• Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

  • Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

    Kevin Scott, Nic Lehoux

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Education

2020 WAN Awards entry: University of Washington, Life Sciences Building - Perkins and Will

University of Washington, Life Sciences Building by Perkins and Will is an entry in the Education Category of the 2020 WAN Awards

by Copy taken from 2020 entry 27 May 2020 2020

The Department of Biology at the University of Washington sees over one third of all students enrolled at UW and is the largest STEM program in the state.

In order to meet their growing demand, the 207,000 sq ft science facility embodies biology’s core values of scientific discovery, collaboration, active learning, and environmental sustainability. With these core values in mind, we designed a flexible, collaborative and highly sustainable building.

Large landings on the open stair and breakout spaces with soft seating near the café and adjacent offices offer collaborative zones throughout the building, fostering conversation between students, faculty, and researchers.

Flexible planning and programming allows 18 more Principal Investigators than originally planned, while enabling endless views and ample natural light through laboratories, offices, conference rooms and break spaces.

Innovative solar glass fins put science on display while generating enough electricity to light 12,400 sq ft of offices year round and contribute to an 81% energy reduction. Running along the southwest façade, the fins are a billboard for sustainable innovation - feeding real-time data to touchscreen dashboards in the entry lobby where students can compare the energy generated by the standard solar panels on the roof with the energy generated by the fins.

A greenhouse located just a couple steps from Seattle’s largest pedestrian thoroughfare encourages the community to engage with the university and discover the science happening within. Additionally, unique plants from the biology courses are integrated into the cascading landscape west of the building.

All the information about how to enter the 2020 WAN Awards is here.  

We are very happy to offer support so please don’t hesitate to email Georgia, WAN Awards Event Coordinator with any questions at Georgia.Baily@haymarket.com.  

Last year more than 40 countries took part in the WAN Awards with strong showings from Europe, the Americas and Asia-Pacific. And we saw some truly outstanding projects, take a look at the winners from last year here.


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