Located on the University of South Florida’s (USF) Tampa campus, a new purpose-built facility for the Judy Genshaft Honors College has broken ground.
The five-story, 85,000-sf building will provide a new home for the Honors Program by providing flexible spaces that foster and enhance interdisciplinary exchange between students, faculty, staff, and the broader USF community.
Highly visible from USF’s central campus and accessible via multiple entry points, the new building’s design emphasizes spaces that promote community engagement, collaboration, and creativity. A centrally located atrium anchors the building. The atrium connects all user into a single spatial experience and is lined with learning lofts that encourage interaction and collaboration.
Flexible spaces adjacent to the atrium on the ground floor can be opened and combined to accommodate large-scale events. The second floor features an exterior, shaded terrace that is accessible from the inside and outside of the building and serves as an outdoor study and meeting space.
The lower-form of the five-story building promotes greater pedestrian activity, which in turn increases the frequency of casual encounters and informal meetings critical for interdisciplinary collaboration.
The building also includes classrooms, labs, study areas, offices, and a publicly accessible cafe. The new, purpose-built facility will not only provide the Honors College with a free-standing building tailored to its program and strategically woven into USF’s campus, but will also allow it to accommodate an additional 600 students, bringing its total number of students to 3,000.
Construction on the facility is slated for completion in late fall 2022.
Related Stories
| Nov 13, 2012
Have colleges + universities gone too far with "Quality of Life" buildings?
We'd like your input - recent projects, photo/s, renderings, and expert insight - on an important article we're working on for our Jan 2013 issue
| Nov 11, 2012
Greenbuild 2012 Report: Higher Education
More and more colleges and universities see sustainainably designed buildings as a given
| Oct 30, 2012
Lord, Aeck & Sargent announces four student life facility wins
Projects recognize the architecture firm’s expertise on a nationwide basis.
| Oct 4, 2012
2012 Reconstruction Awards Gold Winner: Wake Forest Biotech Place, Winston-Salem, N.C.
Reconstruction centered on Building 91.1, a historic (1937) five-story former machine shop, with its distinctive façade of glass blocks, many of which were damaged. The Building Team repointed, relocated, or replaced 65,869 glass blocks.
| Sep 19, 2012
Modular, LEED-Gold Certified Dormitory Accommodates Appalachian State University Growth
By using modular construction, the university was able to open a dorm a full year earlier than a similar dorm built at the same time with traditional construction.
| Sep 6, 2012
CPPI awarded $30.3 million contract for University of Florida’s Harrell Medical Education Building
The specialized interdisciplinary learning environment will serve as a focal point for integration and program development for all primary care educational activities in the College of Medicine.
| Sep 5, 2012
Skanska tops out residence hall complex at the University of Delaware
Construction firm achieves structural milestone for $71 million student housing expansion project.
| Aug 30, 2012
John S Clark Co. completes teaching lab at UNC Wilmington
Three-story building provides offices, classrooms, and labs.
| Aug 7, 2012
Pioneering revival
Financial setbacks didn’t stop this Building Team from transforming the country’s first women’s medical school into a new home for college students.