2009 – 2014 Construction of World Trade Center Tower 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2009 – 2014 Construction of World Trade Center Tower 1 WORLD TRADE CENTER 2009 – 2014 CONSTRUCTION OF WORLD TRADE CENTER TOWER 1 • Four high-speed material hoists • Running from ground floor to roof at speeds of up to 700 feet per minute • 13 personnel hoists 2 JACOB K. JAVITS CONVENTION CENTER 2011 – 2013 Installation of Largest Green Roof in NYC Upgrades to Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing & Lighting Systems • Scaffolding to provide access for glass replacement • Protection shield rated for 600 psf • Center was open and events were on-going during installation • Six personnel hoists on roof 3 MADISON SQUARE GARDEN 2011 – 2013 Renovation Included New Chase Square Entrance, Suites, Clubs, Fan Decks, Hospitality Areas, Restaurants, Retail Locations & Two Bridges • Sidewalk bridges around two city blocks • Loading platforms • Custom protective timber floor mat • QuikDeck® Suspended Access System • Temporary egress solutions • Personnel and material hoists 4 BANK OF MONTREAL: BMO FINANCIAL GROUP – TORONTO 2009 – 2012 Top-Down Re-cladding of Entire Building Replacement of Stone • Custom-engineered movable scaffold with three tiers • Two dual personnel hoists with common platform 5 PERSONNEL / MATERIAL HOISTS 270 PARK AVENUE 432 PARK AVENUE THE PLAZA HOTEL 2007 – 2010 2013 – 2015 Conversion of Hotel Interior Renovation Construction of Highest to Condo of JP Morgan Chase Residential Condo in • Four rack-and-pinion hoists Manhattan Tower Western Hemisphere • Hanging rigs 1,396 Feet Tall • Four dual rack-and -pinion hoists • Eight rack-and-pinion • Common platform hoists with common platforms • Pedestrian sidewalk protection 270 PARK AVENUE PARK 270 432 PARK AVENUE PARK 432 THE PLAZA HOTEL 6 PERSONNEL / MATERIAL HOISTS 99 CHURCH RALPH WALKER CARNEGIE HALL 2014 – ongoing TRIBECA RESIDENCES 2013 – 2014 AT 100 BARCLAY Construction of Renovation of 800-Foot Tower Conversion of Office Infrastructure, Roof & Elevators • Personnel hoists Building into Condo • Sidewalk shed • Sidewalk sheds • Pedestrian sidewalk • Personnel hoists protection • Dual hoists with runways • Hanging rigs and material hoists CARNEGIE HALL CARNEGIE RALPH WALKER TRIBECA RALPH WALKER 100 BARCLAY RESIDENCES AT 99 CHURCH 99 7 PERSONNEL / MATERIAL HOISTS HEARST TOWER 240 EAST 68TH STREET UNITED NATIONS (before and after) Renovation of Entire Renovation of United efore & After Construction of New 30-Story Building Façade Nations Building Glass Structure on - B • Dual hoists at back of building Top of Building • Eight rack-and-pinion hoists with common platforms • Shoring • Pedestrian sidewalk • Sidewalk protection protection • Hoists HEARST TOWER 240 EAST 68TH STREET UNITED NATIONS UNITED 8 SCAFFOLDING THE NEW YORK ROCKEFELLER CENTER NEW YORK LIFE PUBLIC LIBRARY CHRISTMAS TREE INSURANCE 2014 – ongoing BUILDING Annual tradition Ceiling Restoration for Over 20 Years Re-cladding of Work Electricians Install Building Spire with 30,000 Christmas Lights Gold Gilding • Systems™ Scaffold with deck • Systems™ Scaffold • Pipe scaffold on spire NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE LIFE BUILDING NEW YORK ROCKEFELLER CENTER CHRISTMAS TREE THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY PUBLIC THE NEW YORK 9 MAST CLIMBERS SAFWAY SUSPENDED ACCESS SYSTEMS THE ARCADE-WRIGHT BUILDING MILWAUKEE CITY HALL ST. LOUIS, MO Restoration 2014 – 2015 2014 – 2015 Restoration Included Replacement of Brick, • Eleven SafRise Climber™ machines Windows and