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UC Berkeley Residence Halls Units 1 and
2 Infill Student Housing
This
$92-million project features four new residential structures
totaling 884 new beds for the UC Berkeley campus. Structures
are eight stories tall. Scope included the demolition of existing
dining facility and reconstruction of the existing basement.
The new housing units are located just 20 ft. away from other
nine-story campus residences. The new housing design incorporated
natural lighting, additional insulation, and natural cooling
systems in each room. Three of the buildings are dormitories,
and the other is apartment style. Bicycle accommodations have
replaced parking spaces, and segregated material conveyance
chutes on each floor provide easy access to recycling. The
project also included renovating a dining hall to a student-services
building and a new plaza.
Crews incorporated environmentally sound practices during
construction, such as using fly ash, which reduces carbon
dioxide emissions during the creation of concrete, and recycling
construction debris off-site. Although the project, designed
by EHDD Architecture was not originally built to meet Leadership
in Energy and Environmental Design certification guidelines,
the university expects the project will earn a LEED silver
rating.
The 300,000-sq.-ft. infill housing project was built in a
busy urban neighborhood with a large student population. A
construction safety program included signs for reduced speed
limits, a radar/speed monitoring device, alternate pedestrian
routes, no jaywalking signs, and extensive communication with
students.
Because there was such limited delivery space and it was
important not to impede traffic, the crew created a training
video on traffic flagging. "We had 26,000 yds. of concrete
delivered on the project, and we coordinated schedules down
to the hour," said Bob Rycerski, one of two Rudolph and
Sletten superintendents on the job.
Rudolph and Sletten designed a unique removable fence panel
system and initiated a fence-monitoring policy for subcontractors.
The leading edges of all panels were wrapped in reflective
tape for night visibility. The fencing was so popular with
the city that it was adopted as a city standard for future
contractors.
"I think one of the challenges we undertook on this
was to give a private-sector performance to a public entity,
and I think we were successful to that end," said Kevin
Fettig, R&S project manager. "Rudolph and Sletten,
the architect, and the client were able to accomplish that
by working together. We took into account the nearby residences
and minimized the impact of our presence into their world."
Judges' Comments:
"The builders and architects
had to overcome some extreme obstacles in a busy urban setting
to create a unique set of buildings."
Project Team:
Owner: UC Berkeley
Architect: EHDD Architecture
Construction manager, general contractor: Rudolph and Sletten
Engineering team:
Rutherford & Chekene (structural)
Gayner Engineers (MEP)
Key subcontractors:
Rosendin Electric Inc.
Cleveland Wrecking Co. (demolition)
Conco Cement Co. (CIP structure)
Architectural Aluminum & Glass (window walls and metal
skin)
Anning-Johnson (wall framing and plaster skin)
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