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| (Photo
by Michael Goodman for ENR) |
The flashy silver
"lion" with an unruly mane enthroned in Chicagos
$475-million Millennium Park is the citys first Frank
O. Gehry structure. And the "newbies" chugging along
the yellow brick road toward completion of the avant-garde
music amphitheater by architectures Wizard of Oz are
exhausted by the $45-million jobs sundry twists and
hairpin turns.
A learning curve is just about
the only thing missing from the long and winding road to complete
the king of all beasts in the 24.5-acre park. "This experience
is collectively grinding on all of us newbies," says
James Conrath, project manager in the local office of URS,
the owners representative. "X, Y, Z is not as easy
as A,B,C," he adds, referring to the lion manes
coordinate geometry.
Even Gehry veterans find it difficult
to impose order on his deliberate chaos. "With Frank
Gehry, every project throws a whole new set of challenges,"
says Hugh Dobbie, president of Dowco Consultants Ltd., Burnaby,
British Columbia. The amphitheater follows Dowcos previous
stint as steel detailer on Gehrys Los Angeles concert
hall. "After youve been burned, you have trouble
bidding against" the uninitiated naive enough to bid
low, he says.
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| (Photo
courtesy of Walsh Construction Company) |
The pavilion has a wood-paneled
stage with a 90-ft-wide and 50-ft-tall opening. Sliding glass
proscenium doors, mechanically operated, will allow year-round
use. The stage roof and "mane" structures are expressed,
like a permanent backdrop. Under a trellis, there will be
4,000 self-rising seats and space for another 6,000 people
on the lawn.
Click
here to view diagram
The 625 x 325-ft trellis, 60 ft
at its highest point, defines an outdoor "room"
of sorts, but its primary purpose is to hang loudspeakers
for a computer-controlled sound system. The system consists
of speaker clusters at the stage and loudspeakers distributed
over the audience area. A pedestrian bridge approach alongside
the lawn will double as a sound berm, containing the music
and keeping away ambient noise. Acoustically, "we were
able to create a room effect," says Craig Webb, project
designer for Gehry Partners, Los Angeles, by delaying the
sound by milliseconds as it is distributed. "Its
like a surround sound system in a movie theater."
To stay the course in Chicago,
the contractor stumbled, at first, along the road of computer-enhanced
construction. Vets and newbies alike say three-dimensional
solid-object modeling, "net" meetings via the Worldwide
Web, high-tech surveying methods and computer-aided fabrication
made the project feasible. "Without the 3-D models, we
would still be in shop drawings," says Patrick R. Buck
of local Walsh Construction, the general contractor for the
music pavilion and other jobs in the park near Lake Michigan.
Buck is project manager for the wavy tresses, their support
steel and for the silver trellis over the seating area.
The projects tough logistics
demanded lots of coordination, especially for the lions
mane. There, even the 352 x 625-ft trellis pierces the tresses,
like a giant hairpin.
Click
here to view diagram
The 3-D models were part of the
teams salvation and part of the problem. "Getting
everyone educated on 3-D software was one of the major challenges,"
says Buck, especially because Walsh was traffic cop for five
different models used by players scattered all over America.
Net meetings, which allowed remote
players to view, rotate and discuss the model in real time,
were a big help. There were 80 meetings from February to October
2002 on the tress support elements alone. The meetings kept
the shop drawing phase from bogging down, says Buck, who figures
he saved Walshs $35,000 computer system investment in
travel costs alone.
"It was almost like approving
shop drawings before they came," says John Zils, associate
partner in the local office of project structural engineer
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.
The meetings slashed the number
of requests for information. For pavilion steel, including
the trellis, there are 125 RFIs. Without meetings, Conrath
estimates there would have been some10,000 RFIs on tress support
elements alone.
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| FIELD
FIX Compass-arm positions adjusted. (Photo courtesy
of Walsh Construction Company) |
But even 3-D models and net meetings
didnt prevent a significant stumble last summer, when
the team discovered, after erection, that many of the "compass
arms" shop-welded to the elements to receive the tress
panels were not in the right place.
"This whole issue of [tight]
tolerance on multidimensional buildings needs to be looked
at differently," says L. William Zahner, CEO of A. Zahner
Co., Kansas City, Mo., and a Gehry vet who designed, fabricated
and installed the panels. Often, "what we attach to floats
all over the place," says Zahner.
In anticipation, Zahner makes the
surface "as adjustable as we can within the space of
the wall panel," he says. Typically, that means doubling
the tolerance allowed for panel supports.
To assess the problem and devise
the fix, Walsh turned to technology. Using a high-tech scanner,
the team produced an as-built model of the hard surfaces of
the elements, to compare them to the theoretical model.
