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San Jose Civic Center
"It's transparent, it's open, it's the way government
should be."
This
is the new San Jose Civic Center, according to architect Richard
Meier. The simplicity of his statement cleverly belies the
complex efforts it took to achieve his vision. This project
joined the politics of the 10th largest city in the U.S.,
Richard Meier & Partners, the partnership between two
independently successful general contractors, the Turner/Devcon
Joint Venture, and 45 prime subcontractors on a three-year
epic journey.
"As the owner of this monumental project, the City of
San Jose looked to engage a construction management team that
would possess the chemistry needed to successfully interface
with the City as well as the contractors on the project,"
said Randal Turner, deputy director, San Jose Public Works.
"Like many stakeholder organizations, we felt that the
team needed the fortitude to make the necessary personnel
changes to ensure conditions for a positive chemistry were
maintained through the duration of the project. The Turner/Devcon
Joint Venture created this team attitude by consistently assessing
and re-assessing its own team to ensure that proper skill
sets were always present and available to the City to provide
the successful delivery of this project on time and within
budget. This was a true team collaborative effort in every
respect."
The goal of the new Civic Center was to not only unite city
government in one central location, but also highlight San
Jose's role as the unofficial capital of Silicon Valley and
revitalize the downtown economy. To achieve the city's objective,
Richard Meier's design totals 711,909 sq. ft., including five
acres of below grade parking, an 18-story tower, three-story
Council Wing, and a 108-ft.-tall glass domed Rotunda, all
linked together by a 620-ft.-long battered stone wall walkway/gallery.
Each element brought unusual challenges to the construction
team.
Conventional office building design includes centralized
cores housing elevators, rest rooms, mechanical shafts, electrical
and telecommunications rooms. Meier's innovative open floor
plan, designed to maximize natural light and provide unobstructed
views, has these functional elements housed behind shear walls
at both ends of the structure. The narrow tower is supported
laterally with moment frames in one direction and concrete
shear walls in the other.
The steel framework was erected quickly, but the concrete
shear walls were slower due to the intricate scaffolding,
rebar and formwork required for vertical concrete pours. Structural
instability resulting from the pace of the shear wall construction
threatened to stop the steel erection and pouring of floor
decks. Turner/Devcon, structural steel contractor Strocal
Inc, and structural engineer Englekirk & Sabol developed
a solution to allow the continuous erection of the steel independent
of the concrete shear walls. Additional welding was added
and temporary cross bracing was installed at the interior
bays to provide additional lateral support. This allowed the
tower crane to be jumped to finish the steel erection and
for the floor deck infill to be poured as the concrete shear
walls trailed behind. As a result, the joint venture re-engineered
the schedule and facilitated a simultaneous shell and interior
build-out.
Combined with laterally bracing the structure was the challenge
to erect the Brise Soleil (sunscreen) at the west face of
the tower. This curved steel framework, weighing 500 tons,
cantilevers from the 12th to the 18th floors with an outward
projection of up to 30 ft. Temporary 12-story shoring towers
were installed, and remained in place until all welding was
complete, to allow Brise Soleil steel to be erected concurrently
with tower steel and to minimize deflection of the framework.
The exterior of the tower and Council Wing is defined by
the inclusion of elaborate design features, including complex
curved skylights, radiused walkways, curved trellises, balconies,
glazed and metal clad canopies, vertical and horizontal sunshades,
and exposed exterior stairwell 19-stories in height. The project
incorporates many "green building" features, and
meets the basic requirements for LEED certification.
The rotunda's 100-ft. diameter is larger than the dome of
the U.S. Capitol Building. It is comprised of 1,036 panes
of glass and is the only structure of its type and scale in
the world to use the unique exterior cable supported radiused
point fixed glazing. The Battered Wall, which ties the project
together, is elliptical in shape and is constructed of a multitude
of shaped steel members clad with suspended Indiana limestone.
In addition to the curve of the wall, the slope of the batter
changes as it travels from one end to the other.
It is testament to the strength of the city of San Jose,
Richard Meier & Partners, associate architect Steinberg
Architects and the entire construction team that the complex
San Jose Civic Center is successfully complete and exceeds
expectations.
Owner's Comment:
" A true team collaborative
effort in every respect." -Randal Turner, deputy director,
San Jose Public Works
Project Team:
Owner: City of San Jose
Architects: Richard Meier Partners
Steinberg Architects
Construction manager: Turner/Devcon Joint Venture
Engineering team:
Englekirk & Sabol Inc.
ARUP
Key subcontractors:
Strocal Inc.
Enclos Corp.
Rosendin Electric
J&J Acoustics
Conco Cement Co.
ACCO Engineered Systems
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