The signature 12-story building rises on the Drexel Quad, featuring 177,500 sf of classrooms, offices, event spaces, and a 300-seat auditorium.
Drexel University drafted a 2005 strategic plan for a new building to consolidate the college’s teaching, research, and entrepreneur-development efforts. Keast & Hood provided structural engineering design for the signature building. The structural scope included dramatic steel framing that supports limestone-clad precast concrete panels and glass curtain walls. A portion of the first floor structure is suspended from two story-high transfer trusses located between the second and third floors. The design enables a 300-person auditorium on the lower level to remain column free. Other structural features include a five-story atrium with an intricate “floating” stair suspended from rods, large collaborative spaces achieved through the use of long-span steel framing, a mat foundation that accommodates hydrostatic pressure from a potential eight feet of ground water, extremely thin cantilevers, and excavation bracing along an adjacent subway line and nearby public utilities.
The LeBow project was honored with a 2014 Outstanding Project Award ($30-100 million) from the Delaware Valley Association of Structural Engineers. The building is Green Globes Certified, receiving four out of four globes.
The signature 12-story building rises on the Drexel Quad, featuring 177,500 sf of classrooms, offices, event spaces, and a 300-seat auditorium.
Drexel University drafted a 2005 strategic plan for a new building to consolidate the college’s teaching, research, and entrepreneur-development efforts. Keast & Hood provided structural engineering design for the signature building. The structural scope included dramatic steel framing that supports limestone-clad precast concrete panels and glass curtain walls. A portion of the first floor structure is suspended from two story-high transfer trusses located between the second and third floors. The design enables a 300-person auditorium on the lower level to remain column free. Other structural features include a five-story atrium with an intricate “floating” stair suspended from rods, large collaborative spaces achieved through the use of long-span steel framing, a mat foundation that accommodates hydrostatic pressure from a potential eight feet of ground water, extremely thin cantilevers, and excavation bracing along an adjacent subway line and nearby public utilities.
The LeBow project was honored with a 2014 Outstanding Project Award ($30-100 million) from the Delaware Valley Association of Structural Engineers. The building is Green Globes Certified, receiving four out of four globes.
CLIENT: Voith & Mactavish Architects, LLP with Robert A.M. Stern Architects
LOCATION: Philadelphia, PA
TYPE: Academic, SERVICES: New Construction, MATERIALS: Concrete, Steel, SUSTAINABILITY: Green Globes, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Completed project photography © Jeffrey Totaro