The new, approximately 281,000-square-foot, five-story, high-performance research facility fosters an interdisciplinary approach to knowledge generation and research, including innovative endeavors focusing on the sustainability of food, water, and energy. In expanding the research district at ASU’s Tempe campus, the building will give researchers a means to collaborate on pressing environmental and food challenges.
In addition to offering public outreach and exhibit space, ISTB7 will be home to the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Futures Laboratory, the Rob and Melani Walton Sustainability Solutions Service, the School of Sustainability, the Institute of Human Origins, and a five-story atrium biome of flora and fauna. The facility will contain wet and dry lab space, a conference and education center with a 389-seat presentation hall, university classrooms, and faculty and staff offices. Dry lab space may include computing, cyber-security, engineering design and fabrication, and robotics. ISTB7 will also have research labs for biological sciences, engineering, life sciences, and sustainability.
“The ISTB7 construction project is proof positive that regardless of the challenges or difficulties, strong teamwork and commitment to success can overcome any obstacle,” said Bruce Nevel, Vice President for Facilities Development and Management at ASU. “The ISTB7 project team has overcome unforeseen site conditions, unprecedented industry conditions all during a pandemic and yet has persevered to become a role model project — on schedule, on budget, and outstanding quality — on our way to providing the most advanced and state-of-the-art research facility at ASU.”
“As a gateway to the Tempe campus, this represents a legacy project for our team, and we are proud to continue our involvement with ASU on a complex that will connect the science and innovation districts on campus,” said Bryan Kuster, Senior Vice President of McCarthy Building Companies’ Southwest Region Education Building Group who also led the ASU Biodesign C project. “Our laboratory construction team is working with the university and project partners to attain the highest sustainability goals utilizing innovative materials, processes, and technology.”
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Materials on the building incorporate ASU’s own scientific research on integrated carbon-capture technology. Methods to save and produce energy that will be utilized include air currents, evapotranspiration, and photovoltaics. The complex will also treat and recycle sewage for use as greywater using low-energy, bio-based systems.
“This was an incredible opportunity to celebrate the historic nature of the site while creating a project that leverages both the interior and exterior spaces to support and promote ASU’s innovative research,” said Rachel Green Rasmussen, AIA, with Architekton. “The team’s goal was to design a project that roots itself in our evolutionary past while creating a living lab for our sustainable future.”
The ISTB7 project is scheduled for completion in December 2021. Grimshaw Architects and Tempe-based Architekton were selected as architects for the project.
McCarthy Building Companies also constructed the $120-million, 191,035-square-foot Biodesign Institute C research building at ASU, which was completed in June 2018 and received LEED Platinum certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.
McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. is the oldest privately held national construction company in the country — with more than 150 years spent collaborating with partners to solve building challenges on behalf of its clients. With approximately 3,700 salaried employees and craft professionals, the firm has offices in St. Louis, Missouri; Atlanta, Georgia; Collinsville, Illinois; Kansas City, Kansas; Omaha, Nebraska; Phoenix, Arizona; Las Vegas, Nevada; Denver, Colorado; Dallas and Houston, Texas; and San Diego, Newport Beach, San Francisco, San Jose, and Sacramento, California.
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