Milwaukee School of Engineering - Dwight and Dian Diercks Computational Science Hall

Milwaukee School of Engineering Higher Education Science and technology data centers Milwaukee
 Milwaukee School of Engineering Lobby Interior Science Technology Higher Education SmithGroup
Milwaukee School of Engineering Higher Education Science and technology data centers Milwaukee
 Milwaukee School of Engineering Lobby Interior Science Technology Higher Education SmithGroup

Located in the heart of campus on Milwaukee Street, the new Dwight and Dian Diercks Computational Science Hall at the Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSOE) is the academic home for the University’s first computer science degree. The building encourages truly transformative cross-departmental collaboration via its technologically advanced spaces. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is also employed to enhance the curricula of existing degree programs at the University, most notably the engineering disciplines, business, and nursing.

Client

Milwaukee School of Engineering

Location

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Markets/Services

Data Centers, Higher Education, Mission Critical, Science & Technology

Size

64,000 GSF

Featured Awards

Award of Excellence in Electrical Systems Design, AEI Professional Project Awards, The Architectural Engineering Institute (AEI), 2020

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Funded primarily by a $34 million donation from MSOE alumnus and Senior Vice President of NVIDIA Dwight Diercks and his wife Dian, the focal point of the building is a supercomputer powered by state-of-the-art NVIDIA GPU units. The supercomputer, affectionately known as “Rosie,” pays homage to the pioneering 1940s women who worked as human computers calculating ballistic weapons trajectories, some of whom went on to program the early ENIAC computer. Rosie is a GPU-accelerated supercomputer capable of processing intensive applications like artificial intelligence, drones, robots, and autonomous vehicles.

Rosie is envisioned as a regional asset to be used by faculty, students, and outside organizations, the latter being able to access it for a fee. The machine is prominently displayed in the building – Rosie is ensconced in a large glass case accented by a binary frit pattern designed by students. A playful graphic is situated on the supercomputer itself.

SmithGroup’s engineering design and architectural programming and planning services were solicited by Ramlow/Stein Architecture + Interiors, who have been working on the MSOE campus for over a decade. SmithGroup’s expertise in data center design was foundational to their role on the project.

Milwaukee School of Engineering Higher Education Science and technology data centers Milwaukee

While the supercomputer room occupies only 1,500 square feet of the 65,000-square-foot structure, it consumes over 60% of its energy. As such, it needed to be seamlessly integrated into the building and MEP infrastructure. The entire data center is designed for N+1 redundancy, allowing it to remain functional even in the event of a single component failure, thanks to multiple back-up generators and cooling units.

The engineering team was able to achieve a symbiotic relationship between the base academic building energy systems and the supercomputer systems. For instance, the computer room and academic building use the same cooling system during summer months, maximizing efficiency across the whole building. During the Wisconsin winter, when the academic building no longer requires mechanical cooling, the computer facility utilizes “free cooling” from cold outside air via a separate system to keep NVIDIA’s Rosie cool.

SmithGroup conceived the supercomputing space as a work in progress, being able to grow and evolve as new computing technologies emerge (even for technologies not yet invented). Unlike most higher education data centers that are located on the periphery of campus, Diercks Hall is in the center, emblematic of its pedagogical importance and the future of the University.