Caulking THEATER CAPITOL CENTRE • Five SafRise Climber™ machines MADISON, WI RIALTO SQUARE THEATER 2014 – ongoing JOLIET, IL 2014 – 2015 Brickwork Repair on 17-Story Residential Building With Multi-trade Restoration of Landmark Theater RIALTO SQUARE SQUARE RIALTO THE ARCADE-WRIGHT BUILDING THE ARCADE-WRIGHT Irregular-Shaped Balconies • Four SafRise Climber™ machines • SafRise Climber™ MILWAUKEE CITY HALL MILWAUKEE CENTRE CAPITOL 10 SAFWAY SUSPENDED ACCESS SYSTEMS QUIKDECK® SUSPENDED SAFASCENT™ HANGING RIGS ACCESS SYSTEM Suspended Access to • Provides stable, factory-floor-like platform Building Façades • Increases productivity and saves time • Enhances safety • For masonry, caulking, waterproofing and window Structural Rehabilitation, replacement Maintenance & Repair of Queensboro Bridge George Washington Bridge GEORGE WASHINGTON BRIDGE WASHINGTON GEORGE 11 CONSTRUCTION SITE ENCLOSURES DEBRIS CONTAINMENT JOBSITE SECURITY PEDESTRIAN SAFETY BARRIER 12 SIDEWALK BRIDGES & PEDESTRIAN PROTECTION FROM 8-FEET TO 22-FEET HIGH FROM 8-FEET TO 16-FEET WIDE 13 SAFWAY ATLANTIC FACILITIES Newly Serviced Hoist Elevators Woodworking Shop Shot Blasting Machine and Components Safway Atlantic maintains Safway Atlantic invested in a state- We provide in-house servicing an up-to-date woodworking of-the-art shot blasting machine to of all our hoist elevators and shop to quickly and strip paint off steel in minutes. We components. We also maintain an efficiently address custom remove paint from all components inventory of elevator hoist parts needs of various jobsites. every time they come off a jobsite and components. to get them ready for a fresh coat of paint for the next project. Yard Platforms State-of-the-Art Paint Shop We have more than 150,000 Safway Atlantic maintains a Our paint shop boasts heated air square feet of yard space for all stock of platforms of different circulating every 90 seconds to keep of our equipment. sizes and lengths for our hanging paint fumes out. The heated air also rig operations to supplement helps to cure paint faster, which allows elevator hoist access. us to paint equipment quicker. Inventory of Steel Beams Fleet of Trucks Pressure Washer Safway Atlantic maintains an Safway Atlantic has a fleet of We make sure that oily inventory of steel beams in more than 60 trucks to deliver components undergo all sizes and lengths to quickly materials to and from jobsites. high-pressure washing using hot and efficiently meet the water to get rid of oily residue. demands of any jobsite. 14 SAFWAY ATLANTIC HISTORY Safway Atlantic was created by bringing together the experience and expertise of two trusted names in the industry: Atlantic Hoisting & Scaffolding and Safway Services. By combining Atlantic Hoisting & Scaffolding’s reputation for designing innovative high-performance solutions, with Safway Service’s award-winning safety, extensive engineering staff and powerful project management system, Safway Atlantic can deliver the most comprehensive urban access solutions available in the New York, New Jersey and Chicago metropolitan markets. Whether your access challenge is large or small, complex or straightforward, we look forward to providing a world-class solution to efficiently and safely meet your access, hoist or scaffolding needs. 700 Commercial Avenue, Carlstadt, NJ 07072 Tel: (201) 636-5500 Toll Free: (800) 558-4772 Fax: (201) 636-5542 www.safwayatlantic.com 15 700 Commercial Avenue, Carlstadt, NJ 07072 Tel: (201) 636-5500 Toll Free: (800) 558-4772 Fax: (201) 636-5542 www.safwayatlantic.com Safway Atlantic LLC. ORN 3115 - 8/2015.
