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Best of 2005 Awards
SUNY Cortland Glass Tower Hall
Award of Merit: Higher Education
Construction on the 55,600-sq.-ft. Glass Tower Hall at SUNY
Cortland only broke ground in June 2004, but the 197-bed hall
was finished for the current fall semester in August.
It wasn't just the construction that was on a fast-track
schedule. The entire project, from the design phase, took
22 months. And it was the first new dormitory on the campus
in 32 years.
The new Glass Tower Hall takes its name from its distinctive
architectural feature - four floors of glass-encased student
lounges that face Neubig Road and Corey Union. Erected between
two existing, student-occupied dormitories, the building is
also the only air-conditioned residence hall on campus.
The project, financed in part and overseen by the Dormitory
Authority of the State of New York, cost $12.6 million - including
$10.8 million in construction costs - and came in about $416,000
under budget.
"It came in with less than 1 percent of change orders,"
one Best of 2005 jury member said. "That's good value."
Meeting the tight schedule was one of the biggest accomplishments.
The team opted to shift from a traditional design-bid-build
contract to the construction manager-at-risk delivery method,
in which the contractor offers a guaranteed maximum price
for construction of the project and assumes the risk for costs
exceeding that price.
Cited as a "tough job" by the jury, the project
team staged three phases to allow demolition, sitework, foundations,
and structural steel erection to get under way even as the
architects were finishing designs for the building's interior.
The phasing also allowed completion of those early site and
structural tasks, as well as precast concrete plank and roofing,
prior to last December, which allowed the team to work on
the interiors during the winter.
The site itself was particularly tight, requiring the project
team to create a roadway between the two existing dormitories.
The university supplied offsite storage and materials lay-down
areas on campus, as well as a shuttle service from a designated
contractor parking area to the jobsite.
The team encountered surprises during site excavation, having
to relocate or remove features such as underground utilities,
asbestos-covered pipe, and foundation underpinning for prior
structures. In later phases, the project team had to manage
through last year's steel price run-up and a shortage of roof
insulation that required early purchases and offsite storage.
The team also had to account for an elevator workforce strike,
which required the redesign of drywall and finishes so that
work could take place before the elevators were installed,
as well as the bankruptcy of the glazing subcontractor during
the window installation phase, which required the hiring of
a replacement installer and renegotiation with suppliers.
Several design details also make the building more functional
for student use and more energy efficient. For instance, the
hall's student suites use a valence heating and cooling system,
which features hot- and cold-water fin tubes that hang from
the exposed concrete plank ceiling. The system relies on the
thermal principle of hot air rising and cold air sinking to
create air movement past coils to heat or cool room air -
a design that reduced ductwork, increased the amount of available
floor area, and reduced the need for periodic maintenance
of fans or filters.
SUNY is seeking Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
"certified" status from the U.S. Green Building
Council for the new dormitory, which would make it the first
LEED structure in the university system.
Key Players
Owner: State University
of New York
Developer: Dormitory
Authority of the State of New York
Construction Manager:
LPCiminelli
Architect: Ashley McGraw
Architects
Associate Architect: Burt,
Hill
Structural Engineer:
Klepper, Hahn & Hyatt
Mechanical-Electrical Engineer:
Ram-Tech Engineers
Steel Contractor: Raulli
& Sons
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