• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Legat Architects Main Logo

Legat Architects

  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Contact Us
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Augustana College’s Lindberg Center to launch kinesiology program, new natatorium

October 16, 2020 Learning, News, Wellness by Legat Architects

Peter J. Lindberg, M.D., Center for Health and Human Performance to house Augustana College’s new kinesiology program, support expanding public health program, and usher in larger and brighter natatorium

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, positions for physical therapists are anticipated to grow by 22% over the next decade. Accordingly, Augustana College in Rock Island, Illinois is constructing the Peter. J. Lindberg, M.D., Center for Health and Human Performance. It will not only create a home for the college’s new kinesiology program and growing public health program, but it will also introduce a new, 25% larger natatorium featuring a 10-lane competition pool that will host the men’s and women’s swim and diving teams, along with new water polo teams for men and women.

Watch this video courtesy Augustana College to learn more about the Lindberg Center:

The 51,000-square-foot facility, designed by Legat Architects and built by Russell, offers specialized kinesiology labs and equipment for students to study everything from range of motion and force on joints to body composition and bone mineral density. Construction, which started in March 2020, is anticipated to finish in May 2021.

A large commons area off the entry functions as both a meeting area for kinesiology and public health students and a waiting area during natatorium events.

Kinesiology: Perform, Gather, Meditate

The main level of the Lindberg Center features a light-filled commons area, as well as labs and equipment that support the study of human movement. A performance lab houses treadmills, bikes, and other equipment. Next door, a fitness lab offers free weights, variable resistance cable machines, and a small running track. Smaller rooms have BOD POD (tests body composition) and DEXA (tests bone mineral density) machines.

The main entry’s glass curtain wall displays a first-floor gathering area and the Augustana “A” on the wall of the upper-floor commons.
Wood grilles and stained glass salvaged from a campus chapel welcome occupants to the upper-level meditation room.

The upper floor also has a commons space that overlooks the campus. As visitors approach the facility at night, the large Augustana “A” on the upper-floor commons wall shows through the glass. The upper level houses classrooms, conference rooms, and offices for the kinesiology and public health departments, as well as the focus point of the space: an elliptical meditation room.

The Anne Greve Lund Natatorium within the Lindberg Center features 10-lane natatorium with a movable bulkhead, seating for 200, and abundant natural light.

Aquatics: Competition and Analysis

The college’s bunker-like old pool facility was dark, dated, and so small that athletes’ backs nearly touched the wall as they climbed the diving board ladder.

The 25% larger, 10-lane (up from six) new competition pool, named after Augustana College women’s athletics pioneer Anne Greve Lund, accommodates 25-meter (length) and 25-yard (width) configurations. Additionally, the main pool has two diving boards (one meter and three meters) and a movable bulkhead that allows flexibility for different uses.

Spaces surrounding the pool include a team room and a coaches’ room with monitors on both sides for teaching. On the south end of the pool, pull-out bleachers above the coaches’ offices can seat up to 200 spectators. Retracting the bleachers creates an open events space that overlooks the pool.

A north-facing glass curtain wall fills the pool area with natural light while avoiding glare.
A small therapy pool supports the kinesiology program.

The pool uses a unique lane line storage system—instead of getting wound up around the bulky reels seen at most natatoriums, the lane lines at the Lindberg Center get delivered to the basement through holes in the pool deck.

The aquatics center also has a small, prefabricated therapy pool equipped with cameras that kinesiology students use to analyze motion.

Lindberg Center under construction October 2020. Photo courtesy Russell.

A Model for Bold Innovation

The Lindberg Center sits shoulder to shoulder with many of Augustana College’s most charming historic buildings along 7th Avenue. Its energy-efficient and durable building enclosure is constructed mostly of cost-effective precast concrete. However, at the main entry, blue metal panels frame a glass curtain wall.

Legat’s Ted Haug, project designer, said that the design roots the building “in this time and place. The Lindberg Center respects the traditional architectural vocabulary of its neighbors through its use of integral color precast concrete with thin brick. At the same time, the dramatic glass curtain wall displays the interior and draws students in to experience the facility.”

Students at Augustana are driven to find new solutions for the challenges the world faces. This building is symbolic of the way Augustana leaders model that kind of bold innovation. Rarely on other campuses are facilities designed to deliver students a high-quality academic experience and high-quality extracurricular experience under one roof at the center of the campus.

Contact us to learn more about higher education or recreation facility design or comment below to share your thoughts on this post.

Share

In the News

CommunityEmployee Insights

Train station design: regaining the power of rail

tinley park train station legat architects feature
CommunityNews

Hyatt Place and Hyatt House Hotels in East Moline Bring Upscale Lodging to The Bend on the Mighty Mississippi

Hyatt Place Hyatt House East Moline Rendering
News

In Memory: Alan F. Bombick, AIA (1955 – 2016)

Alan F Bombick feature

Looking For More? Check Out The Full Insights.

View All Chevrone right

Get Our Newsletter

Sign up for Legat’s newsletter to uncover design tips, news, and all things architecture.

Footer

Legat Logo Mark
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Services
    • Special Projects
    • Team
  • Careers
  • Insights
  • Projects
    • Learning
    • Wellness
    • Community

Chicago, IL

312 258 9595

Columbus, OH

614 228 7758

Gurnee, IL

847 662 3535

Iowa City, IA

319 450 0510

Oak Brook, IL

630 990 3535

Quad Cities, IA/IL

309 517 5536

Social link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link iconSocial link icon
  • Branding Assets
  • File Storage
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy Policy

©

2025

Legat Architects. All rights reserved.

Website designed by ArtVersion.