Campus learns about building plans at town hall meetings
Throughout the month of October, the UW–Madison and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) hosted a series of town hall meetings on campus to inform the university community about the latest building plans for the Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery.
The Wisconsin Institutes for Discovery, composed of the public Wisconsin Institute for Discovery (WID) and the private Morgridge Institute for Research (MIR), will occupy the 1300 block of University Avenue between Campus Drive and University Avenue.
Surrounded by the College of Engineering, Medical Sciences Center, Genetics/Biotech Center, Microbial Sciences building, and the departments of biochemistry, chemistry, computer sciences and physics, the institutes will serve as a scientific crossroads.
The four-story building will contain approximately 106,000 assignable square feet of research space, including wet and dry laboratories, research support areas, core facilities, and offices.
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 soda fountain and coffee bar; “breakout” rooms for meetings and outreach events; and a round forum in the middle, designed for flexible use. (View larger version.)
Floors 2-4 will house the research laboratories. Each floor will include a research “pod” dedicated to the private Morgridge Institute for Research (MIR), one for the public Wisconsin Institute for Discovery (WID), and an integrated WID/MIR pod. (View larger version.)
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.
The facility is being designed and built with sustainability in mind. The project’s leaders and architects are seeking LEED gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council to ensure the institutes meet the highest standards for environmental responsibility and occupational health.
The institutes’ design and structure are intended to foster collaboration across the sciences that will result in breakthrough discoveries that benefit the world and engage the public in the sciences and arts in new and unexpected ways.
At the meetings, attendees learned about these innovative plans, which include public and retail venues; wet and dry labs; educational outreach space; and social areas to encourage collaboration. They also had the opportunity view models and artists’ renderings of the plans.
