JQH Arena Springfield, MO

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

JQH Arena Springfield, MO JQH Arena Springfield, Missouri “Precast was selected for the exterior of the arena for economical reasons, and the challenge was to create a precast panel that did not look plain on the tall walls. The solution was a textured liner with a pattern intricately laid out to match each adjacent panel. The result was a unique façade that still complements the surrounding architecture and pays tribute to the region.” Tom Heger Senior Project Manager JE Dunn Construction Missouri State University is no stranger to precast concrete construction. Having numerous precast structures on it’s main campus in Springfield Missouri, there was little question as to what the main structural and architectural components would be when designing their new 67 million dollar basketball arena. Architectural wall panels adorned with a cast-in “oak tree bark” finish, wrap the 900 plus precast components that make up the 11,055 seat arena. Over 50 miles of prestressing strand and 275 tons of reinforcing steel were utilized in just the precast elements. The use of a column and raker beam system, allowed for an open usable space under the spectator seating. Prestressed Casting Co. The JQH Arena was completed in time for the opening game of www.prestressedcasting.com the basketball season. Even with the wettest spring on record (417) 869-7350 and uncovering an active artesian well during excavation, the precast structure was completed in 118 days and ahead of schedule. Architect: Ellerbe Becket Associate Architect: Pellham Phillips Construction Manager: JE Dunn Construction.
Recommended publications
  • William Chilton Elected to American Institute of Architects College of Fellows
    PICKARD CHILTON 980 CHAPEL STREET 203 786 8600 MAIN NEW HAVEN 203 786 8610 FAX CONNECTICUT 06510 PICKARDCHILTON.COM 8 MARCH 2010 William Chilton Elected to American Institute of Architects College of Fellows CONTACT: Mig Halpine, Director of Communications (203) 786-8612, [email protected] N E W H A V E N , C O N N E C T I C U T — William D. Chilton FAIA has been elected to The College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects (www.aia.org/practicing/awards/AIAB082298). He has directed large corporate headquarters, institutional and high-rise projects within diverse political and cultural environments worldwide. The LEED Gold CalPERS Headquarters Complex in Sacramento for the nation’s largest public pension fund is representative of his advancement of client and civic aspirations through design excellence. Previously, he was Ellerbe Becket’s President of Architecture and collaborated on Kingdom Centre in Riyadh and the Science Museum of Minnesota in St. Paul. He currently serves on the Advisory Board of the College of Design at the University of Minnesota, the Design Futures Council Executive Board, and is a member of the Urban Land Institute where he served on the juries for the Gerald D. Hines/ULI Student Urban Design Competition in 2007 and 2008. ABOUT PICKARD CHILTON Pickard Chilton is an international architectural practice noted for its expertise in the design of large, complex buildings including corporate headquarters, high rise commercial office towers, hotels, academic, and health care facilities. Headquartered in New Haven, Conn., the firm’s completed projects include: 1180 Peachtree in Atlanta, Georgia; BG Group Place in Houston; the CalPERS Headquarters Complex in Sacramento, CA; 300 North LaSalle in Chicago, IL; Wells Fargo Financial in Des Moines, IA; and the ConocoPhillips West Campus in Houston.
    [Show full text]
  • Liberating Urban Architecture (The Merging of the Virtual and the Real)
    ctbuh.org/papers Title: Liberating Urban Architecture (The Merging of the Virtual and the Real) Author: Peter Paul Hoogendoorn, Peter Pran + H Architects LLC Subject: Urban Design Keywords: Technology Urbanization Publication Date: 2001 Original Publication: CTBUH 2001 6th World Congress, Melbourne 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 / Peter Paul Hoogendoorn PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURE Liberating Urban Architecture (The Merging of the Virtual and the Real) Peter Pran Visionary creativity and innovative thinking in architecture and engineering are liberating us and allowing us to develop outstanding new solutions for buildings and urban design. Our close architect-engineer-developer collaboration and trust makes everything possible. Our work and design visions are on the edge, celebrating complexity, layered meanings and instability ushered in by the 21st century. Today, the real and virtual worlds are rapidly crossing paths, exploding our perceptions of where and how we live and work. Boundaries of all kinds are breaking down, providing opportunities for change in a tectonic realization of existentialist architecture. The job of predicting and charting a course for the future while striving to re-invent reality is destined to become a global struggle. Our goal should be to move aside whatever stands in the way of innovative thought, to articulate liberated buildings and spaces that make lives richer and more mean- ingful, and to define a vision for everyone as individuals. Based on progressive social, cultural and political ideals, we are in a position to take advantage of interaction across all media, and to express the full complexity and equality of all people.