Recommended publications
  • Read Where Architecture Expert Paul Goldberg Comments on the History of New York's Famous Skyscrapers. As You Do So, Complete
    Can you identify any of these buildings? What do they all have in common? Which one do you like best? Read where architecture expert Paul Goldberg comments on the history of New York’s famous skyscrapers. As you do so, complete the following tasks: · In New York buildings are not only buildings, they become ___________________ · New York took over Chicago as regards skyscrapers in ___________________. · The Woolworth building was the tallest building worldwide for _________________. · The _______________ defined the Manhattan skyline. · They are trying to keep a memory of the people who were lost and also to show New York’s ______________________________. · New York stands out from the other cities as the embodiment of ____________________. Woolworth Building; Empire State Building; Chrysler Building; Flatiron; Hearst Tower The Woolworth Building, at 57 stories (floors), is one of the oldest—and one of the most famous—skyscrapers in New York City. It was the world’s tallest building for 17 years. More than 95 years after its construction, it is still one of the fifty tallest buildings in the United States as well as one of the twenty tallest buildings in New York City. The building is a National Historic Landmark, having been listed in 1966. The Empire State Building is a 102-story landmark Art Deco skyscraper in New York City at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and West 34th Street. Like many New York building, it has become seen as a work of art. Its name is derived from the nickname for New York, The Empire State. It stood as the world's tallest building for more than 40 years, from its completion in 1931 until construction of the World Trade Center's North Tower was completed in 1972.
    [Show full text]
  • Leseprobe 9783791384900.Pdf
    NYC Walks — Guide to New Architecture JOHN HILL PHOTOGRAPHY BY PAVEL BENDOV Prestel Munich — London — New York BRONX 7 Columbia University and Barnard College 6 Columbus Circle QUEENS to Lincoln Center 5 57th Street, 10 River to River East River MANHATTAN by Ferry 3 High Line and Its Environs 4 Bowery Changing 2 West Side Living 8 Brooklyn 9 1 Bridge Park Car-free G Train Tour Lower Manhattan of Brooklyn BROOKLYN Contents 16 Introduction 21 1. Car-free Lower Manhattan 49 2. West Side Living 69 3. High Line and Its Environs 91 4. Bowery Changing 109 5. 57th Street, River to River QUEENS 125 6. Columbus Circle to Lincoln Center 143 7. Columbia University and Barnard College 161 8. Brooklyn Bridge Park 177 9. G Train Tour of Brooklyn 195 10. East River by Ferry 211 20 More Places to See 217 Acknowledgments BROOKLYN 2 West Side Living 2.75 MILES / 4.4 KM This tour starts at the southwest corner of Leonard and Church Streets in Tribeca and ends in the West Village overlooking a remnant of the elevated railway that was transformed into the High Line. Early last century, industrial piers stretched up the Hudson River from the Battery to the Upper West Side. Most respectable New Yorkers shied away from the working waterfront and therefore lived toward the middle of the island. But in today’s postindustrial Manhattan, the West Side is a highly desirable—and expensive— place, home to residential developments catering to the well-to-do who want to live close to the waterfront and its now recreational piers.
    [Show full text]
  • Hearst Tower Makes Dramatic Use of Light & Space
    Inside & out, Hearst Tower makes dramatic use of light & space. Welcome to Hearst Tower, Hearst’s global headquarters and the first New York City st landmark of the 21 century. Using the original 1928 Hearst International Magazine Building as his pedestal, noted British architect Norman Foster has conceived an arresting 46-story glass-and-steel skyscraper that establishes a number of design and environmental milestones. Hearst Tower is a true pioneer in environmental sustain- ABOUT HEARST ability, having been declared the first “green” Hearst Tower is home to employees office building in New York City history. of Hearst, one of the largest Inside and out, the design of Hearst Tower diversified media, information and makes dramatic use of light and space. The soar- services companies. Its major inter- ing three-story atrium—filled with the sound of ests span close to 300 magazines cascading water—creates a sense of calm on a around the world, including Cosmo- grand scale. The exterior honeycomb of steel politan, ELLE and O, The Oprah Mag- keeps the interior work areas uncluttered by azine; respected daily newspapers, pillars and walls, thus creating superb views of including the Houston Chronicle and the city from most vantages on the work floor. San Francisco Chronicle; television At night, with its radically angled panes of glass, stations around the country that Hearst Tower looks like a faceted jewel. reach approximately 19 percent of U.S. TV households; ownership in leading cable networks, including Lifetime, A&E, HISTORY and ESPN; as well as business information, digital services businesses and investments in emerging digital and video companies.
