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

Supersizing higher education: Tracking the rise of mega buildings on university campuses

University Buildings

Supersizing higher education: Tracking the rise of mega buildings on university campuses

Mega buildings on college campuses aren’t unusual. But what has been different lately is the sheer number of supersized projects that have been in the works over the last 12–15 months.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 11, 2023
A new life sciences building on the Philadelphia campus of Drexel University Rendering Synoesis

A new life sciences building on the Philadelphia campus of Drexel University will include expanded floor-to-floor heights, a state-of-the-art HVAC system, fully enclosed loading docks, five service elevators, and best-practice chemicals storage space. Rendering Synoesis

In early February, on the campus of Drexel University, Gattuso Development Partners broke ground on what will be the largest life sciences building in Philadelphia when it’s completed in late 2024.

This $450 million, 11-story building, known by its address, 3201 Cuthbert Street, and designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects (RAMSA), will encompass 519,647 sf of wet and dry labs, 11,708 sf of retail space, and underground parking with 137 slots. Drexel, which owns the land within Philadelphia’s University City research corridor, has preleased 60,000 sf in the building. Two-fifths of the building’s interior space is earmarked for academic purposes.

3201 Cuthbert Street is one of a spate of recent building projects, in various stages of development or completion on or near higher education campuses, that are 450,000 sf or larger. While no single factor drove their larger sizes, each of these projects stretches the boundaries of a broader trend toward multipurpose and/or mixed-use combinations that require more leg room.

How and by whom these projects were financed, the availability and location of land where the developments occur, and how they fit into the institution’s image, recruitment, sustainability goals, and community agenda all played roles in these buildings’ ultimate mass, say AEC firms who have worked on recent campus projects.

Several university campuses raise their bar

Mega buildings on college campuses aren’t unusual. But what has been different—or at least noteworthy—lately is the sheer number of supersized projects that have been in the works over the last 12–15 months.

In the case of 3201 Cuthbert Street, Gattuso had several motivations for initiating this project, not the least of which being Philadelphia’s emergence as a life sciences magnet for venture capital investment and new construction demand. 

Gattuso “had a large potential tenant, and it knew that Drexel was looking for more lab space,” recalls Meghan McDermott, a Partner at RAMSA. (Drexel and SmartLabs have preleased 45% of this building’s labs.) McDermott adds that the land is situated between the university and a train stop. “It’s the missing piece.” 

Several other large-scale buildings are reshaping the landscapes on university campuses:

  • On January 18, the John A. Paulson Center opened in Greenwich Village, representing the largest single expansion in New York University’s 192-year history. Sixteen years in the making, this $1.2 billion, 735,000-sf building includes 58 classrooms, three residential towers, a 350-seat theater and orchestral rehearsal hall, and below-ground athletic facility. “It’s almost a campus within a campus,” says Richard Maimon, a Partner with Kieran Timberlake, which designed the Paulson Center with Davis Brody Bond.
  • Last October, the University of Tampa in Florida broke ground for what will be the largest building on its 110-acre campus: a 460,000-sf, 10-story mixed-use building that is scheduled for completion in the fall of 2024. Designed by KWJ Architects in collaboration with the project’s executive architect Baker Barrios Architects, and built by Beck Group, the building will have 600 beds (a number that’s become “a sweet spot” for mixed-use buildings with student housing, says Grayson Silver, AIA, Managing Principal with Baker Barrios Architects), 37 faculty offices, five classrooms, a designated study lounge for veterans, and a 9,000-sf sky park.
  • In Washington, D.C., Howard University, working with the developers Lowe, FLGA, and Davenport Group, plans to start construction next fall for a 10-story, 500,000-sf building on 1.85 acres adjacent to its main campus in the Capitol’s Shaw neighborhood. The building, according to the university, will have up to 500 beds, 27,000 sf of retail space, and 246 below-grade parking spaces.
  • Princeton University in New Jersey recently announced its plans to build a new campus home for environmental studies and its School of Engineering and Applied Science. Ennead is the architect and Whiting Turner the CM on this project, which is scheduled for completion in the fall of 2024 and will encompass 660,000 sf over four buildings that are connected underground in one continuous sequence. The university says this project will also offer “strong connections” to nature and outdoor space. James Corner Field Operations is the landscape architect.
  • James Corner Field Operations also designed the one-acre outdoor plaza between the two buildings that comprise the new home for Columbia University’s School of Business on the university’s burgeoning Manhattanville campus in New York. Designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R) in collaboration with FX Collaborative, the 492,000-sf facility, which opened in January 2022, is spread over the 11-story Henry R. Kravis Hall and the eight-story David Geffen Hall, named after their famous benefactors. “The buildings are siblings with the same DNA but slightly different,” observes Miles Nelligan, an Associate Principal with DS+R. Turner Construction was the CM on this project, which doubles the business school’s available space.
  • The University of California at Berkeley broke ground in January 2022 on the 500,000-sf Helen Diller Anchor House, a student housing building with 772 beds specifically for transfer students. Located a block from Berkeley’s campus, this project is part of university’s response to having the lowest availability of student housing of any branch of University of California system. The university’s long-range goal is to add 8,800 new beds, doubling its existing inventory. Anchor House is one of 11 housing sites in and around its campus that Berkeley has identified for development.