    [Show full text]
  • Architectural Precast Façade and Seating Risers Bring Elegance and Construction Speed to Broward County Arena
    COVER FEATURE Architectural Precast Façade and Seating Risers Bring Elegance and Construction Speed to Broward County Arena Doug Brown, AIA The National Car Rental Center in Broward Lead Architect Ellerbe Becket Architects & County, Florida features architectural precast Engineers Inc. panels on its façade and precast concrete seating Kansas City, Missouri treads and risers inside, both of which give uniqueness and elegance to this facility devoted to hockey, basketball, concerts and special events. Close coordination was required to meet the tight 27-month design and construction schedule. The panels used on the exterior comprise only one mix Jim Downing but other panels also feature a series of tightly Construction Manager spaced reveals that add texture and contrast while Hunt Construction Group reflecting the long, thin, skating lines of hockey Tampa, Florida skates. The interior precast concrete seating required tight tolerances and well-planned logistics to coordinate the erection of the upper tiers. This article presents the design aspects and Donald Collins, P.E. erection highlights of the project. Precast Engineering Consultant Computerized Engineering Inc. Ashland, Virginia he new National Car Rental Center in Broward County, Florida, home to the National Hockey TLeague’s Florida Panthers hockey team, features a unique, user-friendly design that provides efficient pedes- trian circulation and takes full advantage of its distinctive setting (see Fig. 1). The new facility is located in the City Dean Gwin of Sunrise, a few miles west of Fort Lauderdale. Vice President of Sales & Marketing But completing the project within the required schedule— Gate Precast Co. 27 months from letting of contract to occupancy—demanded Monroeville, Alabama close communication among the members of the construc- 32 PCI JOURNAL Fig.
    [Show full text]
  • AIA Minnesota Honor Awards
    AIA Minnesota Honor Awards 2020 Commend Electric Bungalow Salmela Architect (Energy) 2020 Commend Spring Creek Residence VJAA, Inc. (Economy) 2020 Commend X House Snow Kreilich Architects (Integration) 2020 Honor 510 MSR Design 2020 Honor Bell Museum Perkins and Will 2020 Honor Countryside Community Church HGA Architects and Engineers with Alley Poyner Macchietto Architecture 2020 Honor Second + Second Snow Kreilich Architects 2020 Honor Saint Paul Academy and Summit HGA Architects and Engineers School Upper School Addition and Renovation 2020 Honor St. Paul Residences Snow Kreilich Architects 2020 Honor Westwood Hills Nature Center HGA Architects and Engineers 2019 Honor Derby Line I-91 Land Port of Entry HGA Architects and Engineers 2019 Honor Foraged Boathouse Kara Hill Studios 2019 Honor Goose Creek Safety Rest Area VJAA, Inc. 2019 Honor KNOCK, inc. Christian Dean Architecture with CityDeskStudio 2019 Honor Macalester College Janet Wallace Fine HGA Architects and Engineers Arts Center Phase 3 – Theater and Dance 2019 Honor Minnehaha Academy Upper Campus Cuningham Group Architects 2019 Honor Rothe Amundson Salmela Architect 2018 Honor Brookview Elementary BWBR 2018 Honor Haverford College VCAM Building MSR Design 2018 Honor Music and Performance Commons HGA Architects and Engineers 2018 Honor Temple Israel Expansion HGA Architects and Engineers 2017 Honor Deloia Salmela Architect 2017 Honor Faulkner Performing Arts Center HGA Architects and Engineers 2017 Honor Huss Center for the Performing Arts HGA Architects and Engineers 2017 Honor
    [Show full text]
  • United States V. Days Inn of America, Inc
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE CENTRAL DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS DANVILLE/URBANA DIVISION UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) Case No. 96-2028 ) ) DAYS INNS OF AMERICA, INC., et al. ) ) ) Defendants. ) __________________________________________) PLAINTIFF UNITED STATES' REPLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF ITS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED) ISABELLE KATZ PINZLER Acting Assistant Attorney General Civil Rights Division JOHN L. WODATCH, Chief RENEE M. WOHLENHAUS, Acting Deputy Chief ROBERTA S. KIRKENDALL JEANINE M. WORDEN MARGARITA M. PRIETO THOMAS M. CONTOIS Attorneys Disability