    [Show full text]
  • An Overview of Structural & Aesthetic Developments in Tall Buildings
    ctbuh.org/papers Title: An Overview of Structural & Aesthetic Developments in Tall Buildings Using Exterior Bracing & Diagrid Systems Authors: Kheir Al-Kodmany, Professor, Urban Planning and Policy Department, University of Illinois Mir Ali, Professor Emeritus, School of Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Subjects: Architectural/Design Structural Engineering Keywords: Structural Engineering Structure Publication Date: 2016 Original Publication: International Journal of High-Rise Buildings Volume 5 Number 4 Paper Type: 1. Book chapter/Part chapter 2. Journal paper 3. Conference proceeding 4. Unpublished conference paper 5. Magazine article 6. Unpublished © Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat / Kheir Al-Kodmany; Mir Ali International Journal of High-Rise Buildings International Journal of December 2016, Vol 5, No 4, 271-291 High-Rise Buildings http://dx.doi.org/10.21022/IJHRB.2016.5.4.271 www.ctbuh-korea.org/ijhrb/index.php An Overview of Structural and Aesthetic Developments in Tall Buildings Using Exterior Bracing and Diagrid Systems Kheir Al-Kodmany1,† and Mir M. Ali2 1Urban Planning and Policy Department, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL 60607, USA 2School of Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL 61820, USA Abstract There is much architectural and engineering literature which discusses the virtues of exterior bracing and diagrid systems in regards to sustainability - two systems which generally reduce building materials, enhance structural performance, and decrease overall construction cost. By surveying past, present as well as possible future towers, this paper examines another attribute of these structural systems - the blend of structural functionality and aesthetics. Given the external nature of these structural systems, diagrids and exterior bracings can visually communicate the inherent structural logic of a building while also serving as a medium for artistic effect.
    [Show full text]
  • Subseries 2020B-1, Remarketing Circular
    REMARKETING BOOK‑ENTRY‑ONLY On April 1, 2021 (the Mandatory Tender Date), Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) is effectuating a mandatory tender for the purchase and remarketing of the currently outstanding Transportation Revenue Refunding Bonds, Subseries 2020B-1 (the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds). On the Mandatory Tender Date, (i) the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds will be subject to mandatory tender at a purchase price equal to the principal amount thereof; (ii) MTA will convert the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds from the Term Rate Mode to the Weekly Mode; (iii) MTA will obtain an irrevocable direct-pay letter of credit issued by PNC Bank, National Association to support the payment of principal of and interest on, and the payment of the Purchase Price of, the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds; (iv) the terms and provisions of the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds will be amended to reflect the terms and provisions described herein; and (v) the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds will be remarketed at a price equal to the principal amount thereof. The Mandatory Tender Date is also an Interest Payment Date (as defined herein) for the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds, and accrued interest to, but not including, the Mandatory Tender Date will be paid in accordance with customary procedures. See “REMARKETING PLAN” herein. For a discussion of certain federal and State income tax matters with respect to the Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds, see “TAX MATTERS” herein. $66,570,000 METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY Transportation Revenue Variable Rate Refunding Bonds, Subseries 2020B‑1 Dated and accruing interest from: April 1, 2021 Due: November 15, 2046 The Subseries 2020B-1 Bonds — • are MTA’s special, not general, obligations, payable solely from the revenues of the transit and commuter systems and other sources pledged to bondholders as described in this remarketing circular, and • are not a debt of the State or The City of New York or any other local government unit.
