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| Massing
is not arbitrary and reflects the librarys program.
(Photo courtesy of Michael Dickter/Magnusson Klemencic
Associates) |
Seattles 412,000-sq-ft
"book bag" has been cheered as outrageous architecture
and reviled as architectural outrage. Rem Koolhaas, the Dutch
"starchitect" for the $154-million library, reminiscent
of a stack of books wrapped in a fishnet, calls the building
"obscenely beautiful." But the team plotting the
citys latest page turnerthe most gawked at and
talked about volume since Frank Gehrys Experience Music
Project down the streetis largely deaf to the cacophony.
Their energies are focused on substantially finishing the
obscenely eccentric and eight-month-overdue building by March
9.
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Koolhaas,
Ramus
(in yellow hats). (Photo courtesy of
OMA / LMN) |
The Seattle Central Library has
already shattered complacency, as intended. "When something
stirs people up, it is doing what it is supposed to do,"
says Joshua Ramus, Koolhaas partner on the job in the
New York City office of the Office of Metropolitan Architecture,
Rotterdam. Ramus is confident people will like the library
"formly," once they have experienced the dramatic
interiors.
The job has certainly stirred up
the building team, especially for responsibility of "late
charges," mostly concerning the diamond-patterned exterior
wall. "We are in the process of doing change orders,"
says Douglas R. Winn, a vice president of Hoffman Construction
Co. of Washington, the local general contractor-construction
manager.
Though there were site-related
delays, the crux of the brouhaha is the architectural sleight
of hand that makes the buildings "glass" wrapper
camouflage its steel seismic grid. In September, a dispute
resolution board issued recommendations about change requests
that are nonbinding but admissible in court, should litigation
follow. "DRBs analysis is that $8.5 million is
in dispute," says Alex Harris, the librarys capital
program director.
All parties decline to reveal specifics
about the recommendations, including Hoffmans original
"request for equitable adjustment" to the owner
on its current $121.4-million contract. But sources indicate
the board has divided responsibility for delays among the
owner, Hoffman, steel detailer BDS Steel Detailers, Mesa,
Ariz., and shoring design-builder Antioch, Calif.-based Drill
Tech Drilling & Shoring Inc. The board did not find fault
with the curtain wall design-builder Seele LP, Chicago, a
subsidiary of a Gersthofen, Germany-based firm; the steel
contractor, The Erection Co., Arlington, Wash.; or steel fabricator
Canron Construction, Vancouver, B.C., though BDS is a sub
to Canron, which is a sub to TEC.
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| JACOBS |
The dispute has done little to
dampen the spirits of Deborah L. Jacobs, the head librarian
considered the projects visionary. Stressing that construction
is continuing without ill will, Jacobs says the important
thing is that "the community is falling in love after
questioning this strange-looking building."
Among the doubters are those who
say the massing appears arbitrary. It isnt, says the
architect. The form is "derived from experiential, contextual
relationships," and is a reflection of both the program
and how the building will be used.
To create the form, the architect,
a joint venture of OMA and the local LMN Architects, literally
stacked program-specific building blocks vertically and pulled
public-space blocks to the sides to grab views of surroundings
such as Mt. Rainier and Elliott Bay. The result is five perched
and offset platforms, with grand public spaces in between,
all wrapped in glass and steel.
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| Reading
rooms sloped columns resist seismic grid deflection.
(Photo by Michael Goodman for ENR) |
The basement platform, level zero,
is for parking and mechanical space. The two-level staff platform
above also contains the "kids" room and auditorium.
The one-level "living room" is at street level,
along the west side. It is topped by the one-level assembly
platform, containing meeting rooms. The high-ceiling "mixing
chamber," which contains the high-tech media, comes next
topped by the four-level books platform, with its innovative
book spiral. The high-ceiling reading room overlooks the books
platform. The one-story library headquarters platform caps
the building. Click
here to view diagrams
Similar to a parking garage ramp,
the 6° book spiral creates a 200-ft-long accessible and
continuous "run" for the nonfiction collection,
classified under the 000-999 Dewey Decimal System. The ramp
has been designed to hold 60% more books than it will have
on opening day, in an attempt to avoid having to split the
growing collection into different rooms as time goes by.