Rights Section Civil Rights Division U.S. Department of Justice Post Office Box 66738 Washington, D.C. 20035-6738 (202) 307-0986 Dated: December 2, 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Introduction ...............................................................1 Argument .................................................................2 A. The Ruling in the South Dakota Action Has No Relevance to this Case .............2 B. DIA's Construction of § 303 Is Inconsistent with the Statute and Legislative History. .................................................4 C. The United States' Construction of § 303 Is Entitled to Deference. ................6 D. The Undisputed Facts Prove that DIA and HFS Have Violated § 303. ..............9 E. The United States' Reading of § 303 Does Not Make the Statute Void for Vagueness. .......................................................12 Conclusion ...............................................................15
    [Show full text]
  • Turner City©
    Turner City © A representation of buildings completed by Turner in 2017 5 5 16 20 37 37 11 27 32 41 15 18 4 17 68 36 40 6 10 19 25 31 44 22 26 30 35 2 14 9 29 33 39 42 2 1 3 12 64 23 75 8 34 43 21 24 28 1 7 13 28 1 38 51 60 66 49 71 79 80 65 48 68 70 78 61 48 56 70 74 73 77 59 63 86 70 50 55 62 47 76 55 54 58 67 72 46 52 57 86 86 53 45 83 86 85 69 90 84 94 89 81 87 82 86 98 93 88 87 101 99 86 96 95 97 102 100 100 91 95 92 95 107 105 104 106 103 108 1 KAPLANKAYA PHASE 1 10 ZIEGLER PARK SITE IMPROVEMENTS 20 DATA CENTER 30 LYNDHURST ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, 38 ALAMODOME RENOVATION 46 KENT STATE UNIVERSITY, INTEGRATED 55 HOUSTON COMMUNITY COLLEGE MISSOURI 65 ST. VINCENT BROWNSBURG 74 50 LIBERTY 83 BASF CENTRAL CONTROL BUILDING 92 LOVE PARK 101 HOBART & RUSSELL CREIGHTON HALL Capital Partners AND PARKING GARAGE Confidential EXPANSION AND RENOVATION The City of San Antonio, Texas SCIENCES BUILDING ADDITION CITY, CENTER FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP, AMBULATORY CARE CENTER The Fallon Company BASF/Yara (Partnership with Perryman Building OF ANIMAL SCIENCES Mu˘gla, Turkey 3CDC Forest City, NC (Joint Venture with JLN Construction Services) San Antonio, TX (Joint Venture with Van Auken Akins TECHNOLOGY & HEALTH Ascension Health Boston, MA Freeport, TX and Construction Services) Purdue University Office of Architecture in Barcelona Cincinnati, OH Sheehan Partners Ltd.
    [Show full text]
  • University of Missouri
    Business School SPOTLIGHT Facilities Featured School: University of Missouri Robert J. Trulaske, Sr., College of Business Columbia, Missouri, United States www.business.missouri.edu March 2012 AACSB International SPOTLIGHT | Business School Facilities University of Missouri | 2 Harry and Ann Cornell Hall Construction Began: December, 1999 Open for Business: May, 2002 Size: 153,000 sq. ft. Floors: Six Cost: 30 million USD Architectural Firm: Ellerbe Becket / Interior Designs by University of Missouri Planning, Design & Construction Construction Firm: Joint Venture -- Kidwell Construction Co. / Walton Construction Co., L.L.C. More Information: http://business.missouri.edu/Cornell+Hall/default.aspx Offices: 85 faculty offices, 4 department chair/director suites, Dean’s suite, 11 administrative support / center suites Classrooms: 10 tiered case-study rooms, 9 flexible seating classrooms, 1 lecture hall (118-seat capacity), 1 auditorium (Jack and Mary Bush Auditorium, 500-seat capacity, cinematic projection), 13 breakout rooms, 1 trading room, 3 computer classrooms/labs (Anheuser Busch Technology Center) © AACSB International. All Rights Reserved. SPOTLIGHT | Business School Facilities University of Missouri | 3 Other: Naturally lit atrium with a view of all six floors from lobby entrance. A 16-by-8-foot LED screen in the atrium greets students and visitors with news, information, and announcements. Five additional LCD screens provide information at other building locations. 1 Board Room, 5 conference rooms, 12 interview rooms, behavioral lab and focus group facilities, 3 faculty/staff lounges, 5 student lounges/areas, 2 multipurpose common areas (with kitchen), multimedia capabilities in all classrooms, wireless networking throughout, hardwired e-mail kiosks in student areas, offices for student organizations, 1 alumni reception room for special events.
