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SmithGroup designed a space that reflects the high quality and professional work of ZEISS at their Michigan Quality Excellence Center in Lyon Township, Michigan.
Established in Germany in the mid-1800s, ZEISS is a longstanding global leader in the design and manufacture of scientific optics and electronic measuring systems. Because many of its sophisticated measuring instruments are used in the automobile industry, it had a significant presence in Michigan, with four offices in the Detroit area. ZEISS recognized the advantages of consolidating these offices into one facility for demonstration, customer support, training and metrology services, and sought a new facility that would reflect its values and capitalize on its strengths.
Like ZEISS products, the Michigan Quality Excellence Center building is taut and precise. It demonstrates respect for its workforce, with an immersive environment that encourages innovation and collaboration. It also demonstrates respect for its products, providing the exacting conditions needed to test and operate ZEISS equipment.
Employees and customers enter the building via a walkway that spans low gardens, offering views through and around the building to preserved wetlands that surround much of the site. The grand lobby juxtaposes the natural setting, flanked by a starkly elegant product showroom to the left and a human-centric cafe and gathering area to the right—a symbolic balance of human and machine.
From the lobby, two wings form the building’s shallow U shape and embrace a large inner courtyard. Workspaces are oriented along this inner courtyard, which is framed by a large terrace with seating areas and a rich wetlands landscape beyond. The building’s narrow floor plate and open, flexible seating arrangements result in smaller, collaborative work pods, compelling natural light, and uninterrupted sight lines to nature. In contrast to the bright, immersive human spaces, laboratory spaces require a highly stable environment with strict parameters for temperature and light levels. To achieve the tolerances demanded by these zones, the design isolates them with dedicated mechanical systems and creates layers of protection to prevent unwanted solar gain.
From the large massing to the fine details of the window film, components work in tandem at different scales to heighten the relationship between human and machine, and the excellence they can achieve when working hand in hand.
Design: SmithGroup
Construction Manager: The Christman Company
Photography: James Ewing, Jeremy Bittermann
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