UNT Health Science Center IREB Lab Renovations

Fort Worth, Texas

Expertise

  • Education

Services

  • mechanical / plumbing engineering

Opened in 2019, the Interdisciplinary Research and Education Building (IREB) at the University of North Texas Health Science Center (UNTHSC) is a 172,000-square-foot, LEED Gold–certified facility that brings together teaching, research, and public-facing campus spaces in a highly flexible environment. The building houses the College of Pharmacy, the North Texas Eye Research Institute, and the School of Health Professions, and includes open-concept laboratories, a small vivarium, simulation suites, active learning classrooms, faculty offices, dining services, and shared public spaces. As one of the first facilities on campus to incorporate active learning classrooms, IREB helped establish a new instructional model that has since become the campus standard.

During construction, UNTHSC requested a significant program change—converting approximately 60,000 square feet of planned wet research laboratories into clinical and administrative space—while still preserving the ability to return those areas to lab use in the future. Thanks to the building’s original design, which incorporated expandable vertical chases and modular mechanical space in the penthouse, this change was implemented without impacting the project schedule or overall budget and maintained long-term flexibility for future research needs.

BHB provided mechanical and plumbing engineering design for renovations to portions of the second, third, and fourth floors, totaling approximately 15,000 square feet. The renovation scope included classrooms, offices, and conference rooms, as well as performance specifications for modifications to the existing fire protection and fire alarm systems serving the renovated areas.

Because the building was designed to allow any space to be converted back to laboratory use, BHB’s mechanical design specified laboratory-grade venturi air valves with heating water reheat coils to serve the renovated spaces. These new supply air valves were interlocked with return air valves to maintain required space pressurization, ensuring compatibility with future lab conversions. On the plumbing side, BHB designed the removal and rerouting of existing piping to accommodate the revised floor plans and new space configurations.

Delivered using a Construction Manager at Risk (CMAR) approach, the project reflects BHB’s ability to adapt engineering systems to evolving program requirements while preserving long-term flexibility, performance, and sustainability within a complex academic research facility.

Key People

  • Ian Bost, PE, LEED AP

  • Kirk Plum, PE, NSSA AP, CPDT, LEED Green Associate

  • Allen Grammer, PE, NSSA AP