News: Construction Design & Engineering

Bruner/Cott Architects completes new 21,000 s/f Aliki Perroti & Seth Frank Lyceum at Amherst College

Amherst, MA Bruner/Cott Architects has completed the new 21,000 s/f Aliki Perroti & Seth Frank Lyceum at Amherst College, which comprises the school’s Center for Humanistic Inquiry (CHI), the Department of History, and communal venues to drive discourse and critical thinking. Inspired by the Lyceum of Ancient Athens – a place for philosophical discussions and debate – the building’s spaces are arranged to encourage interaction, collaboration, and conversation among fellows, faculty, students, and the greater college community.

Located on South Pleasant St., the project is the incubator for a new campus district. It conjoins an extant Greek Revival house with contemporary construction to create a setting for exploring the human condition. The house’s interior was modified to provide a program of offices, classrooms, and support spaces. A new two-story addition is situated next to the house, separated by a transparent exterior wall. These two volumes contain the project’s large public spaces, an event space, and a flexible classroom. A new three-story office wing wraps behind the house to create a linear band of offices looking west into the building’s natural setting. An open, central commons created by the adjacencies of the Lyceum’s offices, classrooms, and ground floor event space along with outdoor terraces provide a vibrant place for the community to share thoughts, ideas, and work.

Supporting the college’s commitment to carbon neutrality by 2030, the Lyceum showcases low-carbon design. Its interior and exterior palettes prioritize materials with low amounts of embodied carbon as well as products that can store carbon, such as wood and other plant-based materials. The building’s envelope is highly insulative and airtight, coupled with all-electric mechanical systems and a 31-kW roof-mounted solar array. The resulting design required an extremely low 69 kg/co2/m2 of embodied carbon to construct the building and is predicted to use only 14.5 kbtu/sf/year of operational carbon. Indoor air quality, operable windows, a daylighting strategy, a verdant landscape, and views of the surrounding environment are additional aspects that enhance occupant wellbeing.

“The new Lyceum is a place where we’ll gather for dialogue and exchange and to ask difficult questions about what it means to be human,” said president Michael Elliott. “This is the core of what we’ve been doing at Amherst College for over 200 years.”

MORE FROM Construction Design & Engineering

Timberline Construction Corp. completes renovation for Notre Dame Long Term Care facility

Worcester, MA Timberline Construction Corp. (Timberline) has completed an 18-month, 55,000 s/f renovation of the Notre Dame Long Term Care facility. The project transformed the nursing home into a modern, community-driven and patient-focused environment
READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
Columns and Thought Leadership
Ask the Electrician: How do I prepare my commercial building for a disaster?

Ask the Electrician: How do I prepare my commercial building for a disaster?

New England’s notorious weather – from fierce winter storms to summer squalls and fall hurricanes – can leave businesses in the dark. While power outages are often blamed on storms, they can also be caused by unforeseen events like accidents or construction mishaps.
Insulation experts are the unsung heroes of our clean energy progress - by Jeffrey Saliba

Insulation experts are the unsung heroes of our clean energy progress - by Jeffrey Saliba

While not as well-known as Nobel-prize-winning economists, politicians, or international climate activists, your local union insulators are essential to reducing harmful carbon emissions across Massachusetts. We’re proud to advocate for cleaner energy in the halls of power, as well as do the skilled, physical work in schools, office buildings,
Navigating tariffs and material  uncertainty in today’s construction market - by Karl Ginand and Tiffany Gallo

Navigating tariffs and material uncertainty in today’s construction market - by Karl Ginand and Tiffany Gallo

As headlines around tariffs seem to dominate the news daily, many considering construction projects have anticipated major cost escalations and widespread supply issues. While tariffs haven’t driven pricing spikes to the extent once feared, the lasting impact has been a new layer of uncertainty, affecting more than just budgets.
It’s time to lead: Confronting mental health in construction - by David Watts

It’s time to lead: Confronting mental health in construction - by David Watts

As we close Mental Health Awareness Month, we must be clear: May isn’t just about ribbons, hashtags, or lunchtime mindfulness apps. It’s about responsibility to confront hard truths that linger in silence, and to challenge ourselves, as leaders in our industry, to do more.