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January 26, 2009
Caltech's Newest Shining Star:
The Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics
PASADENA, Calif.--The California Institute of Technology (Caltech) scientists
who study the outer reaches of space are about to get some space of their
own with the official opening of the Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics.
The opening not only marks the beginning of a new era for Caltech astronomy,
but is the Institute's kick-off for the International Year of Astronomy,
a global effort initiated by the International Astronomical Union and
UNESCO to mark the 400th anniversary of the first use of an astronomical
telescope by Galileo Galilei. The aim of the year is to stimulate worldwide
interest in astronomy and science.
The Cahill Center--located at 1216 California Boulevard--boasts 100,000
square feet of offices, laboratories, and common areas. Designed by the
Los Angeles-based firm Morphosis (led by Pritzker Prize-winning architect
Thom Mayne) and built by general contractor Hathaway Dinwiddie, the building
is both highly functional and visually impressive.
Everything about this building has that thought-through feel--from its
address (1216, in angstroms, is the wavelength of ultraviolet light emitted
by hydrogen atoms) to the view from the lobby up an ever-narrowing staircase
to the skylight on the third floor (which mimics the experience of peering
up through a telescope) to the cut-through hallways on each floor (which
connect Caltech's north and south campuses and serve to orient the building's
occupants).
But what is perhaps most important about the Cahill Center is that it
will allow some 300 of Caltech's top-ranked astronomy and astrophysics
faculty and graduate students to work together in a building dedicated
to their needs for the first time in more than 40 years, thanks to Charles
H. Cahill, who provided the lead gift for the $50 million center. The
building has been named for Cahill and his late wife, Anikó Dér
Cahill.
"As a civil engineer myself, I'm always excited to be part of the
birth of a new building, especially one that has been needed and envisioned
by our faculty and administrators for so long," says Caltech president
Jean-Lou Chameau. "If not for the extraordinary generosity of Charles
Cahill and several other supporters, our faculty might still be waiting
for this dream to become a reality."
Indeed, the Cahill Center was made possible not only by Cahill's lead
gift, but by generous support from a number of Institute friends, including
the Sherman Fairchild Foundation, the Ahmanson Foundation, the Kenneth
& Eileen Norris Foundation, Fred & Joyce Hameetman (whose gift
will name the Hameetman Auditorium), and Michael Scott.
"Taking a program like this to the next level is a team effort,"
says Chameau, "and our donors have been a key part of this remarkable
team."
For decades, our extraordinary astrophysics faculty have been scattered
across campus, among several overcrowded buildings," says Andrew
Lange, chair of Caltech's Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy
and the Marvin L. Goldberger Professor of Physics. "The Cahill Center
will bring together 26 astrophysics faculty and their groups into a single,
remarkable space. Students and faculty alike will have a much richer experience.
I can safely predict that new discoveries will be spawned in the coming
year by conversations in hallways and interaction spaces that would not
have otherwise taken place."
Some of the key features of the building include
the 148-seat Hameetman auditorium and a library situated on the building's
first floor to maximize their use as social and gathering spaces;
offices located on the building's second and third floors and the western
part of the first floor, amongst which are scattered conference rooms
and interactive spaces designed specifically to promote impromptu discussions
and informal group meetings;
a single basement floor (with ample access to natural light) which houses
all of the building's laboratories;
remote-observing rooms; and a building-wide wireless system.
The design for the Cahill Center draws on the institutes desire
to maximize interaction between the astronomy and astrophysics faculty
and their research groups, explains Kim Groves, principal in charge
for the Morphosis team. Visual and vertical connections between
the laboratory and office levels occur via the main stair, while interaction
areas and open break rooms punctuate each floor, all providing opportunities
for chance and planned discussions to occur between the researchers.
Views out of the building look across the campus and up into the sky,
providing select moments to celebrate the study of astronomy and astrophysics
on the world-renowned Caltech campus.
The Cahill Center is noteworthy not only for its creative design concept
and execution, but also because it will be the first Caltech building
to be certified under the LEED Green Building Rating System. LEED, which
stands for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, was created
by the U.S. Green Building Council, a coalition of more than 7,500 organizations
from all sectors of the construction industry. LEED certifications are
meant to encourage "whole-building" sustainability by recognizing
structures that meet the building council's high standards.
"Conventional buildings have significant impacts on the environment
over their lifetimes, considering the resources used to construct and
maintain them and the generation of the energy used to operate them,"
notes John Onderdonk, Caltech's manager for sustainability programs. "Constructing
LEED-certified buildings, which represent the state of the art in resource
and energy efficient design, is critical to improving Caltechs environmental
performance."
The Cahill Center will be given its gold-level LEED distinction because
of the many features that allow it to reduce negative environmental and
health impacts. The building's design provides for
reducing water use by 30 percent;
reducing energy use by 24.5 to 28 percent; and
providing access to daylight to a minimum of 75 percent of its spaces.
"Two of the most visible green features of the Cahill Center are
the use of day lighting throughout the building--which reduces the need
for electrical lighting--and the architectural paneling on the exterior,"
Onderdonk explains. "The paneling actually shades the building, thereby
reducing heat gain and the need for interior air conditioning."
This focus on keeping things green extended to the construction phase
of the building as well. In building the Cahill Center, the architects
and construction crews focused on using materials with recycled content,
as well as local and regional materials; they also used low-emitting adhesives,
sealants, paints, carpets, composite woods, and laminate adhesives. In
addition, they diverted more than 90 percent of the construction waste
from the landfills, which significantly reduced the building's impact
on the environment.
The opening of the Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics will be
followed on January 27 with a full-day symposium to celebrate Caltech
astrophysics. The symposium, "The Future of Astrophysics," is
being held in the Hameetman Auditorium, with webcasts to the Cahill conference
rooms. Speakers will include
Michael Turner, professor of physics, University of Chicago;
Jason Glenn, associate professor of astrophysics, University of Colorado;
Seth Shostak, senior astronomer, SETI Institute;
Roger Blandford, professor of physics, Stanford University;
Tim De Zeeuw, director general, European Southern Observatory;
Robert Kirshner, professor of astronomy, Harvard University;
Steven Beckwith, vice president for research and graduate education, University
of California;
Andrea Ghez, professor of physics and astronomy, University of California,
Los Angeles;
Peter Goldreich, professor in the School of Natural Sciences, Institute
for Advanced Study;
Jerry Nelson, professor of astronomy, University of California, Santa
Cruz.
Cahill Center
for Astronomy and Astrophysics Building : Architects Statement
Los Angeles Buildings
Morphosis
Californian Architecture
About Caltech: Caltech is recognized for its highly select student body
of 900 undergraduates and 1,200 graduate students, and for its outstanding
faculty. Since 1923, Caltech faculty and alumni have garnered 32 Nobel
Prizes and five Crafoord Prizes.
In addition to its prestigious on-campus research programs, Caltech operates
the W. M. Keck Observatory in Mauna Kea, the Palomar Observatory, the
Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO), and the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory. Caltech is a private university in Pasadena, California.
Los Angeles architect : Frank
Gehry
Key Los Angeles Building : Walt
Disney Concert Hall by Frank Gehry
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
American Architects
Los Angeles Architects
American Architecture
Comments / photos for the Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics
Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics
: page - adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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