07/13/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/13/2026 09:20
The Vision
The lobby to Virginia Tech's Academic Building One would not only provide students, faculty, and guests with an entry to the facility. It would be a portal to possibilities. The ceiling and wall design would play an integral role, helping to articulate the grand lobby as the starting point for learning, exploration, collaboration, and innovation shaping the future of tech education.
The Challenge
High expectations were placed on Academic Building One. It would stand as a paragon of architectural design's ability to transcend boundaries to influence a campus and community. It was the first academic building on the Innovation Campus in Alexandria, supporting Virginia's $1.1 million Tech Talent Investment Program and contributing to the bid to attract Amazon's second headquarters to the region. Plus, every aspect needed exemplify the principles of sustainability, health and wellness, accessibility, connectivity, and integrated technology.
Bringing the outside in was the first step in ensuring the lobby ceiling and wall design delivered on these expectations. This meant referencing the heliomorphic exterior which was designed "to directly relate to the movement of the sun" and comprised of a faceted structure balancing onsite energy generation, energy efficiency, zoning requirements, daylighting, and occupant comfort. It was critical the folded geometry of building-integrated photovoltaic panels (used to generate energy) and the warmth of the terra cotta fins (providing passive shading) were carried into the interior.
"Early collaboration and a commitment to learning what the materials could do and applying that knowledge brought a very complex design vision to life," explained Sven Shockey, Vice President/Design Director, SmithGroup. "The folded geometry and warm wood tones all feel very natural and intentional."
To create additional cohesiveness inside and out, the exterior soffit and interior ceiling panels needed to work together to continue the geometry perfectly through a glass partition wall-not exactly an easy feat when accounting for light refraction, wood with natural variation, and geometric complexity.
Lastly, the interior lobby space in and of itself layered on challenges:
"The ceiling was pretty massive-and the larger the ceiling, the more variants you are going to see with natural wood or natural wood veneer," said Henry Gaffey, Project Engineer, ISEC. "But to meet the architect's vision and maintain a warm, calm space, we needed to moderate that variance somewhat. We found a way to be 'consistently inconsistent' without being overly disruptive and to do it in a way that used the wood grain to enhance the bold geometry."
Above the lobby Armstrong solutions can be seen distinguishing four floors of Academic Building One. This included but was not limited to CALLA and ULTIMA acoustical panels, TURF Slice acoustical panels, and METALWORKS ceilings, which were installed in the Boeing Auditorium, located just off the grand staircase.
The Solution
One year after completion, Academic Building One was featured on CBS News' America ByDESIGN™. It also earned ISEC the 2026 Washington Building Congress Craftsman award for outstanding architectural millwork, with ISEC's deliveries anchored by the monumental stair and 7,500 ft.2 of acoustical wood ceiling and feature wall. The Armstrong METALWORKS exterior soffits and highly customized ACGI WOODWORKS wall and ceiling solutions in and beyond the lobby played a notable role in both these recognitions.