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

Designing innovative campuses for tomorrow's students

Higher Education

Designing innovative campuses for tomorrow's students

Planning for places that foster effective innovation is still an emerging process, but the constant pressure on universities to do so continues from two of their key institutional constituencies—students and employers, writes Perkins+Will's Ken Higa and Josh Vel.


By Ken Higa and Josh Vel | October 20, 2016

Courtesy of Perkins+Will

The effort to remake higher education institutions into entrepreneurship and innovation hubs has escalated like a Cold War arms race. The promised payoffs of this innovation drive are institution-wide and community-deep: building relationships, aligning the institution, and preparing the organization as well as its students for transformational change. But how do you create space that can be messy and nonlinear in an institutional culture that is steeped in tradition, standards, and rules? It may be that pursuing effective university-driven innovation programs and facilities will involve equally innovative strategic approaches to design and development—for example, decoupling innovation centers from any single departmental steward and, perhaps, from institutional ownership overall.

Planning for places that foster effective innovation is still an emerging process, but the constant pressure on universities to do so continues from two of their key institutional constituencies—students and employers.

Generations Y and Z—and the expectations of their parents— are primarily sparking the innovation drive on campus. As the most digitally connected group in history, Generation Z students are preconditioned to massive disruption and uncertainty. Concerned that traditional career approaches cannot be trusted, they are highly motivated to build innovation skills and exercise their entrepreneurial interests— perhaps even more than their Generation Y predecessors.

The second group driving the growth of university innovation centers is the marketplace of corporate employers who recruit on campus. They require a workforce of more agile thinkers who can apply an owner’s mind-set and work ethic to ever-shifting market needs. More than ever, employers are evaluating job candidates on more than just grades— they want students who demonstrate leadership, critical thinking, and communication skills.

Colleges and universities are the natural connecting point for these trends. In the competition to demonstrate innovation mastery, university faculty and pedagogy need supporting infrastructure and technology. Campus design and architecture will be the prime catalysts for transforming universities into our society’s engines of growth.

 

BREAKING DOWN SILOS TO FOSTER INNOVATION AT CLEMSON UNIVERSITY

Clemson University’s Watt Family Innovation Center (WFIC) demonstrates the results of an intentionally nontraditional planning decision that has influenced the program’s success to date. The institution determined that no one college or department should “own” the center, which is—practically and symbolically—situated in neutral territory near the very center of the Clemson campus. The center’s independence frees it to bring together a diverse set of students to collaborate and innovate and to serve as a powerful cross-university resource.

 

Courtesy of Perkins+Will

 

Clemson gave the design team behind the WFIC the imperative to foster “engaged learning” and showcase the university’s Creative Inquiry program. The program provides faculty, students, and the broader community a hands-on, interactive, engaged learning environment in which to collaborate on real-world projects ranging from aquaculture to bioengineering, digital media to industrial engineering. The WFIC also serves as a highly visible unifying force for the myriad innovation programs percolating at Clemson including the Clemson Innovation Network, the Design and Entrepreneurship Network, and the Arthur M. Spiro Institute for Entrepreneurial Leadership.

With the goal of elevating the impact and reputation of Clemson’s research, innovation, and creativity, the center’s oversized windows and ultra-modern open space provide a dynamic sense of transparency. Its easily movable furnishings, reconfigurable partitions, powered-over-Ethernet lighting, and high-speed virtual network connections provide the flexibility necessary to scale, pivot, and advance innovation. The WFIC is also configured with $12 million in advanced audio/ visual technology to allow students, faculty, and leaders from industry and government agencies to collaborate, generate big ideas, and solve complex problems.

 

Courtesy of Perkins+Will

 

CREATING INNOVATIVE POSSIBILITIES THROUGH UNIQUE PARTNERSHIP AT THE UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA

The University of Florida (UF) has taken a different approach to cultivating innovation and entrepreneurship for tomorrow’s students. It has taken on the role of city builder.

Nestled between the university campus and downtown Gainesville, UF’s Innovation Square is a 40-acre urban master plan for a modern live/work/play research and innovation community intended to link university research with commercial opportunity and lure smart, young talent to the campus and community.

The new Infinity Hall is billed as an “Entrepreneurial Living Learning Community,” a five-story, 97,000-square-foot combination dorm and new venture incubator for over 300 students. While Infinity Hall is open to all UF undergraduates, it is especially focused on housing Innovation Academy participants. Innovation Academy is a four-year undergraduate program in which students can combine any one of 30 majors with a minor curriculum emphasizing creativity, entrepreneurship, leadership, and innovation.

 

Courtesy of Perkins+Will

 

The desire for housing that fostered innovation and entrepreneurship, in addition to serving as a source of funding, took the Infinity Hall project out of the traditional university planning process. Infinity Hall was conceived as a public-private partnership located off-campus in Innovation Square. This approach freed the facility from the constraints on entrepreneurial space usage that would have existed if UF went with standard state bond financing, direct ownership, and on-campus development.

