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Best of 2005 Awards
Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church Renovation
& Addition
Project of the Year: Renovation
For
the congregants of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, last
Easter was a season of renewal in both the physical and spiritual
sense. A $28 million expansion and renovation of their historic
church finished in March, allowing the faithful to again celebrate
in their own sanctuary.
"This was a lovely restoration, requiring the collaborative
efforts of skilled craftspersons, artisans, and constructors,"
said one of the Best of 2005 jurors.
Constructed in 1875, the Gothic Revival-style church was
once the tallest structure in New York, holding that title
for eight years until the Brooklyn Bridge surpassed it. The
church now sits among high-rises in its commercial setting
at Fifth Avenue and 55th Street in Midtown.
The building had not had major modifications or renovations
since its initial construction, and it needed many 21st Century
improvements, such as the complete modernization of electrical,
HVAC, fire, and security systems as well as accessibility
improvements.
In addition, the church has a thriving congregation and needed
to add administrative and program space to respond to increased
demand on the facility.
The project, which began in June 2004, took place on a tight
site in a building that required significant preservation
efforts. The project team - led by two New York-based firms,
Goshow Architects and Structure Tone as the construction manager
- determined that the only way to add another 13,000 sq. ft.
to house new educational, conference, and meeting facilities
was to dig into the Manhattan schist below the fragile, 130-year-old
sanctuary, without harming its all-wood interior and dramatic
vaulted ceiling.
The team managed the task by transferring loads from the
church's existing footings to a temporary steel support structure.
Within that framework, contractors removed more than 7,000
cu. yd. of stone and dirt to accommodate the two floors of
new space, where it built the below-grade Christian Education
Center and a passageway from the structure upstairs.
The team also shored the sanctuary to add air conditioning
for the first time by reconfiguring the original convection
heating system, which distributes heat through slots behind
each pew. Developed in part by Goldman Copeland Associates
of New York, the reconfigured system pushes cold air through
the slots at low velocities - a solution that avoided the
need to install mechanical equipment and ductwork in the attic
or to disturb the carved Gothic ceiling.
In addition, the team widened and revitalized the Grand Hall
in the original structure. The design incorporates a mosaic
tile motif from another part of the church into the Grand
Hall floor and a similar pattern in the new education center's
bathrooms, providing continuity between the old and new spaces.
The design also features darkly stained oak panel walls and
lead-pane rippled glass windows in the new space to match
the originals in the sanctuary, Grand Hall, and library.
To find space for expanded administrative offices, the project
team turned to the 10-story, 38,000-sq.-ft. brownstone Church
House, built next door in 1925. The team built two floors
at the top of the existing building, moving mechanical equipment
to the newly constructed 12th floor.
Key Players
Owner: Fifth Avenue
Presbyterian Church
Architect: Goshow Architects
Structural Engineer:
Robert Silman Associates
Construction Manager:
StructureTone
Excavation Contractor:
Urban Foundation/Engineering
M-E-P, FP Engineer:
Goldman Copeland Associates
Geotechnical Engineer:
Mueser Rutledge Consulting Engineers
Excavation Contractor:
Urban Foundation/Engineering
Steel Contractor: Empire
City Iron Works
Plumbing Contractor:
Laboratory Plumbing & Heating
Electrical Contractor:
Unity Electric
HVAC: JDP Mechanical
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