Heading off development opponents

A number of these larger projects, including the Helen Diller Anchor House and Paulson Center, are characterized by their universities as “gateways” to their campuses. Maimon adds that the Paulson Center is designed to reflect NYU’s “dynamism” in ways that the campus’s older buildings do not.

Any magnum-sized construction or development project, though, will also attract attention and opponents. Kyle Gibson, Director of Communications for Capital Strategies, Berkeley’s development arm, told BD+C in an email that the university isn’t entertaining interview requests during construction of Anchor House, citing as one reason “several active litigation matters regarding our housing development projects.” 

Columbia University’s new 492,000-sf Business School is housed in two buildings located at Columbia’s distinctly urban Manhattanville campus in New York City.

Columbia University’s new 492,000-sf Business School is housed in two buildings located at Columbia’s distinctly urban Manhattanville campus in New York City. Photo Iwan Baan
Columbia University’s new 492,000-sf Business School is housed in two buildings located at Columbia’s distinctly urban Manhattanville campus in New York City. Photos Iwan Baan

Minimizing community and municipal resistance is key to moving these projects forward. 3201 Cuthbert Street falls under “as of right” zoning, meaning that the developer agrees to comply with all applicable zoning codes. In other words, the project won’t require special permits, variances, or discretionary actions by regulatory boards, explains McDermott, whose firm helped Gattuso Development Partners with its feasibility studies for this building.

Before the ceremonial shovels hit dirt to celebrate its new building’s groundbreaking, NYU had already worked out the details for the Paulson Center’s zoning on a superblock, says William Paxson, a Partner at David Brody Bond.

Expansion-minded universities and their developer and AEC partners must be attuned to their communities’ sensibilities and expectations. That concern often translates into positioning a new building as a neighborhood asset and enhancement.

Columbia’s 17-acre Manhattanville campus is open to the community, with city streets running through it. The master plan for the two business school buildings required a design that incorporated an “urban layer” that made them “hypertransparent” to the community, Nelligan says. The new Business School occupies either side of an outdoor square where rundown warehouses and tenement housing once stood. The entire lot is significantly larger than a nearby triangular lot where the business school originally was to be built but turned out to be too small to contain Columbia’s vision.


Related: 2022 University Sector Giants 
• Top 150 University Sector Architecture and AE Firms
• Top 85 University Sector Engineering and EA Firms
• Top 90 University Sector Contractors and CM Firms


NYU’s Paulson Center is part of a master plan that called for the reconstruction of Greene Street as a pedestrian walkway that connects the Soho neighborhood with Greenwich Village and NYU. The university also built a nearby 11,000-sf play garden for community use. “It’s a reknitting of the neighborhood,” says Maimon of Kieran Timberlake.

Howard University’s President Wayne A.I. Frederick has stated that the university’s new mixed-use building under development will support the District of Columbia’s goal to add 36,000 new housing units by 2025 to combat rising costs. The new building, says the university, also expands upon its vision for the Howard Town Center Area Sub-District, as outlined in D.C.’s plan to restore this historical community as a cultural destination.

Sustainable showcases

Larger buildings have the potential for becoming voracious energy consumers. Most universities have ambitious sustainability goals. Design and engineering strategies to reconcile those buildings and goals have become more important.