Of 2,064 arms, 489 in the center
and east elements had to be replaced or adjusted, says Dowco.
The team still has not sorted it
all out. Walsh says Dowcos number is wrong. Steel fabricator
Lejeune Steel Co., Minneapolis, declines comment.
Everyone is vague about how much
the snafu slowed the project, which is now set for substantial
completion at Aprils end instead of mid-March. But Zahner,
which just finished installing the 700 panels, says he didnt
expect to be installing panels in winter.
"Our initial projections were
that [the pavilion] would be done sooner, but we didnt
try to schedule genius to the midnight hour,"
Conrath says.
The opening celebration of Millennium
Park is now set for July 24, a date that also has moved. Chicagos
grand civic gesture began with a 1997 master plan by SOM for
an expansion of the northwest corner of Grant Park, atop a
three-level, 16-acre platform over existing rail tracks, a
bus lane and a future commuter station. It was supposed to
be done in 2001. Click
here to view diagram
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| CIVIC
GRANDEUR Sixteen-acre park turned into a 24.5-acre
park. (Photo by Michael Goodman for ENR) |
Plans changed when the Pritzker
family agreed to give $15 million toward the music venue if
the city switched gears and made the park an architectural
statement, with Gehry as the exclamation point. Mayor Richard
M. Daley (D), the parks big booster, agreed.
The park was then expanded to 24.5
acres and the grand opening pushed to 2002 to accommodate
the Gehry pavilion, whose tresses and trellis are paid for
with $18.5 million from donors.
The platform levels, already under
construction when Gehry arrived in 1999, have stayed true
to the master plan.
But the park level plan has been
morphing. There are now 10 projects underwritten by $205 million
from donors. The changes and delays in fund-raising and letting
contracts pushed the opening to this summer.
The citys $270 million is
mostly for the pavilions $25-million base building,
the $204-million Millennium Park garage and park infrastructure.
The 2,181-space garage is the major funding mechanism to pay
off $170 million in city bonds.
A $2.7-million ice rink opened
in December 2001. A $4.5-million replacement of a landmark
peristyle was completed in October 2002. A $52-million, 1,500-seat
underground music and dance theater, which shares back-of-the-house
space with the pavilion, was finished in November. A $12.1-million
pedestrian bridge, Gehrys first span, is to open in
July, along with a $10.2-million ornamental garden. A $10-million
sculpture resembling a giant kidney bean should be completed
by August and a $12.5-million reflecting-pool sculpture consisting
of two rectilinear towers with facing projection screens by
October. Landscaping is to be done by July.
According to projections, the cultural
and recreational park will bring in $250 million additional
tourist dollars each year. The citys small investment
in cutting-edge architecture is already paying off, says Edward
K. Uhlir, assistant to the mayor and Millennium Park project
director. Area real estate prices are soaring and work is
under way or complete on several hotels and residential buildings
nearby.
URS arrived in June 2000, when
the Public Building Commission took over administering the
project from Chicagos Dept. of Transportation. The garage,
delayed by design problems, was opened in phases; the north
part in February 2001 and the south that December.
For construction, the city broke
the park projects into many contracts. The approach "made
coordination more difficult," says Conrath, but it was
the only way to go because the park elements came into being
at different times.
URS is one of three owners
reps that report to Uhlir. City contracts are lump sum, low
bid. Donor-funded contracts are typically negotiated.
Gehry expedited the music pavilion
design, finishing in November 1999, so that adjustments could
be more easily made in the platform structure below.
For the structural engineer, the
biggest challenge was devising a consistent geometry to take
the "free out of free form," says Zils. For the
3-D tress elements, all made of straight members, SOM superimposed
a grid of virtual horizontal planes every 10 ft and virtual
vertical planes every 9 ft, 8 in., and then mimicked the tress
forms. The vertical planes conform to the garages 29-ft
structural module.
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| SLOTS
Some 700 doubly curved panels are required to
remain true to the designed surface. (Graphics courtesy
of A. Zahner Co.) |
The 12 elements, made of wide-flange
ribs, horizontal tubes, diagonal braces and pipe supports,
extend across an area 320 ft wide and up to 142 ft. The five
center elements bear on tips of 12 trusses that cantilever
70 to 100 ft off the proscenium truss girder, and are stiffened
by braces. SOM lined up element ribs with cantilevers. Three
other elements are supported by braces and four sit on the
platforms raft slab. Click
here to view diagram
To simplify the analysis model,
SOM introduced a theoretical shell element that requires very
little stiffness to distribute the load. The engineer also
modeled the base building frame and elements as one. SOM had
to interface with and support the design of the panels. For
example, panels act like wind catchers. To ensure they wouldnt
vibrate, SOM did a dynamic analysis. Though their curvature
stressed some, it made the panels very stiff and unlikely
to vibrate, says SOM. Click
here to view diagram
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| PIERCING
Like hairpins, trellis runs through curved panels "coiffing"
the proscenium, complicating steel work. (Photo by Michael
Goodman for ENR) |
The steel pipe trellis is a bilaterally
symmetrical, two-way intersecting arch forma shell structure.
