Oakton Community College: Margaret Burke Lee Science and Health Careers Center

Margaret Burke Lee Science and Health Careers Center

PHOTOS © JAMES STEINKAMP, STEINKAMP PHOTOGRAPHY

As a new gateway to Oakton Community College (Des Plaines, IL), the Margaret Burke Lee Science and Health Careers Center houses sophisticated lab and simulation environments. The 93,000-square-foot center, designed by Legat Architects and built by Turner Construction, also celebrates the campus’s natural highlights and showcases sustainable advances.

Planning sessions resulted in a new breed of interactive workspaces within and beyond the walls of the facility. Faculty participated in the design of classrooms, study spaces, offices and the hardscape, including three outdoor classrooms. Third-floor biology labs feature a unique octagonal shape and oval workstations that encourage interaction. Triangular alcoves outside the labs serve as student breakout space. Legat worked with lab consultant Harley Ellis Devereaux to plan the biology labs, along with the nursing simulation and undergrad research labs typically not found in community colleges.

The three-level center widens as it rises to reduce the building’s footprint, maintain passages into the campus and shelter an outdoor plaza. Study spaces, classrooms and offices are situated for optimum views of the lake to the west and the forest to the south. The cantilevering third-floor corridor shades the second floor and offers panoramic views, while a staircase frames views to the north.

The design also responds to the building’s location along the Des Plaines River flood plain: piers raise the facility to create a “compensatory storage area” that holds water.

Signs throughout the Lee Center detail its sustainable innovations. For instance, a lobby wall features wood roof sheathing reclaimed from a Midwestern barn. Exposed polished concrete floors absorb the winter sun’s warmth, then release heat throughout the day to reduce energy demands.

A fully-automated exterior ventilated blind system senses the sun’s angle, temperature and wind speed to help cool the building, while a sunshade with integrated photovoltaic panels helps generate electricity.

This article originally appeared in the issue of .

Featured

  • bar graph with the bars made out of abstract cinder blocks and other construction materials

    Spaces4Learning 2025 Trends in K–12: Materials & Construction

    With 2025 well underway, it’s time to take a look at some broader trends submitted by you, our Spaces4Learning readership. We asked for your thoughts on topics like classroom design, health & safety, materials & construction, and technology in both K–12 and higher-education environments. Below is a roundup of 2025 trends in K–12 materials and construction from the experts in the trenches.

  • Active Learning Classroom

    Striking a Balance: The Keys to Renovating Science Education Buildings for the 21st Century

    The recent renovation of the Durham Science Center at the University of Nebraska-Omaha (UNO) provides a roadmap for facilities managers tasked with balancing budget constraints, modern pedagogical demands, and long-term sustainability.

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Introduces Claude for Education

    Anthropic has launched a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.

  • Kimball International Debuts Health & Education Experience Center

    Kimball International recently opened a new facility at its corporate headquarters in Jasper, Ind., that will act as a hands-on showroom for a variety of its furniture products and solutions, according to a news release. The 13,000-square-foot Health & Education Experience Center was originally designed by Gensler as the headquarters for Kimball International’s National brand.

Digital Edition