    [Show full text]
  • Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    BANKERS LIFE FIELDHOUSE “Retro” was the name of the game when architect Ellerbe Becket designed plans in 1999 for Bankers Life Fieldhouse – the 18,000+ seat, $180 million home to the Indiana Pacers in downtown Indianapolis. A celebration of Indiana basketball tradition with a tribute to the state’s most memorable high school and collegiate fieldhouses was the inspiration behind the development, which boasts of being the “first fully themed arena in the world.” Tnemec coatings were specified for the interior and exterior structural steel at the fieldhouse, formerly known as Conseco Fieldhouse. The exterior steel was shop primed with Series 90- 97 Tneme-Zinc, a zinc-rich, aromatic urethane. Once in the field, an intermediate coat of Series 161 Tneme-Fascure, a corrosion- resistant, fast-cure epoxy was brush- and roller-applied, followed by a dark green coat of Series 73 Endura-Shield, an aliphatic acrylic polyurethane. A topcoat of Series 76 Endura-Clear, a unique aliphatic polyurethane clearcoat, was applied to complete the coating system. “Series 76 was used on the exterior steel to protect and enhance the color coat of Series 73,” said Tnemec coating consultant Jeff Parish. “With a structure that’s one hundred feet in the air, you PROJECT INFORMATION want to ensure that it won’t have to be recoated anytime in the near future. This coating system worked perfectly.” Project Location The interior structural steel was prepared in accordance with Indianapolis, Indiana SSPC-SP6/NACE No. 3 Commercial Blast Cleaning and arrived on Project Completion Date site after having been primed with Series 161.
    [Show full text]
  • John C. Gaunt, FAIA Page 1 John C. Gaunt
    John C. Gaunt, FAIA Page 1 John C. Gaunt, FAIA Dean School of Architecture, Design & Planning The University of Kansas 1465 Jayhawk Blvd., Marvin Hall Room 206 Lawrence, KS 66045 Summary John C. Gaunt has been a practicing architect for 35 years, 18 of which have been with Ellerbe Becket, with 6 years (1987-94) as its President/CEO. As executive leader of a diversified design firm of approximately 1000 employees in six offices nationally (with a developing international practice), he was responsible for articulating its values, directions, and objectives, and guiding its strategic development. For the past nineteen years he has been Dean of the School of Architecture, Design & Planning, University of Kansas. Education Master of Architecture, University of Pennsylvania (1967) Studio of Louis I. Kahn Bachelor of Architecture, University of Minnesota (1964) Honors Graduate Bachelor of Arts, University of Minnesota (1962) Architecture and Art History Professional Experience The University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS Dean, Professor, School of Architecture, Design & Planning (1994-present) Ellerbe Becket, Inc., Minneapolis, MN (1975-1994) CEO/President/Chairman (1987-1994) Major Clients: University of Notre Dame (1977-1994) The Mayo Clinic (1982-1994) Indiana University (1978-1994) University of Minnesota (1984-1994) William Beaumont Hospital (1986-1994) Primary Project/Design Responsibility: Indiana University School of Public and Environmental Affairs (1980) Riley children’s Hospital (1985) Medical Research Center (1989) University of Notre Dame Museum of Art (1978) Residence Halls (1980) Faculty Office Building (1984) New York Hospital/Cornell Medical Center Master Plan (1985) Lenox Hill Hospital, New York Master Plan (1986) William Beaumont Hospital, Michigan Master Plan (1989) John C.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Inventory Form
    MINNESOTA ARCHITECTURE - HISTORY INVENTORY FORM Project: Local Historic Bridge Study - Phase II Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota Identification SHPO Inventory Number HE-MPC-04286 Historic Name Minnesota Soldiers' Home Bridge Review and Compliance Number Current Name Bridge 5756 (Minnesota Soldiers' Home Bridge) Form (New or Updated) Updated Field # Description Address N/A Slodiers Home Road over Minnehaha Creek Linear Feature? No City/Twp Minneapolis HPC Status: Unknown Resource Type Structure County Hennepin Architect/Engineer Bayne and Hewett Legal Desc. Twp 28 Range 23 Sec 17 QQ NWSW Style No Style USGS Quad St. Paul West Construction Date 1908 UTM Zone 15N Datum NAD83 Easting 483659 Northing 4973243 Original Use Transportation Property ID (PIN) Current Use Transportation Description Bridge 5756, also known as the Minnesota Soldiers’ Home Bridge, is located in the southeast corner of Minneapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota. Built in 1908, the bridge carries Soldiers’ Home Road over Minnehaha Creek and provides access to the Minnesota Soldiers’ Home (now the Minneapolis Veterans Home) from Minnehaha Park. The bridge has a southwest to northeast alignment, extending between Minnehaha Park on the west and the Minnesota Soldiers’ Home on the east. The valley it crosses consists of dense woods, with Minnehaha Creek and trails near its bottom. The bridge carries vehicular and pedestrian traffic. Bridge 5756 is a steel deck arch structure of riveted construction with steel cross-bracing. The Soldiers’ Home Bridge is 626.50 feet in length with a main span of length of 288 feet and an out-and-out width of 31.33 feet. The substructure of the bridge consists of reinforced concrete abutments and eight reinforced-concrete footings.