The ramp created "warped"
surfaces on the sloped steel grids above and below it. But
the almost imperceptible warp was accomplished without any
curved elements, unlike the "swoopy" EMP, say those
involved with both buildings. "While EMP oozes complexity,"
says Robert Vincent, Hoffmans project manager, "the
library might seem more simply crafted." Its not.
Library geometry is more exacting, tolerances are tighter
and EMPs curves are "far more forgiving" than
the librarys straight lines, says Vincent.
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CANTED
Sloped truss supports eliminate transfer girders.
(Photo by Lara Swimmer Photography
/ Hoffman Construction) |
The structural engineer agrees.
"The library is much more irregular," says Jon D.
Magnusson, chairman-CEO of Magnusson Klemencic Associates,
Seattle. Even the seismic grid, which uses the same rolled
shape throughout, has variations due to spans and different
edge conditions. And thanks to offsets and the architects
wish to minimize columns and transfer girders, no columns
line up in plan. There are only 20 true vertical columns.
Designing the frame became an exercise in connecting the dots,
says Jay Taylor, MKAs project manager.
The building is framed in structural
concrete from the spread footing foundations, 10 ft below
the west grade, to level three, which is at grade on the east.
Above, the structure is steel. A mat supports a 213-ft-tall,
expressed concrete core, 65 x 44 ft in plan, in the southwest
quadrant of the footprint. The core carries gravity loads
but resists minimal lateral forces. A 28-ft-wide footing supports
two concrete shear walls and a concrete column in the northwest
corner of the concrete substructure.
Every platform column around the
perimeter is raked and architecturally expressed. Some concrete
columns also are skewed. Click
here to view diagrams.
Each offset platform box has a
perimeter steel truss, on either two or four sides, that matches
its story height. The headquarters platform cantilevers as
much as 28 ft on each of all four sides. The books platform
cantilevers at each of the four corners beyond the sloped
column. The assembly platform is hung on the north and the
west sides from interior cantilevered trusses.
Sloping columns minimize story
height by eliminating girders, but they weigh nearly twice
as much and create thrust. In the steel frame, trusses in
the plane of the floor diaphragm drag thrust back to the core
or to an opposing column. In substructure slabs, extra reinforcing
steel takes the thrust.
The three-story belt truss for
the 200 x 176-ft books platform is the hardest-working, says
the engineer. The south truss is supported by the biggest
column, a 3-ft-square box column made of 23/4-in.-thick
plate. The column lands on top of the substructure.
Ramp slabs in the north and center
sections are sloped east to west but the book shelves, accessible
off the ramp, will be on flat-topped "steps" created
by a topping slab.
The grid knits the platforms together,
preventing them from tipping over. Made from 12-in.-deep wide-flange
members, the grid works like a giant braced frame, collecting
seismic forces from each platform, carrying them across the
grid to the next platform and ultimately to the concrete base.
The building is designed for site-specific ground motions
based on an earthquake with a 500-year return period.
Diamonds are 4 ft on a side. The
grid size, set during schematic design in a collaboration
with OMA/LMN, Hoffman, MKA and structural engineers from Arups
London and Los Angeles offices, was determined by the largest
glass panel that could span without need for a girt system
to attach it to the grid. This dramatically reduced costs.
Diamonds are assembled into seismic
panels, oriented from 21° to 45° from horizontal
and up to 84 ft in length. Three stiffening solutions control
panel deflection due to its own weight, curtain wall weight
and wind loads. These are "intervention" columns,
strongbacks and steel gravity columns in the plane of the
grid. For example, five sloped, expressed interventions in
the reading room limit vertical deflection. Strongbacks, mostly
mid-panel, create amoeba shapes that follow stress patterns.
Amoebas combined with interventions act like drop panels in
flat-slab framing. Amoebas alone provide more depth for longer
spans.
