Penn Engineering

Facilities

Amy Gutmann Hall

In this new facility, students and faculty explore and responsibly apply the vast potential of data. It provides the space necessary to build on existing programs and further capitalize on the breadth of expertise, research, and data available at Penn’s world-class health and social science schools.

Features include hybrid learning classrooms; collaborative spaces for student projects; a data science hub for the entire Penn community; research centers for new socially-aware data science methodologies and novel, bio-inspired paradigms for computing; and laboratories that will develop data-driven, evidence-based solutions for safer and more cost-effective health care.

Contact Us to discuss exciting giving opportunities in Amy Gutmann Hall.

Renovations

A comprehensive space analysis has established a clear framework for how Penn Engineering’s facilities must evolve to support continued growth in the years ahead. As research expands into increasingly interdisciplinary areas and engineering education emphasizes hands-on, project-based learning, existing spaces must be reimagined to meet these demands. Adaptable, technologically advanced laboratories and modern instructional environments are essential to enabling new avenues of scientific inquiry and advancing emerging techniques and methodologies.

Penn Engineering is advancing a series of targeted renovations to align its facilities with these priorities, including the expansion of makerspace and teaching lab capacity in Towne Building and the consolidation of GRASP Lab research spaces within Levine Hall. Continued investment will be critical to sustaining this progress and unlocking larger efforts, such as the reimagining of the first floor of the Moore School Building and a full renovation of Hayden Hall.

Philanthropic support will accelerate these projects, enhancing the academic and student experience while positioning the School to attract leading faculty and advance emerging areas of research.