    [Show full text]
  • Nicole Hoffman Mark Navarro Kimberly Nordhoff Stephanie Schwindel Chris Williams Original Building •Architects: Joseph Urban and George P
    ARCH 631 • Fall 2008 • Professor Ann Nichols Nicole Hoffman Mark Navarro Kimberly Nordhoff Stephanie Schwindel Chris Williams Original Building •Architects: Joseph Urban and George P. Post & Sons •Opened in 1928, $2 million •“Important monument in the architectural heritage of New York" •The building was structurally reinforced to accommodate an office tower that was never realized •Cast limestone façade with fluted columns and decorative statues New Tower Expansion • Architect: Foster + Partners •Structural Engineer: WSP Cantor Seinuk •Construction Management: Turner Construction • New 46-story tower completed in 2006 •856, 000 sq ft. office building •Project cost:$500 million •New York City’s first LEED Gold Accredited Skyscraper Lord Norman Foster • Honored into knighthood in1990 • Pritzker Prize in 1999 • Life Peerage (Lord Foster of Thames Bank) •Began Foster + Partners in 1967. •Received 470 awards and citations for excellence and has won more than 86 international and national competitions. Existing Building Renovations • Interior of original building was completely gutted • Limestone façade was saved to serve as a historic reminder to the past • Additional framing added behind limestone façade for extra lateral strength • Made room for independent steel and glass mega structure to set inside Foundation and Soil •Separate foundation system from existing building • Large difference in elevation of SPREAD FOOTING CAISSON the bedrock under site • A few feet to 30 feet • Half of tower supported on spread footings • Half of tower supported
    [Show full text]
  • Building Envelope • Sustainability Consulting
    BUILDING ENVELOPE • SUSTAINABILITY CONSULTING • MONITORING 40 Bond Street InterActiveCorp (IAC) Headquarters 841 Broadway New York, NY New York, NY New York, NY Hearst Tower World Trade Centers 1-4, 7 Bank of America at New York, NY 9/11 Memorial and Museum One Bryant Park New York, NY New York, NY FIRM INTRODUCTION Vidaris, Inc. is a consulting firm specializing in building envelope, sustainability and energy efficiency. The company was created by combining the legacy firms of Israel Berger and Associates, LLC (IBA) and Viridian Energy & Environmental, LLC. Formed in 1994, IBA established an exterior wall consulting practice providing niche services to real estate owners, owner representatives and architects. Services were provided for new construction as well as investigation, repositioning, repair, and restoration of existing buildings. Later expansion included roofing as well as waterproofing consulting, encompassing the entire building envelope. IBA developed into an industry-leading resource. Viridian Energy & Environmental was established in 2006, providing consulting services to assist building owners and managers in energy efficiency, sustainability and LEED certifications. Energy modeling expertise set Viridian apart from other consultants offering more standardized service and support. In 2011, IBA and Viridian Energy & Environmental merged their specialized service offerings to form Vidaris. As building envelope designs and mechanical systems were becoming more complex, the two companies recognized that it was an opportunity, more so a necessity, for them to be able to provide a holistic approach to these closely related disciplines for their clients. Deep technical knowledge, a long proven track record, reputation, and a sophisticated analytical approach would allow Vidaris to provide a level of service second to none.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rise of One World Trade Center
    ctbuh.org/papers Title: The Rise of One World Trade Center Authors: Ahmad Rahimian, Director of Building Structures, WSP Group Yoram Eilon, Senior Vice President, WSP Group Subjects: Architectural/Design Building Case Study Construction Structural Engineering Wind Engineering Keywords: Construction Structural Engineering Wind Loads Publication Date: 2015 Original Publication: Global Interchanges: Resurgence of the Skyscraper City Paper Type: 1. Book chapter/Part chapter 2. Journal paper 3. Conference proceeding 4. Unpublished conference paper 5. Magazine article 6. Unpublished © Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat / Ahmad Rahimian; Yoram Eilon The Rise of One World Trade Center Abstract Dr. Ahmad Rahimian Director of Building Structures One World Trade Center (1WTC) totaling 3.5 mil square feet of area is the tallest of the four WSP Group, buildings planned as part of the World Trade Center Reconstruction at Lower Manhattan in New New York City, USA York City. Currently it is the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere with an overall height of 1776 ft. (541m) to the top of the spire. Ahmad Rahimian, Ph.D., P.E., S.E. F.ASCE, is a Director of Building Structures at WSP. Ahmad’s thirty years of experience with the The 1WTC structural and life safety design set a new standard for design of tall buildings in the firm range from high-rise commercial and residential towers aftermath of the September 11 collapse. The unique site condition with existing infrastructure to major sports facilities. He recently completed the design of 1WTC and One57 W57th Street. His other notable structural also added additional challenges for the design and construction team.
