Interior Features
The interior of the four-story Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery building has been designed with care and imagination to deliver on the promise of collaboration and research leading to a better world.
The ground floor will house a vibrant “Town Center” for use by scientists, the university community and the community at large. It will include a restaurant, a soda fountain and a bakery/coffee bar; “breakout” rooms for meetings and outreach events; and a round forum in the middle, designed for flexible use.
Floors two through four will house research laboratories. Each floor will include a research pod (workspace) dedicated to the private Morgridge Institute, a research pod for the public Wisconsin Institute for Discovery and an integrated pod for scientists from both institutes. The lower level also will house specialty laboratories which may require more complex utilities and high ceilings.
Two atria on either side of the building (one to the north and one to the south) will insulate the research labs from traffic noise, provide ample natural lighting from skylights and offer views of the Town Center below.
According to Craig Spangler, principal at the Ballinger and design lead on the project, “Many buildings have an internal atrium. In this case, we’ve put the atrium on both sides. We want the building to be approachable from any side and very open, so the public can see what’s going on inside. The idea of having an externalized commons is one of the things that makes this building unique.”
Among the other features of the Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery Building:
- Straight halls are non-existent; spaces are flexibly open to encourage interaction and accommodate collaboration.
- Common areas will invite large and small group discussion and discovery.
- "Communicating stairs," open and wider than utilitarian stairs, with room at the landings to pause for conversation or enjoy a view of the outdoors, will bring people together.
- Smart boards and flat screens will be close at hand.
- Labs are being designed so they can be changed to match wet or dry research needs to provide flexible long-term use.
-
This will be the first research facility at the UW-Madison constructed with a geothermal heating system.