Opening space on Infinity Hall’s first floor to allow nonresidents to provide relevant services was an important part of the project. The public-private partnership scenario made it easier for the Infinity Hall team to get the right kind of support needed to make this hybrid education-entrepreneurship, living-learning space succeed. While many of these components were developed internally, many others were realized with the help of commercial partners or other departments at the university.

Further, locating the facility within Innovation Square directly addressed a standard challenge for university planners: how to adequately address the “town and gown” issues involved in relating to the community, especially at the edges of campus. Infinity Hall serves as another level of bridge between UF and other parts of the Gainesville community.

 

DELIVERING ON PROMISED PAYOFFS

The significant number of students who are deeply engaged in their work in the space is the biggest proof of success for both the Clemson and University of Florida facilities. In its first full semester, the Watt Family Innovation Center is home to at least 60 different courses representing 29 academic departments across all of Clemson’s colleges. There are more than 3,000 Clemson students taking courses in the center and still more students using the small team rooms and collaboration areas in the hallways.

At the University of Florida, Infinity Hall has seen similar immediate success. Last August, for instance, two freshmen who met for the first time as residents of Infinity Hall launched Peru+You, a food product company representing Peruvian culture, beginning with their own brand of Canchita—a corn kernel product—that they now sell at local farmers’ markets as they pursue online and retail distribution.

With success stories like these, it is safe to say that tomorrow’s students are responding positively to the bets placed by major colleges and universities on innovation and entrepreneurship. Equally encouraging is how these institutions are thinking like entrepreneurs themselves: fully using all the resources at their disposal—including their physical and facility assets—and breaking free of prior planning paths to accomplish big goals and become engines for growth.

To read the full article, visit the Society for Campus and University Planning.

Related Stories

| Sep 2, 2022

New UMass Medical School building enables expanded medical class sizes, research labs

  A new nine-story, 350,000 sf biomedical research and education facility under construction at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School in Worcester, Mass., will accommodate larger class sizes and extensive lab space.

University Buildings | Aug 25, 2022

Higher education, striving for ‘normal’ again, puts student needs at the center of project planning

Sustainability and design flexibility are what higher education clients are seeking consistently, according to the dozen AEC Giants contacted for this article. “University campuses across North America are commissioning new construction projects designed to make existing buildings and energy systems more sustainable, and are building new flexible learning space that bridge the gap between remote and in-person learning,” say Patrick McCafferty, Arup’s Education Business Leader–Americas East region, and Matt Humphries, Education Business Leader in Canada region.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 90 University Contractors and Construction Management Firms for 2022

Turner Construction, Whiting-Turner Contracting, PCL Construction Enterprises, and DPR Construction lead the ranking of the nation's largest university sector contractors and construction management (CM) firms, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 85 University Engineering + EA Firms for 2022

AECOM, Jacobs, Salas O'Brien, and IMEG head the ranking of the nation's largest university sector engineering and engineering/architecture (EA) firms, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 150 University Architecture + AE Firms for 2022

Gensler, CannonDesign, SmithGroup, and Perkins and Will top the ranking of the nation's largest university sector architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 90 Construction Management Firms for 2022

CBRE, Alfa Tech, Jacobs, and Hill International head the rankings of the nation's largest construction management (as agent) and program/project management firms for nonresidential and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 200 Contractors for 2022

Turner Construction, STO Building Group, Whiting-Turner, and DPR Construction top the ranking of the nation's largest general contractors, CM at risk firms, and design-builders for nonresidential buildings and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 45 Engineering Architecture Firms for 2022

Jacobs, AECOM, WSP, and Burns & McDonnell top the rankings of the nation's largest engineering architecture (EA) firms for nonresidential buildings and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 22, 2022

Top 80 Engineering Firms for 2022

Kimley-Horn, Tetra Tech, Langan, and NV5 head the rankings of the nation's largest engineering firms for nonresidential buildings and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

Giants 400 | Aug 21, 2022

Top 110 Architecture/Engineering Firms for 2022

Stantec, HDR, HOK, and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill top the rankings of the nation's largest architecture engineering (AE) firms for nonresidential and multifamily buildings work, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2022 Giants 400 Report.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Mass Timber

Bjarke Ingels Group designs a mass timber cube structure for the University of Kansas

Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) and executive architect BNIM have unveiled their design for a new mass timber cube structure called the Makers’ KUbe for the University of Kansas School of Architecture & Design. A six-story, 50,000-sf building for learning and collaboration, the light-filled KUbe will house studio and teaching space, 3D-printing and robotic labs, and a ground-level cafe, all organized around a central core.



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