Case Study :
Colorado State University – New Chemistry Building – LEED Platinum

61,200ft²

This new 61,200-square-foot chemistry building on the Colorado State University campus provides research offices and advanced laboratory space, including facilities designed for hood-intensive synthetic chemistry programs. The building was designed to support high-performance research environments while meeting stringent sustainability goals.

Air-handling units with heat recovery coils were installed in a partially redundant configuration that separates laboratory and office ventilation systems. Each of the four air-handling units includes a Konvekta heat-recovery system, which significantly improves energy efficiency compared with traditional recovery methods. Mechanical equipment is controlled through a centralized Building Management System to optimize operations.

Building heating is supplied via campus steam, connected to redundant heat exchangers, and the campus chilled-water system provides cooling. Lighting throughout the building incorporates both LED and high-efficiency fluorescent sources, with automatic controls, including occupancy sensors and daylight harvesting, in circulation areas, offices, and meeting rooms.

The building achieved LEED Platinum certification, reflecting CSU’s commitment to high-efficiency laboratory design and sustainable campus development.

  • Laboratory Exhaust Systems
  • Reliable Campus Utilities
  • Sustainable Lab Design
  • Heat Recovery Solutions
  • Flexible Infrastructure
  • Energy-Conscious Engineering
  • Redundant Mechanical Systems
  • LEED Platinum Certified