Rafael Viñoly Architects’ design of the Ray and Dagmar Dolby
Regeneration Medicine Building at the University of California, San
Francisco has been completed.
The project is targeting LEED Gold certification. DPR Construction
served as the design-build contractor and the Smith Group served as
executive architect. The University held a grand opening celebration of
the building on February 9, 2011.
Located on a steeply sloping urban hillside, the Dolby regeneration
medicine building presented the design team a unique challenge:
executing a horizontal structure on an uneven site.
RVA responded by creating a beautifully sinuous, serpentine building that makes use of every foot of available space.
The main floor functions as one continuous laboratory divided into four
split levels, each stepping down a half-story as the building descends
the forested hillside slope, and each level is topped by an office
cluster and a grass roof with wildflowers and plants.
Exterior ramps and stairs, taking advantage of the temperate climate,
provide continuous circulation between all levels, and the facility
connects to three nearby research buildings and UCSF Medical Center via a
pedestrian bridge.
The building structure is supported by steel space trusses springing
from concrete piers, minimizing site excavation and incorporating
seismic base isolation to absorb earthquake forces.
Inside the building, the transitions between the split levels are
designed as hubs of activity. Break rooms and stairs located at these
interfaces increase the potential for chance interaction – a goal for
promoting a cross-pollination of ideas among the scientists - and
interior glazing maximizes visual connectivity between the lower labs
and the upper offices.
To further promote collaboration, the laboratories occupy a horizontal
open-floor plan, with a flexible, custom-designed casework system that
enables the rapid reconfiguration of the research program.
Abundant south-facing glazing fills the open laboratories and offices
with natural light and views of the wooded slope of Mount Sutro nearby.
Green roof terraces impart environmental benefits and an outdoor amenity for building occupants and campus community.
Visible from surrounding campus buildings’ upper floors, the terraces
create a welcoming transitional space where the dense campus meets the
forest.
The Ray and Dagmar Dolby Regeneration Medicine Building is the headquarters for The Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCSF, which extends across all UCSF campuses.
The Center encompasses 125 labs made up of scientists exploring the earliest stages of animal and human development.
The goal of these studies is to understand how disorders and diseases
develop and how they could be treated based on the knowledge of, and use
of, stem cells and other early-stage cells.
The Institute’s mission is to translate basic research findings to clinical research and on to patient care.
Scientists in the Institute will work closely with clinical researchers
at UCSF Medical Center, located nearby, to translate discoveries into
therapeutic strategies.
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