MSU STEM Teaching and Learning Facility
East Lansing, Michigan
- Award Year
- 2022
- Award Category
- Wood in Schools
- Architect
- Integrated Design Solutions (AOR & power plant), Ellenzweig (STEM addition)
- Contractor
- Granger Construction
- Structural Engineer
- SDI Structures
- Photos
- Christofer Lark, Kevin Marshall/Integrated Design Solutions
More than 7,000 Michigan State University students walk through the doors of this building each week, giving MSU a chance to raise awareness of an innovative and sustainable building system while providing an enriching learning environment. The layout consists of two mass timber wings flanking the north and south ends of a repurposed power plant. The south wing houses “wet” teaching laboratories for biology, chemistry and material science. The north wing houses “dry” teaching labs for physics and computer science. The hybrid design features three stories of glulam post-and-beam construction with steel diagonal bracing, and a structural steel penthouse for mechanical equipment. While the roof deck was built with 3-ply cross-laminated timber (CLT), designers chose atypical 4-ply panels for the floors instead of the more traditional 5-ply. This approach allowed them to preserve ceiling space and reduce the volume of wood required while still meeting span and vibration requirements. In the power plant, CLT structural floor decks were used anywhere new walking surfaces were needed, further linking it to the STEM wings. STEM addition: 120,000 sf / Type III-B construction; Power plant: 62,000 sf / Type III-B construction