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| To
avoid fireproofing, designers had to keep seismic grid
from accepting gravity loads. (Photo by Michael Goodman
for ENR) |
The architect wanted the seismic
grid exposed on the interior, for appearance and to save on
fireproofing costs. Under the Seattle code, steel does not
have to be fireproofed if it does not take gravity loads.
To satisfy that, MKA designed the
primary frame to stand on its own, without benefit from the
seismic grid. Vertical slot connections between the grid and
the gravity frame at the tops of sloped sections keep gravity
loads out of the grid.
Halfway through the 18-month approval
process, 9/ll occurred. "The fire department became much
more wary" and increased exiting load requirements, says
Sam Miller, LMN project manager.
The building is fully sprinklered.
But that left the issue of smoke control. Under the fire code,
interior volumes, such as the mixing chamber and living room,
are considered one giant atrium because they are open to one
another through overlooks and a 140-ft-tall skylight. The
code called for 800,000 cfm of exhaust, which would have been
costly and required a "huge" number of louvers for
makeup air, says Miller.
A computational fluid dynamics
computer model for smoke flow, created by the San Francisco
office of fire protection engineer Arup Fire, was used to
convince officials that only 275,000 cfm was needed. The CFD
graphic gave the fire department its first understanding of
how the building worked, says Miller.
Hoffman was awarded the job in
June 2000, as EMP was winding down. During preconstruction,
the focus was on constructibility and the budget. In early
January 2001, Hoffman put some numbers on the table that "floored
everybody," says Vincent. The estimate had ballooned
by $20 million.
Through value engineering, "we
were able to bring the project in on budget," says Vincent,
without any significant loss of design intent and with program
improvements. For example, the team sliced $2 million by combining
the top two levels into one, thus lowering the profile.
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Seismic
grid grows up around temporary steel. Photo by Lara Swimmer
Photography
/ Hoffman Construction) |
Because the job was fast-tracked,
the library applied for a concrete permit before structural
steel design was complete. But footings for steel falsework
had to be part of the concrete package. For this, and to attract
more bidders, Hoffman hired MKA to do a preliminary design
of temporary steel and a steel erection sequence. "Thats
really rare," says Dale Stenning, Hoffmans senior
project engineer. Bidders could alter the erection sequence
but not footing location or size.
Hoffman got a notice to proceed
on Sept. 6, 2001, after the library cleared the site. The
only remaining element of the old building was the 43-ft-deep
east foundation wall. In December, when crews started digging
to extend it down 20 ft, the wall started moving, eventually
sinking up to 1 in. and moving into the site as much as 41/4
in. Hoffman called a "big time out" on Jan.
5, which lasted 28 days, so Drill Tech could strengthen its
soil-nail shoring system and install a "more-aggressive"
drainage system to relieve water pressure on the wall.
Structural excavation and footings
began in February. But "unforeseen, inconsistent"
soil conditions made overexcavation necessary to replace unsuitable
bearing material with good soil. That ate up 20 more workdays.
If not for work-arounds, "we probably would have lost
another three weeks," says Winn.
Steel erection was slated to begin
on Aug. 9, 2002, but did not start until Dec. 9, 2002. If
not for accelerated fabrication, the job could have been "well
over a month later," says Martin Bache, fabricator Canrons
contracts manager. "We worked hand to mouth to supply
the jobsite."
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| Cant
tell the structure from the glass curtain wall. (Photo
by Michael Goodman for ENR) |
The decision to design the wrapper
first and then align the seismic grid perfectly behind it
meant the steel detailer had to know the thickness of the
glass curtain wall to detail the grid. The detailer did not
receive that information on schedule. Responsibility for that
is one of the main issues in the dispute over the schedule.
Detailer Don Engler, BDSs
vice president of international operations, thinks starting
with the glass and working back to the structure "is
a big mistake." But once thats done, he thinks
it is imperative for the contractor to allow enough time for
all "predecessor activities," which he says it didnt.
