AMD's Lone Star Campus

AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners

AMD's Lone Star Campus

TBG Partners

ARCHITECTS:
TBG Partners

YEAR
2008

LOCATION
Austin, United States

CATEGORY
University

Technology company Advanced Micro Devices’ (AMD) new “Lone Star” campus – located at 7171 Southwest Parkway in Austin – has been awarded LEED Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, making it the largest LEED-certified corporate campus in Texas.

AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners

The $190 million, 870,000-square-foot campus opened in January 2008 on a 59-acre tract in south Austin. Project elements include four four-story office buildings, three recessed parking garages and the Lone Star building, which features an employee fitness center, cafeteria, gourmet coffee bar, casual meeting space, outdoor decks and a gaming center with table tennis, billiards tables and video game consoles.

Austin-based Graeber, Simmons & Cowan served as the lead architect; Texas-based TBG Partners provided programming, site planning and landscape architecture services; Austin-based Paul Koehler Brown and Austin-based Jaster-Quintanilla served as the structural engineers; Austin-based Michael E. James &Associates served as the civil engineer; and Dallas-based Austin Commercial served as the general contractor.

AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners

AMD's new Austin campus was designed to fit the specific needs of its employees and the local environment. To create the innovative site development plan, the project team embarked on an intensive design process known as a "charrette" and created a site plan based on three key tenets: reducing site impact, protecting water quality and using innovative sustainable design.

Some of the innovative design features resulting from this unique development process include: Green Site Planning & Building Materials: Site plans called for structured garages instead of open lots and compact buildings with limited footprints, reducing the amount of impervious cover used to 20 percent below the amount legally entitled.

Its exterior consists of native stone and metal panels, providing aesthetic continuity for the campus, while expansive glass with solar shading allows daylight to penetrate the open office areas and provides employees with visual access to the natural setting. Approximately 43 percent of the land was left undeveloped.

100 Percent Texas Native Landscaping: AMD partnered with TBG Partners and Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center to identify ecological areas and to salvage the native trees, shrubs and grasses within the footprint of the campus' roads and buildings.

This natural vegetation was harvested prior to the project’s groundbreaking and replanted at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center during construction of the AMD project. TBG's design incorporated the salvaged plants to maximize preservation of the existing environment and to restore disturbed and failing ecological systems.

AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners
AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners

Rainwater Collection: An innovative rainwater harvesting system was designed to collect rainfall from all roof surfaces, including the structured parking garages.

The rainwater is collected, filtered and stored in two underground tanks equaling two million gallons. The collected rainwater is used to irrigate the site's native landscaping and to supplement the potable water used in the campus' energy-efficient cooling system.

Sustainable Products: The design team utilized products that feature high amounts of recycled content and rapidly renewable materials to reduce energy, such as bamboo, certified wood grown in ecologically maintained forests, and concrete with a large percentage of fly ash, a waste byproduct of the coal industry. Finish materials and treatments were simplified throughout the campus in order to reduce waste, chemical pollutants and maintenance. Wherever possible, stains or clear coats were used instead of laminates, paints and coverings. In all, 75 percent of its construction waste was recycled.

Founded in Sunnyvale, Calif., in 1969, AMD came to Austin in 1979, building the company's first U.S. chip manufacturing facility outside Silicon Valley.

Today, Austin is home to AMD's largest non-manufacturing campus and employs more than 2,500 people. AMD has a long history of environmental stewardship and corporate responsibility and has been recognized for its efforts by some of the most prestigious institutions. 

AMD's Lone Star Campus
© TBG Partners
AMD's Lone Star Campus
Plan

In 2008, the company received the annual Climate Protection Award from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for continued commitment to energy-efficient product innovation, facility design and management and industry education.