to-ceiling glass, earth tones, and sweeping curves—formed using metal battens coated with a color-changing paint—add visual appeal to the campus.

The LEED Gold plant can expand as the campus grows, with a capacity to serve one million sf of expansion.

 

Photo: Kevin Turner. Click to enlarge.

 

BUILDING TEAM

+Submitting firm: Kitchell (GC)
+Owner: UC San Diego Health System
+Architect: CannonDesign
+Structural: KPFF
+MEP: exp

GENERAL INFORMATION

Project size: 40,000 sf
Construction cost: $68 million 
Construction period: June 2012 to July 2015

Related Stories

Building Team Awards | Jun 8, 2017

Team win: Clemson University Allen N. Reeves Football Operations Complex

Silver Award: Clemson gets a new football operations palace, thanks to its building partners’ ability to improvise.

Building Team Awards | Jun 8, 2017

Narrow site, broad vision: LA Metro Light Rail Operations & Maintenance Facility

Gold Award: A slender building site had direct implications for the design of this light-rail facility.

Building Team Awards | Jun 8, 2017

Missing link: Denver International Airport and Transit Center

Gold Award: A new mixed-use transit center fulfills Denver’s 28-year plan to improve access to the nation’s fifth-busiest airport.

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2017

Rising above adversity: National Museum of African American History and Culture

Gold Award: The Smithsonian Institution’s newest museum is a story of historical and construction resolve.

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2017

Justice league: United States courthouse

Gold Award: The Building Team for L.A.’s newest courthouse went way beyond what was expected.

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2017

Blurring the lines: University of Chicago North Residential Commons

Gold Award: The University of Chicago’s new Residential Commons is part campus, part community.

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2017

Rebuilding to heal: Sandy Hook Elementary School

Gold Award: Community involvement was paramount as Newtown, Conn., replaced the school where a mass shooting occurred.

Building Team Awards | Jun 6, 2017

Nerves of steel: 150 North Riverside

Platinum Award: It took guts for a developer and its Building Team to take on a site others had shunned for most of a century.

Building Team Awards | Jun 1, 2016

Multifamily tower and office building revitalize Philadelphia cathedral

The Philadelphia Episcopal Cathedral capitalizes on hot property to help fund much needed upgrades and programs.

Building Team Awards | May 31, 2016

Gonzaga's new student center is a bustling social hub

Retail mall features, comfortable furniture, and floor-to-ceiling glass add vibrancy to the new John J. Hemmingson Center.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021