No one disputes Hoffmans
contract requirement to produce a three-dimensional wire-frame
model of the steel centerline geometries for the detailer.
Many dispute how it was fulfilled.
Seele President Thomas Geissler
says the dispute stems from a "misunderstanding."
Seele didnt have a contractual obligation to give its
3-D model to the steel detailer, though Hoffman kept asking
for it. Seele ultimately gave the model to Hoffman, with a
liability waiver.
Detailing was supposed to begin
in February 2002. Engler claims BDS started receiving "flawed"
models that April. Engler claims it "finally" got
all the information by that September. The engineer says BDS
received the final wire frame in June and received marked-up
fold line details after that, until September.
Once the clog was undone, the steel
went smoothly. Primary steel was erected on 360 tons of falsework
and in a certain order because of construction loading constraints
and cantilevers. There were six shore lines, mostly for the
books and assembly platforms.
To reduce the unbraced length of
falsework as tall as 75 ft, crews gang-braced each line using
a horizontal brace mid-height and tied off the brace at its
ends only. Certain falsework had to be positioned to allow
the seismic grid to be erected around it. And falsework design
required consideration of both steel and slab weight because
certain slabs, needed for stability, would be poured before
deshoring.
TEC crews erected steel on all
four sides concurrently. When the first platform was framed,
crews started the seismic grids underslung sections.
In March and April, crews began unloading the four lines supporting
the books platform in a synchronized operation. Because lines
were ganged, falsework could not be removed one by one. Instead,
TEC worked out a method to unload falsework, from the middle
toward the corners, through localized yielding of the webs
induced by torching the flanges at the base. The goal was
to engage key gravity elements in a certain order to minimize
twisting. To avoid transferring gravity loads into the seismic
grid, the final grid-to-platform connection was not made until
the platform had deflected under its own weight.
Steel erection went "incredibly
well," says Derek Beaman, MKAs project engineer,
with very few fit-up problems. The same goes for the 130,000-sq-ft
curtain wall, even though 3,377 of its nearly 10,000 diamonds
are odd shapes.
The warped surfaces of the cladding
were formed with lines, straight in one direction and segmented
in the other, to create the curvature. Seele designed a 5-in.-long
aluminum spacer that fixes the I-shaped mullions directly
to the grids wide flanges at 8-ft intervals. The spacer,
with concealed fasteners, allows steel to be as much as 1/2
in. out of plane.
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| Five
members join at different angles. (Photo by Michael Goodman
for ENR) |
Crews are installing the skin piece
by piece, starting with aluminum profiles and extrusions.
Next comes a silicone gasket for waterproofing, followed by
glass. An exterior pressure plate caps the mullions. Gutters
and closure panels at fold lines between faces follow. In
the worst condition, five gutters join at different angles.
"This was a piece of 3-D engineering never done before,"
says Geissler. Click
here to view diagram.
Panels are either double or triple
glazed. Triple-glazed units have an outer cavity containing
a suspended, stretched metal mesh for solar shading, like
a micro-louver. The inner cavity contains krypton gas.
The skin was prefabricated at Seeles
plant in Germany. Using a computer program to keep track,
Seele labeled and shipped the pieces to Seattle. Curtain wall
installation, 80% complete, is to be finished at the end of
January. "We saved eight weeks" off a 39-week installation,
says Geissler, using a bigger crew, overtime, resequencing
and overlapping work.
Glass goes in from the top down
instead of bottom up, because work-platform supports penetrate
the lower grid.
Geissler says about 30% of grid
bolt holes are out of tolerance. This is handled by a spacer
that could take steel up to 1 in. out of tolerance.
Installers are averaging 450 sq
ft per day, up from 215 at the start. "There was a big
learning curve," says Geissler, who adds that Seele had
to be "extremely effective" to make money on the
$19-million contract.
Librarian Jacobs says the excitement
among her 300-person staff is building as the planned mid-spring
opening nears. "I continue to get goose bumps when I
see the building," says Jacobs, who feels it is already
the heart of the city.
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