The grand opening of Holly Pointe Commons welcomed more than 1,400 students to the new, $145 million residence hall on Rowan University’s campus in Glassboro, N.J.
Designed and constructed with accessibility and sustainability goals, the facility meets the requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and is targeting LEED® Silver certification through the U.S. Green Building Council. Supporting the project’s performance criteria and condensed construction schedule, Wausau Window and Wall Systems provided nearly 1,500 window units to glazing contractor Newman Glass Works.
Rowan’s vice president for student life and dean of students, Richard Jones, stated, “Our students love that Holly Pointe Commons is a gateway to campus. The complex has a progressive, forward-thinking design that speaks to who we are as a University. Its unique design gives students the ability to be their authentic selves and to be part of learning communities that are so critical to their success.”
Designed by Erdy McHenry Architecture, the 303,000-square-foot building showcases a modern aesthetic and serpentine-shaped footprint. Standing 75 feet high, Holly Pointe Commons includes a four-story and a seven-story building interconnected by a study bridge. Its façade is constructed of metal panels and Wausau 2250i INvent™ Series windows.
Torcon, Inc. served as the construction management firm for the design-build project. Construction began in June 2015 and was completed just 14 months later, in time for the start of the 2016 semester. Traditionally, a project of similar size and complexity could take more than three years. The team credits the collaborative effort process and Wausau’s comprehensive product offering in the project’s speedy success.
“Torcon raved about the performance of Wausau and Newman, saying, ‘This is, hands-down, the easiest window package we have ever dealt with on a project. The glazing package has been the best performing trade on site,'” shared Wausau’s architectural sales representative, Jason Green.
Green added, “We support local control of scope of work, project management and approval as facilitated by our knowledgeable team and engineering tools. We are proud to offer our competitively priced, pre-engineered products on an accelerated delivery schedule to meet the needs of fast-paced projects, such as Holly Pointe Commons.”
On the new student residence, Newman Glass Works installed a combination of fixed and operable units. To help ensure that fresh air and a connection with the outdoors are made accessible to people with limited physical abilities, Wausau’s project-out windows comply with the university’s ADA requirements where specified. This means the windows are laboratory-proven capable of operating with one hand, using a force of 5 pounds or less, to unlock, open, close and lock, without tight grasping, pinching or twisting of the wrist.
Maintaining Wausau’s reputation for industry-leading high performance, no reductions in air, water or structural performance were necessary in laboratory testing of Wausau’s accessible windows. “We also were able to provide the same look across all hardware options, and to maintain the same sightlines for both the fixed and operable windows,” noted Green.
Beyond accessibility and aesthetics, a polyamide thermal barrier within the 2.5-inch aluminum framing enhances the performance of each window. Further contributing to the project’s sustainability goals, the aluminum used to produce Wausau’s window systems is a high recycled-content aluminum billet composition.
Linetec provides the thermal improvement services for all of Wausau’s aluminum products, as well as the finishing. Many of the window units showcase dual color finishes with Bright Silver on the exterior and Medium Gray on the interior. The remainder was painted in Medium Gray on both surfaces. All of the aluminum framing members were finished in a three-coat, metallic, 70 percent polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) resin based, liquid paint.
As a recognized, environmentally responsible finisher, Linetec captures the liquid paints’ volatile organic compounds (VOCs) content using a 100 percent air capture system and safely destroys the VOCs with a regenerative thermal oxidizer. Linetec then re-uses its heat energy byproduct to improve process energy efficiency. This process of re-use is completed before the material exits the paint line.
Applied under Linetec’s stringent factory-controlled processes, these finishes meet the American Architectural Manufacturers Association’s (AAMA) 2605 industry standards, as well as minimize buildings’ maintenance costs and maximize long lifecycles.
In seven years, Rowan University’s enrollment is expected to reach 25,000, a significant increase from the current 17,000 students. Of these, the 1,415 students living at Holly Pointe Commons include freshmen, sophomores and transfer students. The new building provides student housing as the university’s population continues to grow.
The residential complex was designed with the needs of freshmen and sophomores in mind. Rooms are organized in pods that include a mix of student bedrooms, lounge and study spaces, bathrooms and laundry rooms. The pods provide spaces to help students build a sense of community in the hall.
SOURCES:
Holly Pointe Commons, Rowan University; 29 Mullica Hill Rd., Glassboro, New Jersey 08028; http://www.rowan.edu/studentaf
• Development partners:
o University Student Living, LLC, the comprehensive housing company of The Michael Organization; Marlton, New Jersey; https://themichaelsorg.com/usl
o Provident Group-Rowan Properties LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Provident Resources Group, Inc.; http://www.provident.org
• Architect: Erdy McHenry Architecture; Philadelphia; http://em-arc.com
• Construction manager: Torcon, Inc.; Red Bank, New Jersey; http://www.torcon.com
• Glazing contractor: Newman Glass Works; Camden, New Jersey
• Glazing systems – manufacturer: Wausau Window and Wall Systems; Wausau, Wisconsin; http://www.wausauwindow.com
• Glazing systems – glass fabricator: PPG Solarban® 60; http://www.ppgideascapes.com
• Glazing systems – finisher: Linetec, Wausau, Wisconsin; http://www.linetec.com
• Photos courtesy of: Rowan University ©2016 Joel Schwartz
• Time lapse video: http://www.rowan.edu/adminfina