NYU has connected the Paulson Center to the university’s cogeneration plant, so the new building didn’t require boilers or chillers. Columbia Business School has one of the city’s largest chilled beam systems, along with indoor air quality controls and stormwater management. Both projects are LEED-Gold certified.

The John A. Paulson Center at New York University is a multipurpose building that includes three residential towers and 58 flexible classrooms.

The John A. Paulson Center at New York University is a multipurpose building that includes three residential towers and 58 flexible classrooms.
The John A. Paulson Center at New York University is a multipurpose building that includes three residential towers and 58 flexible classrooms. Photos Connie Zhou | JBSA

The HVAC system for the life sciences building on Drexel’s campus is designed to accommodate 60% lab space and 40% offices, providing 1.5 cubic feet per minute or greater airflow in the lab areas. The sustainability features in Princeton’s new building will include geo-exchange heating and cooling, heat recovery systems for air-handling units, and high-performance exteriors.

Funding can sway programming

A building’s size and purpose can be influenced by who’s footing the bill. Big donors sometimes just want their names on the building, like the Helen Diller Foundation that is gifting Anchor House to Berkeley and will fund its operations. John Paulson, the hedge fund billionaire, donated $100 million to the construction of his namesake building at NYU in recognition of his alma mater.

The University of Tampa’s new multipurpose building under construction is being funded by the university via a mix of donations and its capital reserve fund. Silver of Baker Barrios Architects observes that, as a public project, this building’s design and size are based primarily on the needs of the campus, which factor in projected student enrollment growth, trends at other universities, and the building being part of the university’s recruitment and marketing plans.

Baker Barrios also designed Union West Student Living, a $105 million, 525,000-sf building that opened at Orlando, Fla.’s Creative Village urban redevelopment in August 2019. Its 15 floors include 640 beds, 105,000 sf of classroom space, and 10,000 sf of retail. Union West, says Silver, was a public-private partnership.

The building gives two schools a downtown presence: the University of Central Florida, whose digital arts department has a close relationship with EA Sports, which is headquartered in Creative Village; and Valencia College, which uses floors 3-5 in this building for its Culinary Arts school, whose students get preferred placement for jobs with Disney.

Silver adds that in the University of Tampa’s building, the apartments are the same size and are efficiently designed to squeeze into five floors, whereas the configurations of the bedrooms in the P3 building in Orlando “are more diverse.”

Size can strain a project’s budget

A larger-size campus building leaves room for design flexibility and forward thinking. The Drexel project, for example, will have 50,000-sf floorplates, a two-story lobby, and floor heights that range from 16 to 24 feet.

Interestingly, the Paulson Center was approved for 900,000 sf. But, explains Maimon of Kieran Timberlake, “knitting together the program elements with the volumetrics” resulted in a final design that was slimmer and 20% smaller. Two of its residential towers are for first-year students, with 420 student beds and 18 for resident advisors. The third tower, which is separate, has 42 apartments for faculty.

When it opens in 2024, this 10-story, 460,000-sf building will be the largest on the University of Tampa, Fla.’s, campus.
When it opens in 2024, this 10-story, 460,000-sf building will be the largest on the University of Tampa, Fla.’s, campus. Rendering University of Tampa

Paxson of Davis Brody Bond notes, parenthetically, that while there’s normally economies of scale to be gained in larger buildings that are single purpose, the Paulson Center “is not a simple big building” so any savings were offset by its complexity. To that point, RAMSA’s McDermott adds that economies of scale “depend on the degree of repetition.” The goal for larger buildings, she says, is to find some standardization the design can follow.

More space for creative design

In more cases than not, larger buildings are replacing past-their-prime predecessors, or are filling voids within a campus’s built environment. Uris Hall, which for decades served as the home to Columbia’s Business School, was so cramped for space that classes were going on from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. The business school’s new home is more capacious, allowing for more “reasonable” classroom hours, says Nelligan of DS+R. 

The size of its classrooms “pushes against” the parameters of the boxes, with 17 75-person classrooms located at the corners of each building, says Alex Leung, AIA, LEED AP, CPHD, Principal with FX Collaborative. In Kravis Hall, the project’s structural engineer, Arup, devised “skip truss” framing on alternating faculty floors that supports open student floors with nearly column-free classrooms.

