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Campus Design for the Post-Linear Learning Era

Western Kentucky University, Gordon Ford College of Business at Amy and David Chandler Hall
Western Kentucky University’s Gordon Ford College of Business at Amy and David Chandler Hall consolidates resources including academic advising, peer tutoring and financial aid guidance. | Photo Credit (all): Gensler

By Maggie Marlin, IIDA

The COVID-19 pandemic forced higher education to answer an uncomfortable question: if the classroom is the only place that matters, why bother with a campus at all?

Universities responded by completely rethinking what makes physical space valuable. The answerisn’tmoreclassrooms:it’severything around them. Walk into a new college building today and the spaces between classes command as much design attention as the lecture halls. Faculty from different departments share collaborative spaces. Students work alongside industry partners in innovation labs. Libraries have evolved into social infrastructure,whereconnection matters as much as collection.

This shiftisn’tjust about amenities. As technology reshapes how knowledge gets transmitted and artificial intelligence handles more of the rote work of education, education design is doubling down on what can’t be automated: human connection, hands-on collaboration and the kind of creative thinking that only happens when people come together in physical space.

According toGensler’s,released earlier this year,education is undergoing a fundamental transformationthat’sreshaping not just how students learn, but how entire learning environments are conceived and built. Three major trends are driving this evolution, andthey’realready visible in projects across the country.

Learning Without Lanes

The first big shift? Learning is no longer linear, and neither is the campus.

Students todayaren’tjust earning degrees;they’recollecting skills. They might spend mornings in traditional lectures and afternoons in apprenticeship programs with campus industry partners, pause their degree to launch a venture, then return for an executive MBA a decade later. Education has become modular, customizable,and continuous, which means campus spaces need to evolve into flexible ecosystems that can support everything from micro-credentials to business incubators to lifelong learning hubs.

Western Kentucky University’sGordon Ford College of Business at Amy and David Chandler Hallillustratesthis approach.The buildingconsolidatesresources including academic advising, peer tutoring, financial aid guidanceandeven a ‘Suited for Success Closet’ where students can borrow business attire for interviews.It’sdesigned to support students wherever they are in their journey, whetherthey’renavigating their first semesteras afirst-generationstudentor preparing to pivot careers mid-degree.

On the first floor,the trading labdisplays real-time stock market changes through Bloomberg Technology terminals, giving students access to professional-grade financial analytics typically reserved for working professionals. Sales classroomsinclude set-ups ofreal-world environmentsthatstudentsmightencounterwhen making a sales pitch,blurringthe line between academic exercise and professional practice. The most forward-thinking element might be the simulation lab, which uses augmented and virtual reality for marketing strategy exploration. The floor is deliberately furniture-free, allowing forfully immersive AR and VR experiences.It’sa space designed not for how students learn today, but for howthey’llneed to learn tomorrow, and return tolearnagain years from now.

Western Kentucky alsodemonstratesthis principle through strategic design choices: coreobjectivesincluded creatingspaces sostudentswouldlinger beforeand after scheduled classes, accommodating everything from traditionalundergradsto professionals pursuing executive education, with spaces that stay flexible enough to evolve alongside industry needs.

What AI Can’t Replicate

Purdue University, Mitch Daniels School of Business
Purdue University, Mitch Daniels School of Business

If campusescan’tcompete with AI on information delivery, they need to own what technologycan’ttouch: collaboration, community,and creativity.Libraries, incubators, makerspaces,and other campus “third spaces” are being reimagined to prioritize hands-on, project-basedand team-driven work. The social experience of learning becomesacompetitive advantage.

This is where projects like Western Kentucky’s Commons at Helm Library come into play. The facility transformed a 1930s building that once housed the university gymnasium into a new intellectual hub at the historic academic heart of campus. The Commons combines social spaces, including food service venues that accommodate 900 guests, with library and student support services.It’sdesigned to serve both campus-based and commuter students, creating a destination that pulls people in rather than just providing study carrels.

The project has earnednumerousawards, including the IIDA/American Library Association Library Interior Design Award and Best in Show, precisely because it understands that the future library is less about book storage and more about human connection.

Purdue University’s Mitch Daniels School of Business, scheduled for completion in 2027, also usestilizesthis philosophy. The building integrates business, technology,and engineering classrooms and labs with advising offices, flexible collaboration areas,and an auditorium for campus-wide conferences and events. Recognizing that the high-traffic site lacked green space, the design team added a courtyard for outdoor breaks and events. At night, the glazed facade will glow with activity,telegraphingthe innovative combination of spaces within and framingthe School of Business as a forwardlooking and vibrant community.

With a future-forward outlook, the building includes a full prototyping and engineering lab where students can merge technical and business skills in real-world developmePnt scenarios. It offers spaces students might encounter in corporate workplace environments, preparing them not just with knowledge but with the collaborative muscle memory they’ll need in their careers.

Read more in the Higher Education Issue of Ӱԭҕl.

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