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Gorgeous Green Roofed UCSF Lab Undulates Gingerly on a Hillside

02/07/2011
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  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine
    The University of California SF Campus is set on Mount Sutro west of downtown <a href="http://inhabitat.com/sanfrancisco/">San Francisco,</a> and commands an incredible view of the city, but the campus has very little room to grow beyond its hodgepodge of fifties and sixties towers due to the steep hillside. The newly completed Institute for Regeneration Medicine (dubbed the Dolby Building) is a striking example of how amazing design can result from difficult circumstances. The sloped property on the edge of the campus required a technically and aesthetically unique approach that <a href="http://www.rvapc.com/"> Rafael Viñoly Architects</a> came up with - they placed a <a href="http://inhabitat.com/green-roof/">green roofed</a> tower horizontally and winded it with the contour of the hill on unique point load footings.
    1
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine
    The overriding design challenge was to build on such a steep undulating landscape.
    2
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine
    The bulk of the building rests on trusses that connect at centrally located concrete piers and are anchored to the upper hillside.
    3
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine
    Isolation dampeners are incorporated for<a href="http://inhabitat.com/how-building-codes-saved-lives-during-chiles-earthquake/"> earthquake </a>events.
    4
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine
    An open <a href="http://inhabitat.com/cantilevered-office-anchors-green-campus-in-mexico/">cantilevered </a>walk wraps the building and a open air bridge connects to the campus eleven stories up.
    5
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (11)
    The building also softens the campus with its undulating form, making play in a group of overly serious towers.
    6
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (2)
    The building is broken into four sections, each with its own<a href="http://inhabitat.com/waldspirale-is-a-curvy-rainbow-colored-apartment-with-a-forest-on-top/"> green roof park</a>.
    7
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (12)
    Each section is stepped down a half story allowing for with a transitionary public space.
    8
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (15)
    The 80,000 square foot facility is composed mostly of labs, offices, and conference rooms-- but the hardworking program is broken up by skywalks and the abutting green space.
    9
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (1)
    The open spaces create as the architects say, chance encounters.
    10
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (4)
    The HVAC equipment is tucked beneath the building except for lab vents on the roof.
    11
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (7)
    This allows for a clean,<a href="http://inhabitat.com/intexure-architects-transform-parking-garage-into-a-rooftop-zen-garden/"> Zen-like</a> garden space and open view corridor.
    12
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (6)
    The half acre green roof also helps absorb copious amounts of rainwater and maintains interior temperatures making a substantial contribution to the building’s LEED Silver certification.
    13
  • UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine (14)
    Did we mention the views of Golden Gate Park and the city?
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UCSF Institute for Regeneration Medicine

The University of California SF Campus is set on Mount Sutro west of downtown San Francisco, and commands an incredible view of the city, but the campus has very little room to grow beyond its hodgepodge of fifties and sixties towers due to the steep hillside. The newly completed Institute for Regeneration Medicine (dubbed the Dolby Building) is a striking example of how amazing design can result from difficult circumstances. The sloped property on the edge of the campus required a technically and aesthetically unique approach that Rafael Viñoly Architects came up with - they placed a green roofed tower horizontally and winded it with the contour of the hill on unique point load footings.

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Categories:  Architecture, Education
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