University of Minnesota Bagley Outdoor Classroom

Project Details

Project Name
University of Minnesota Bagley Outdoor Classroom
Location
DuluthMN55812
Architect
COULSON
Project Types
Education
Project Scope
New Construction
Shared By
ckc
Project Status
Built
Year Completed
2010
Style
Modern
Size
1,550 ft²
Certifications & Designations
Team
Project Architect/Design/LEED Coordinator/Landscape Design/Interior Design/Passive House Design: Carly Coulson, AIA, LEED AP, CPHD

Project Description

Salmela Architect in collaboration with COULSON, completed the University of Minnesota-Duluth Bagley Classroom in 2010. The building is located in a 50 acre nature preserve within the university campus and near the shore of Lake Superior. It serves as a multi-purpose assembly space and environmental studies center. Over 30 departments use the facility as a field station to supplement exercises within the nature area. Engineering students use the building as a learning laboratory and monitor building performance.

A LEED building was the initial goal of the client. The team achieved the highest LEED score and the first LEED Platinum project for the university, a near-zero energy building, and a near-zero waste and water facility. The groundbreaking implementation of the Passive House approach in this extreme cold climate achieved deep energy conservation, reducing the heating load by 92% where the peak heating load is just 3000 watts (two hairdryers), and allowed a very small photovoltaic system to reach near-zero energy. This resulted in a design aesthetic where technology doesn’t dominate and the amount of PV has a comfortable scale integrated into the design. The project uses 87% less potable water with vacuum-flush composting toilets, a first in Minnesota for a higher-ed building.

The innovative, yet simple structure is super-insulated and air-tight. It consists of a shallow concrete foundation wrapped in 12 inch EPS, 16 inch SIP walls and roof, reclaimed timber beams, and triple-pane windows. COULSON successfully lead a diverse group of stakeholders including interdisciplinary user groups, and the University of Minnesota Duluth Facilities Management Department who built this pioneering and poetic building with their own in-house construction team.

Sidebar Single