    [Show full text]
  • NY Skyscrapers : Über Den Dächern Von New York City
    Dirk Stichweh Fotografien von Jörg Machirus Scott Murphy SKYSCRAPERS ÜBER DEN DÄCHERN VON NEW YORK CITY PRESTEL München London New York INHALTSVERZEICHNIS 5 Vorwort 6 Die Geschichte der New Yorker Wolkenkratzer - Eine kleine Zeitreise DOWNTOWN SKYSCRAPERS 14 Einleitung 28 60 Wall Street 48 30 Park Place 16 Trump Building 30 70 Pine Street 50 Barclay-Vesey Building 18 Bankers Trust Company 32 One Chase Manhattan Plaza 52 World Trade Center Building 34 120 Wall Street (Twin Towers) 19 Bank of New York Building 35 Park Row Building 54 One World Trade Center 22 Standard Oil Building 36 New York by Gehry 60 World Financial Center 23 One New York Plaza 38 Municipal Building 62 West Street Building 24 55 Water Street 42 56 Leonard Street 63 One Liberty Plaza 26 20 Exchange Place 44 Woolworth Building 64 Equitable Building MIDTOWN SKYSCRAPERS 68 Einleitung 116 General Electric Building 157 Time-Life Building 70 Flatiron Building 118 Helmsley Building 158 XYZ Buildings 72 Metropolitan Life Tower 120 383 Madison Avenue 160 WR. Grace Building 74 Metropolitan Life North Building 122 JPMorgan Chase World 161 Fred F. French Building 78 New York Life Building Headquarters 162 500 Fifth Avenue 79 One Penn Plaza 124 Waldorf Astoria Hotel 164 Bank of America Tower 80 Empire State Building 126 Seagram Building 166 4 Times Square 86 American Radiator Building 130 Lever House 168 New York Times Tower 88 Lincoln Building 132 432 Park Avenue 170 McGraw-Hill Building 89 Chanin Building 134 Four Seasons Hotel 172 Paramount Building 90 MetLife Building 135 IBM
    [Show full text]
  • The Hearst Tower: Combining Steam Driven Absorption Cooling with a DOAS/Radiant System
    The Hearst Tower: Combining Steam Driven Absorption Cooling with a DOAS/Radiant System Jessica M. Lucas The Pennsylvania State University Department of Architectural Engineering Senior Thesis-Mechanical Option Architecture Hearst Tower 959 Eighth Avenue o 856,000 Square Feet New York, NY o 42 stories, 597 feet tall o Glass and metal curtain Project Team wall façade o Diagrid design features Owner: triangular glass panels Hearst Corporation four stories high o Primarily office space, but Development Manager: will also house an Tishman Speyer auditorium, test kitchens, Properties executive dining hall, and a television studio Architect: Foster and Partners Associate Architect: Adamson Associates Construction Structural Engineer: o December 2004-June Cantor Seinuk 2006 o Expected to earn MEP: LEED gold Flack+Kurtz certification Construction Manager: o Original 6 story Structural System Turner Construction headquarters facade preserved with new Composite steel and Lighting: o tower constructed concrete floor system with George Sexton through center 40 foot column free interior span Mechanical System o Tower is connected to the landmark façade by a o Low temperature air distributed using central horizontal skylighting VAV system system o 4-4000 ton cooling towers serve the chiller plant o Diagrid members are wide o Chiller plant contains 2-1200 ton and 1-400 ton flange rolled steel sections centrifugal chillers connecting at nodes o Radiant floor heating and cooling serves the lobby o The secondary lateral system is a braced frame at the service
    [Show full text]
  • Open Alexander Grosek Thesis V Final.Pdf
    THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY SCHREYER HONORS COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE PSYCHIC VALUE AND URBAN REGENERATION: HOW AND WHY SIGNATURE ARCHITECTURE AFFECTS REGIONAL ECONOMIES ALEXANDER GROSEK SUMMER 2020 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a baccalaureate degree in Finance with honors in Finance Reviewed and approved* by the following: Christoph Hinkelmann Clinical Associate Professor of Finance Thesis Supervisor Brian Davis Clinical Associate Professor of Finance Honors Adviser * Electronic approvals are on file. i ABSTRACT Focusing on buildings designed by winners of the Pritzker Prize for Architecture, I create a sample of 509 buildings-designed-by-signature-architects (BDSA) in the United States. This yields 170 metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) that contain 509 BDSA. Drawing on U.S. Census data from 2010 – 2019, 13 economic data points are collected for each MSA in the sample, yielding 2,210 initial data points. The same 13 data points are collected for each of the 37 states where at least one BDSA currently resides, yielding an additional 481 unique data points Finally, the same 13 data points are collected for the U.S. economy as a whole. This data is sorted using basic weighted-average calculations to measure the relationship between the number of BDSA and the regional economic performance of the group of MSAs containing those BDSA, weighted by the number of BDSA in each city. The BDSA-weighted average of these economic statistics is then compared to the state and national averages for the same economic indicators. The results of this study show that the 170 regions under analysis have BDSA-weighted economic indicators that, when viewed together, demonstrate significantly more robust regional economic environments than the population-weighted average statistics for the 37 state economies in which they reside and the national average for the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The 150 Favorite Pieces of American Architecture
    The 150 favorite pieces of American architecture, according to the public poll “America’s Favorite Architecture” conducted by The American Institute of Architects (AIA) and Harris Interactive, are as follows. For more details on the winners, visit www.aia150.org. Rank Building Architect 1 Empire State Building - New York City William Lamb, Shreve, Lamb & Harmon 2 The White House - Washington, D.C. James Hoban 3 Washington National Cathedral - Washington, D.C. George F. Bodley and Henry Vaughan, FAIA 4 Thomas Jefferson Memorial - Washington D.C. John Russell Pope, FAIA 5 Golden Gate Bridge - San Francisco Irving F. Morrow and Gertrude C. Morrow 6 U.S. Capitol - Washington, D.C. William Thornton, Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Charles Bulfinch, Thomas U. Walter FAIA, Montgomery C. Meigs 7 Lincoln Memorial - Washington, D.C. Henry Bacon, FAIA 8 Biltmore Estate (Vanderbilt Residence) - Asheville, NC Richard Morris Hunt, FAIA 9 Chrysler Building - New York City William Van Alen, FAIA 10 Vietnam Veterans Memorial - Washington, D.C. Maya Lin with Cooper-Lecky Partnership 11 St. Patrick’s Cathedral - New York City James Renwick, FAIA 12 Washington Monument - Washington, D.C. Robert Mills 13 Grand Central Station - New York City Reed and Stern; Warren and Wetmore 14 The Gateway Arch - St. Louis Eero Saarinen, FAIA 15 Supreme Court of the United States - Washington, D.C. Cass Gilbert, FAIA 16 St. Regis Hotel - New York City Trowbridge & Livingston 17 Metropolitan Museum of Art – New York City Calvert Vaux, FAIA; McKim, Mead & White; Richard Morris Hunt, FAIA; Kevin Roche, FAIA; John Dinkeloo, FAIA 18 Hotel Del Coronado - San Diego James Reid, FAIA 19 World Trade Center - New York City Minoru Yamasaki, FAIA; Antonio Brittiochi; Emery Roth & Sons 20 Brooklyn Bridge - New York City John Augustus Roebling 21 Philadelphia City Hall - Philadelphia John McArthur Jr., FAIA 22 Bellagio Hotel and Casino - Las Vegas Deruyter Butler; Atlandia Design 23 Cathedral of St.
    [Show full text]