U.S. Air Force Academy Center for Character & Leadership Development by SOM

U.S. Air Force Academy Center for Character & Leadership Development
Photo © Magda Biernat

The Center for Character & Leadership Development (CCLD) will serve as an education and research center, supporting the Air Force Academy’s mission to integrate character and leadership development into all aspects of the Cadet experience while also serving as a think tank for leadership and character development initiatives nationwide.

Photo © Magda Biernat

The CCLD also represents an important and symbolic addition to the Academy’s campus, which SOM designed in 1954, and was designated a National Historic Landmark District in 2004. As the first building constructed in the Cadet Area since the 1990s, the CCLD creates an architectural focal point for the campus, and serves as a counterpoint to the Academy’s iconic Cadet Chapel.

Photo © Magda Biernat

“Character and leadership development is the essence of the Air Force Academy’s mission and is interwoven into every aspect of the Academy experience,” says Lt. Gen. Michelle Johnson, Superintendent of the U.S. Air Force Academy. “This iconic structure represents our bold vision to become the premier venue for the integrated study and development of character and leadership.”

Photo © Magda Biernat

The 46,000-square-foot building is located at a critical meeting point between the cadet and public areas of the campus. The building serves as a nexus, with spaces dedicated to cadets, professors, distinguished visitors and the public. It contains the Forum, a flexible gathering space for academic and social interaction; a series of collaboration, conference, and seminar rooms; offices; library; and the Honor Board Room, where inquiries related to the Cadet Honor Code take place.

Photo © Magda Biernat

“Our design for the CCLD creates a distinct and contemporary icon for the U.S. Air Force Academy, while also deferring to the discipline and rigor of the original campus plan,” states Roger Duffy, Design Partner at SOM. “We were honored to have this opportunity to revisit one of our most important projects, and to make a 21st-century contribution at the heart of the campus.” The CCLD features a dramatic 105-foot skylight, a design element that establishes a bold presence on the campus, while bringing ample natural light into the building.

Photo © Magda Biernat

This glass-enclosed structure aligns precisely with the North Star, which signifies the Academy’s guiding values. By aligning this new center for community and collaboration under the North Star, SOM’s design creates a meaningful architectural interpretation of the Academy’s aspirations. With its complete integration of architecture and structural engineering, dynamic nature of its form, and machine-like precision, the skylight is fluid yet disciplined.

Photo © Magda Biernat

The structure of the skylight consists of diagonal steel plates composed in a triangular grid and precisely calibrated to resist the lateral forces due to wind loading. The Architecturally Exposed Structural Steel (AESS) is devoid of all embellishment or ornamentation, and its sleek connections are cohesive with the aesthetics of the structure. At the center of the building, the Forum’s terraced levels will accommodate gatherings at a variety of scales and levels of formality.

Photo © Magda Biernat

Glasswalled collaboration rooms surround the Forum, offering meeting spaces that emphasize the quality of transparency that is central to the building’s design. Symbolically placed at the building’s heart, the Honor Board Room features a conference table situated beneath a glass aperture that opens onto the larger skylight above. A cadet seated at the table will be precisely aligned with the North Star.

Photo © Magda Biernat

The interior of the Honor Board Room is kept deliberately simple, with walls, floor and ceiling clad in maple, to emphasize the table illuminated at the center of the room. Designed to meet LEED® Silver certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, the CCLD will set a new standard for green technology and building practices on the U.S. Air Force Academy campus. To meet this sustainability goal, and to potentially obtain LEED® Gold certification, SOM developed integrated building systems that influence all aspects of the building’s design, construction, and operation.

Photo © Magda Biernat

The CCLD features an energy efficient approach to climate control that utilizes high-efficiency air handling units, displacement ventilation, radiant heating and cooling, and a solar chimney effect within the skylight structure that expels heated air. In addition to the ample natural light provided by the skylight structure, the building’s classrooms, meeting rooms, and offices are situated around two adjacent courtyards to minimize the use of artificial lighting. Source by SOM.

Photo © Magda Biernat
  • Location: Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA
  • Architects: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM)
  • Design Partner: Roger Duffy
  • Managing Partner: Anthony Vacchione
  • Senior Designer: Scott Duncan, Frank Mahan
  • Technical Coordinator: Thierry Landis
  • Structural Engineer: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP, Charles Besjak, Preetam Biswas
  • MEP Engineer, Civil Engineer, Sustainability: Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
  • Lighting Consultant: Brandston Partnership, Inc.
  • IT/Acoustics/AV: Cerami & Associates
  • Theater Consultant: Fisher Dachs Associates
  • Historic Preservation: Robert Nauman
  • Cost Estimating: Faithful + Gould
  • Topographic Survey: Nolte Associates, Inc.
  • Code/Fire Safety: CCI
  • Wind Tunnel Testing: RWDI
  • Client: United States Air Force Academy
  • Area: Site 86,500 square feet
  • Project Area: 46,500 square feet
  • Building Height: 105 feet
  • Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Magda Biernat, Courtesy of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Photo © Magda Biernat
Site Plan
Plan
Elevation

1 Comment

  1. Just to let you know, this post appears a little bit weird from my android phone. Who knows maybe it is just my mobile phone. Great post by the way.

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