johnsonarchitecture

Rocky Top Dining Hall at UTK Earns BIA's Brick in Architecture Award by Robert Simmons

Simmons STUDIO Architects and Johnson Architecture of Knoxville earned a Brick in Architecture Award from the Brick Industry Association for their co-designed 1,200 seat dining hall. The Rocky Top facility is the new hub of student life at UT Knoxville, and the centerpiece of the West Campus Redevelopment project at the University of Tennessee, a collection of collegiate neo-Gothic structures weaved together with a rich fabric of brick, stone and clay tile roofs. The project captured the Silver Higher Education 2023 Award from the BIA.

The $42.5M project uses over 300,000 bricks from General Shale Brick Co., laid by Gentry & Painter, Inc., and features a monumental brick hearth in the fifty foot tall main dining hall. “The sustainable choice for 100-year building design is masonry, and the durable beauty of the material continues to shine in high-performance building design,” notes Bob Simmons, founder of Simmons STUDIO Architects.

Atrium Stair Robert Batey Photography

West Campus Dining Commons and Pedestrian Promenade Robert Batey Photography

West Campus Dining Commons at UT Knoxville to Open Soon by Robert Simmons

SimmonsSTUDIO Architects of Boston, MA and Johnson Architecture, Inc. of Knoxville, TN are thrilled to announce that construction on 81,700 SF of new construction for the West Campus Dining Commons will soon be complete.

The centerpiece of the six acre West Campus Redevelopment at UT Knoxville, the project will provide an innovative 1,300-seat dining venue offering a state-of-the-art exhibition cooking experience, designed by Ricca Design Studios, for the campus. The project will include a campus convenience store and an in-house bakery offering fresh baked goods, and a venue for late night service.

The dining spaces will focus outward toward views of the Smokey Mountain skyline on the horizon. The Johnson Ward Mall project, designed by CRJA/IBI landscape architects, will green the boulevard along the front of the building, incorporating water garden bioswales to calm and filter storm water.

The building itself will act as a connector for the campus as well, bringing the upper and lower parts of the steeply graded hilltop site together, with ADA access by elevator that is open 24/7 as well.