Kravis Hall is organized around three distinct networks of circulation that connect all levels through stairs, bringing sunlight and air deeper into the building. In Geffen Hall, students, faculty, and administration are more traditionally separated. The ground-floor connection between the two buildings leads to a 300-seat auditorium in Geffen called Cooperman Commons and, in Kravis, an urban-style living room called The Commons that’s next to a 199-person-capacity dining room.

Anchor House at Berkeley will include two event spaces, an interior courtyard on its second floor, a culinary classroom for the university’s Rausser College of Natural Resources, and a makerspace run by the Berkeley Art Studio with classes for students and the community. 

The Tampa project is fulfilling the university’s needs for more offices and classrooms, says Silver. And while the building is specifically for housing incoming first-year students who aren’t allowed to have cars, the project includes a 440-space parking deck, which is meant for the future expansion of the university’s north campus.

Related Stories

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 26, 2023

UC Davis Health opens new eye institute building for eye care, research, and training

UC Davis Health recently marked the opening of the new Ernest E. Tschannen Eye Institute Building and the expansion of the Ambulatory Care Center (ACC). Located in Sacramento, Calif., the Eye Center provides eye care, vision research, and training for specialists and investigators. With the new building, the Eye Center’s vision scientists can increase capacity for clinical trials by 50%.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Mar 15, 2023

Georgia State University Convocation Center revitalizes long-neglected Atlanta neighborhood

Georgia State University’s new Convocation Center doubles the arena it replaces and is expected to give a shot in the arm to a long-neglected Atlanta neighborhood. The new 200,000 sf multi-use venue in the Summerhill area of Atlanta is the new home for the university’s men’s and women’s basketball teams and will also be used for large-scale academic and community events.

Sponsored | Cladding and Facade Systems | Mar 15, 2023

Metal cladding trends and innovations

Metal cladding is on a growth trajectory globally. This is reflected in rising demand for rainscreen cladding and architectural metal coatings. This course covers the latest trends and innovations in the metal cladding market. 

Student Housing | Mar 13, 2023

University of Oklahoma, Missouri S&T add storm-safe spaces in student housing buildings for tornado protection

More universities are incorporating reinforced rooms in student housing designs to provide an extra layer of protection for students. Storm shelters have been included in recent KWK Architects-designed university projects in the Great Plains where there is a high incidence of tornadoes. Projects include Headington and Dunham Residential Colleges at the University of Oklahoma and the University Commons residential complex at Missouri S&T.

Virtual Reality | Feb 27, 2023

Surfing the Metaversity: The future of online learning?

SmithGroup's tour of the Metaversity gives us insight on bringing together physical and virtual campuses to create a cohesive institution.

University Buildings | Feb 23, 2023

Johns Hopkins shares design for new medical campus building named in honor of Henrietta Lacks

In November, Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Medicine shared the initial design plans for a campus building project named in honor of Henrietta Lacks, the Baltimore County woman whose cells have advanced medicine around the world. Diagnosed with cervical cancer, Lacks, an African-American mother of five, sought treatment at the Johns Hopkins Hospital in the early 1950s. Named HeLa cells, the cell line that began with Lacks has contributed to numerous medical breakthroughs.

Sustainability | Feb 9, 2023

University of Southern California's sustainability guidelines emphasize embodied carbon

A Buro Happold-led team recently completed work on the USC Sustainable Design & Construction Guidelines for the University of Southern California. The document sets out sustainable strategies for the design and construction of new buildings, renovations, and asset renewal projects.

University Buildings | Feb 9, 2023

3 ways building design can elevate bold thinking and entrepreneurial cultures

Mehrdad Yazdani of CannonDesign shares how the visionary design of a University of Utah building can be applied to other building types.

Giants 400 | Feb 9, 2023

New Giants 400 download: Get the complete at-a-glance 2022 Giants 400 rankings in Excel

See how your architecture, engineering, or construction firm stacks up against the nation's AEC Giants. For more than 45 years, the editors of Building Design+Construction have surveyed the largest AEC firms in the U.S./Canada to create the annual Giants 400 report. This year, a record 519 firms participated in the Giants 400 report. The final report includes 137 rankings across 25 building sectors and specialty categories.   

University Buildings | Feb 8, 2023

STEM-focused Kettering University opens Stantec-designed Learning Commons

In Flint, Mich., Kettering University opened its new $63 million Learning Commons, designed by Stantec. The new facility will support collaboration, ideation, and digital technology for the STEM-focused higher learning institution.

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