The Historic Netsch CampusMain MenuThe Historic Netsch Campus Walking TourThe Historic Netsch Campus Walking TourCampus Plans: From Navy Pier to the University of Illinois Chicago CircleWalter Netsch's Unique Campus DesignChronology of Campus ConstructionHarrison-Halsted NeighborhoodBlock "I" Window DesignHarrison and HalstedHistoric ArtifactsThe Circle ForumThe Site of Turner GateThe Architecture and Art buildingSecond-Story WalkwaysHenry Hall and Jefferson HallUniversity HallBehavioral Sciences buildingStevenson HallLincoln, Douglass, and Grant HallsRichard J. Daley LibraryScience and Engineering OfficesTaft, Burnham, and Addams HallsScience and Engineering LaboratoriesScience and Engineering SouthBlue Island CorridorMemorial GroveGreen Architecture at UICLeanna Barcelonab78d4da7f92616ae537951578811de1af3a3c396Amara Andrew4c3de93e76c0cd744fba27cfbd00636d5347adad
Architectural plans for the Science and Engineering South building
Science and Engineering South, created by Netsch in phase three of campus construction, is another example of his Field Theory design model, which consisted of rotating simple squares by 45 degrees to form complex geometric elements radiating outward.
The two major wings of the building contain offices and laboratories to the east and classrooms to the west. A planned phase four addition was cancelled. The covered breezeway area and staircases leading away from it utilize granite as the building material.