| University of Chicago Graduate School
of Business Hyde Park Center Cost: $125 million The
University of Chicago Graduate School of Business had previously held classes
in seven buildings, and the decision was made to build the Hyde Park Center.
The
415,000-sq.-ft. facility was designed in response to innovations in teaching and
student collaboration.
Since the faculty is interdisciplinary, the decision
was made to bring together faculty offices so finance, accounting and marketing
professors could socialize and exchange ideas.
The manner that business
school students and faculty interact has changed in recent decades, making the
previous buildings the GSB occupied not suitable for today's learning.
The
new building will facilitate collaboration because it contains ample space for
group meetings, clubs and quiet study.
Because of the intensity of the
GSB's programs, students are anticipated to occupy the building at least eight
to 10 hours each day. Amenities have been provided to support these activities,
including a student lounge. Design was Key The
Hyde Park Center is designed to complement architecturally significant buildings
nearby: Frank Lloyd Wright's Frederick C. Robie House and the Rockefeller Memorial
Chapel.
The Hyde Park Center has a winter garden that is six stories high
and enclosed by four funnels of glass, each supported by steel columns that rise
40 ft. before fanning out to form funnels.
The columns form Gothic arches
that reflect elements in the design of the Rockefeller Memorial Chapel and also
the Ida Noyes buildings nearby.
The winter garden fabrication required
specialized equipment and material from across the United States and Europe.
The
columns were fabricated in Poland and rolled in France, and the components were
completed in Germany. The glass was fabricated in Italy.
The Hyde Park
Center also complements the ground-hugging style of the Robie House by including
rooftop planters, horizontal limestone on the facade and cantilevered floors.
A 42-ft.-long cantilever area supports the Dean's office.
The site on the
southeast corner of 58th and Woodlawn avenues had the typically high water table
of the Hyde Park neighborhood.
Because of the building's lowest portions
are 35 ft. below grade, an earth retention system was required. A slurry wall
was selected because of its ability to provide a water cutoff during excavation
and to eliminate concerns that vibrations caused by installing a sheeting system
would disturb the community and damage adjacent properties.
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