    [Show full text]
  • Elliot Mittler Collection of Welton Becket and Associates Photograph Archives, 1940-1979
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf2t1nb0w3 No online items Finding Aid for the Elliot Mittler collection of Welton Becket and Associates Photograph Archives, 1940-1979 Processed by UCLA Library Special Collections staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé. UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Manuscripts Division Room A1713, Charles E. Young Research Library Box 951575 Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/special/scweb/ © 2011 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 1325 1 Descriptive Summary Title: Elliot Mittler collection of Welton Becket and Associates Photograph Archives Date (inclusive): 1940-1979 Collection number: 1325 Creator: Mittler, Elliot Extent: 62 boxes (31.0 linear ft.) Abstract: Welton Davis Becket (1902- ) was a Los Angeles based architect with Becket, Wurdeman, and Plummer (later renamed Welton Becket and Associates) - one of the largest firms in Los Angeles with building credits throughout the world. He also served as the Master Planner and Supervising Architect for UCLA from 1949 to 1969. After Becket's death, the firm continued under the same name, directed by his nephew, MacDonald Becket. Around 1985, the firm was acquired by Ellerbe Incorporated to become Ellerbe Becket. The collection consists of photographs related to the work of the Welton Becket & Associates architectural firm. Most of the photographs represent projects in and around the Los Angeles area and include examples of both residential and commercial buildings with interior and exterior views. Language: Finding aid is written in English. Repository: University of California, Los Angeles.
    [Show full text]
  • 2020 Region VI CRC MN History Display
    MINNESOTA REGION VI CRC 2020 HISTORY DISPLAY Appendix A Minnesota Chapter AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEATING, REFRIGERATING AND AIR-CONDITIONING ENGINEERS. INC. Celebrating 75 Years of Service to the Community COPY OF ARTICLE FROM APRIL 1918 "JOURNAL" or AM . Soc at HCAT . fc VIMT . ENCJNUU (A pril ) * » APPLICATION FOR CHAPTER To The AMERICAN Societv of HEATING AND VENTILATJNG ENGINEERS. New York, N. Y. Gentlemen: We. the undersigned members of THE AMERICAN SOCIETY of HEATING AND VENTILATING ENGINEERS. respectfully beg to present herewith our petition for a Charter in order that we may organize a local Chapter of the Society in the Twin Cities for the Slate of Minnesota. Our objects in organizing this Chapter are quite explicitly covered in the paragraph under Incorporation, as given on page 82 of the 1916 Year Book, and if the charter be granted us, we herewith promise to abide by all the regulations as set forth under Article IX. on Local Chapters, as indicated on pages 95 and 96 of the said Year Book. It is our desire that the name of the local Chapter, if charter be granted us, be the Minnesota Chapter of The AMERICAN SOCIETY of HEATING A ND VENTILATING ENGINEERS. We expect to draw upon the Twin Cities, Duluth and other cities of the Slate for our membership and therefore advise that the name be the Minnesota Chapter. We have already taken steps to provide for a good strong working membership, and have sent in nine applications for membership in the Society to date. We are assured of still more and the indications are that upon our permanent organization, we will have a working strength of at least 33 to 40 members.
    [Show full text]