Wasatch Campus, Utah Valley State College, Heber, Utah (Metal Construction News, April 2010)

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Date: 4/1/2010

The $10 million campus has been a welcome addition for students who had been taking college courses through a satellite campus in a rental building in downtown Heber. The new 67,000-square-foot (6,224-m2) building is expected to be the centerpiece of a campus that will ultimately be home to approximately 2,500 students. The 20-acre (8-hectare) campus had been donated by a group of local landowners. The building includes classrooms, lecture halls, a library, food services and cafeteria, a physical fitness room, computer data rooms, a bookstore and administrative offices. The campus offers two-year degrees in accounting, behavioral science and business information systems, along with a bachelor degree in business management.

The building envelope consists of a steel structure, a combination of split-faced and homed concrete masonry veneer, natural stone veneer and glass. The stone came from a nearby quarry and was selected to reflect the natural colors and textures found on the site. The building also features 50,000 square feet (4,645-m2) of 24-gauge, 18-inch- (457-mm-) wide Englert’s Series 2500 metal standing-seam roof panels in Sandstone. Englert Inc. also supplied 20,000 square feet (1,858-m2) of Series 4000 Sandstone 24-gauge metal wall panels that complement the concrete and natural stone veneers.

2139-21Surrounded by stunning mountain landscapes, the facility was designed to follow the natural contours of the land and take advantage of the view corridors. The pitch of the standing-seam metal roof and its neutral colors were a key consideration in making a visual connection to the site. According to GSBS Architects, its “generous roofs provide character to the building by reflecting the natural slope of the land and protect large west-facing expanses of glass that provide access to views.”

The standing-seam metal roof also maximized use of recycled content in building materials, according to GSBS. “By incorporating the best of the sustainable architecture movement, the design follows standards for cost-saving modular approaches, aims to achieve a LEED rating and produces a facility that will last 100 years.”

Construction manager/building architect: Sahara Inc., Bountiful, Utah
Campus architect: GSBS Architects, Salt Lake City
Installer: Southam & Associates, American Fork, Utah
Metal roof and wall panels: Englert Inc., Perth Amboy, N.J., www.englertinc.com