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Green Good Design Awards ARCHIVE 2022 Green Architecture
UCSF Joan and Sanford I. Weill Neurosciences Building | 2016-2019
  • UCSF Joan and Sanford I. Weill Neurosciences Building | 2016-2019
  • UCSF Joan and Sanford I. Weill Neurosciences Building | 2016-2019
  • UCSF Joan and Sanford I. Weill Neurosciences Building | 2016-2019
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UCSF Joan and Sanford I. Weill Neurosciences Building | 2016-2019

San Francisco, California, USA

Architects: Mark Cavagnero Associates
Architects of Record: SmithGroup
Client: University of California
Photographers: Tim Griffith Photography

The first center to integrate the research and treatment of neurology and psychiatry at UCSF, the Weill Neurosciences Building challenges the traditional boundaries of these disciplines through a program that fuels connectivity and collaboration.

From the outset of the project, the integrated project team drew inspiration from the incredible scientific research and innovative patient treatments that the scientists and doctors are doing already and that this building will support. The team understood that this will be a building of hope for many, and it should express its potential as a catalyst for progress.

Architecturally, the building is conceived as a pair of programmatically driven wings, united around a public atrium which includes the public and social spaces.

Wrapped with an architectural screen expressive of the precise science within, the four-story research volume is lifted above a transparent two-story clinical volume wherein natural materials seek to create a warm, serene space conducive to care.

This clear and concise massing is enlivened through powerful articulation of the forms that are informed by the campus to create a dynamic and welcoming environment that is illuminated and connected to nature.

Delivered through a collaborative Big Room cross-discipline teaming approach and ongoing collaboration, the team was able to develop and refine the design and facilitate decision-making.

The team achieved a high level of design aspiration on this high-performing and complex building, including approximately 68,000SF Wet Research, 70,000SF of Dry Research, 60,000 SF of Clinical Space, including two 3T MRIs, and 15,000SF of Shared/Support Program.

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