Diadon Enterprises © 2018

Turner breaks ground on $98M Chico State project, sends VP back to school | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

A rendering shows the planned College of Behavioral and Social Sciences building at Chico State University.
The 94,000-square-foot building will include solar panels, an efficient water system, LED lighting, a chilled beam cooling system and an indoor garden. Courtesy of Turner Construction

Turner Construction broke ground on a $98 million, net-zero energy building for the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences at California State University, Chico, according to a company announcement.

Sustainable aspects of the 94,000-square-foot building include solar panels, an efficient water system, a design that leverages both natural and LED lighting and a chilled beam cooling system. The structure also includes an indoor garden with living trees and bridges, as well as open and enclosed study spaces.

The building, designed by Los Angeles-based AC Martin, will be home to nine academic departments, 22 classrooms, five laboratories and a lecture hall, as well as faculty offices, conference space and breakout rooms to foster collaboration.

Gayle Hutchinson, president at Chico State, said the building reflects the university’s commitment to sustainability. 

“As we columbus oh dump truck company to attract and serve the next generation of changemakers, we’re proud to do so with one of the most state-of-the-art buildings in the entire CSU system,” Hutchinson said. 

The building also reflects the impacts of the pandemic on design. Each classroom and lab will feature what the university refers to as “Chico Flex,” its instruction model that enables faculty to teach and interact with students in person and online simultaneously, according to the university.

Turner’s Dan Wheeler, vice president and general manager, is a 1993 graduate of Chico State’s Construction Management program and is returning to the campus as a part of the build. 

A headshot shows Turner Construction executive Dan Wheeler.
Dan Wheeler
Courtesy of Turner Construction
 

“To be a part of the College of Behavioral and Social Sciences project 30 years after I graduated means so much to me and our company,” Wheeler said in the release. “We hire many Chico State students and with this project, we can catch up with students on a regular basis and they will be able to see what a real-world job of this magnitude looks like.”  

Wheeler previously worked on the construction of the campus’ Student Services Center in 2008.   

The new social sciences building is slated to open to students in fall 2024.

 

Construction Dive news delivered to your inbox

Get the free daily newsletter read by industry experts

Daily Dive newsletter example

Editors' picks

  • Four-story glass and sandstone building with a vast green lawn in front of it.
    Image attribution tooltip
    Courtesy of Adolfson & Peterson
    Q&A

    Despite labor shortages, construction in Texas is booming

    Adolfson & Peterson’s new central Texas director of preconstruction also discussed how the industry has changed over the past three decades and how the role of tech is evolving.

    By Julie Strupp • March 24, 2023
  • Workers talking at construction site reviewing plans Explore the Trendline
    Image attribution tooltip
    ljubaphoto via Getty Images
    Trendline

    Construction Outlook 2023

    How will construction fare this year? Inflation, a potential recession, supply chain struggles and sky-high labor demands are pushing up against optimism from infrastructure spending, growth in specific sectors and tech advancement. While economists have warned of an impending recession for months, it has yet to arrive. Construction Dive broke down several trends in labor, technology and infrastructure, while testing the hardiness of specific sectors in 2023. Here is a look at what to expect this year:

    By Construction Dive staff
A field of solar panels on a grass plain. The solar panels stretch as far as the eye can see in long rows.
rendering of Project Beacon
A rendering shows the future Great Wolf Lodge in Connecticut, complete with an indoor waterpark.
A yellow crane stands in front of a tall, shiny glass building that is mostly constructed.
A row of nine men, mostly wearing suits, stand with shovels in front of a pile of dirt. There is construction columbus oh dump trucks in the background and confetti raining down.