As the anchor project of Princeton University’s new natural sciences neighborhood, the new Frick Chemistry Laboratory had to replace one of the oldest chemistry labs at any US university with a state-of-the-art, highly sustainable structure with the flexible design necessary to continue Princeton’s highly regarded sciences program for years to come.
Consisting of two four-floor buildings connected by a full-height glazed atrium, from conception this huge laboratory was designed to meet stringent sustainability and efficiency targets.
Arup’s scope included structural, electrical, mechanical, plumbing, and fire protection engineering, as well as façade, lighting and acoustic consulting. Our strategies achieved a 30% energy savings over code-compliant baseline; these included a highly insulated façade, high-efficiency glazing and optimized solar shading. The project was designed to lend transparency to science, with the building’s systems exposed and the central atrium offering views into the labs, to put chemistry on display.
The Frick is the second-largest academic building on Princeton’s campus, and the first built to the University’s aspirational new sustainability guidance. One goal was for the new building to use no more energy than the old one it was replacing – despite the fact that the new building is many times larger and more technologically modern than its predecessor.