The trellis consists of 24 flat arches, two each the same,
made of 12 to 18-in.-dia pipes. The arches spring from parallel
lines of twelve 6-ft-dia concrete pylons, 15 ft tall and 60
ft apart. One flatter and one steeper arch spring from each
pylon and land on different pylons along the opposite line.
SOM imposed a two-way diagonal
grid system on the architects random arch configuration.
Intersecting arches meet on the same theoretical surface,
says the engineer, but at different angles.
For economy and constructibility,
SOM worked with Gehry to reduce the number of radii per arch
to four. Radii change at the welded nodes. For economy in
fabrication, SOM designed the arches to curve in one direction
only.
The pylons, which take the arches
thrust, had to be stiff to control deflections and the trellis
shape. A small deflection at a support would be magnified
at the center. Gehry didnt want a simpler tension ring
at the ends of the trellis.
Temperature-related movement of
the trelliss substructure, through two expansion joints,
had to be part of the 3-D finite element analysis.
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| FALSEWORK
Towers are under cantilevers until elements are up. (Photo
courtesy of Walsh Construction Company) |
To erect the trusses, the steel
erector used twelve 78-ft-tall shoring towers, one under each
tip of each cantilever. The erector designed and positioned
the falsework to allow erection of catwalks and primary steel
for the five center elements.
Towers had to remain until the
trusses and center elements were complete and surveyed. Then,
towers were relieved of their loads simultaneously. SOMs
predicted deflection for dead load was 3 3 /4
in. The tip deflection of the longest cantilever was
some 3 in., says Dave Budzius, project manager for steel erector
Dannys Construction Co. Inc., Gary, Ind.
The engineer predicted additional
deflection of 3 /4 in. due to superimposed
dead load and some 2 in. of live load deflection. DCCI measured
a total of approximately 6 in. of deflection.
The metal elements weigh from 15
to 96 tons. Some of the larger, heavier elements had to be
installed 142 ft above grade. The weight combined with their
configurations, plan positions and elevations, required the
use of large cranes, says DCCI, which erected the elements
in six months starting last Feb. 18. Erection detailing was
completed on Sept. 12.
In preparation for the lifts, large
sections of the elements were assembled at grade level, rigged
and lifted into position with one crane while the second crane
erected the braces and in-fill steel. Erection moved west
to east. Placing the at-grade elements first allowed the first
elevated element to be erected over its top. Once the west
elements were erected, the cranes tracked east as the crane
grillage leap-frogged with the cranes to the east.
Center elements were erected next.
When the eastern-most center element was erected and detailed,
crews removed truss falsework.
The majority of the trellis system
was erected from June to the end of September 2003. Trellis
erection involved approximately 165 full-penetration field
welds. The coordinated detailing and erection scheme provided
120 pipe pieces, varying from 50 to 105 ft long, with average
80-ft lengths.
Shoring towers supported the trellis
at 48 node points. A braced top beam supported devices that
suspended the trellis near the node point. The suspension
slings were positioned slightly offset of the node points
to allow for accurate surveying of the punched-marked node
points. By suspending the nodes in lieu of placing shims or
jacks, DCCI was able to quickly and accurately adjust the
node elevations, says Budzius.
The design documents allowed the
trellis to be erected either from north or south. The team
decided to erect from both directions at once, starting from
the south, where there were minimal logistics issues and a
need to complete sooner to make way for construction of a
garden.
Due to the crush at the north end,
the team erected the two north diagonal grids in conjunction
with the tress elements. This would allow field welds to be
done sooner, says Budzius.
Two-directional erection creates
potential for a misfit at the juncture. Thanks to the suspension
tops and diagonal drop-down field splices, the fill-in pieces
were successfully erected and positioned, says Budzius.
North trellis piping comes within
inches of tress elements, braces and the catwalk. To avoid
a traffic jam, DCCI set the center trellis intersection node
in advance. It was delivered in pieces and assembled on the
slab. After its geometry was verified, it was fully welded
as one unit. In conjunction with the element erection, DCCI
used both cranes to erect the 76-ft-long node and suspend
it from the cantilevers. After that, DCCI erected the center
elements.
The east and west elements are
also proximal to the trellis. By coordinating the north erection
schemes field splices, DCCI was able to position shoring
towers so they would not interfere with elements, says Budzius.
With the use of a shoring bent, DCCI erected the node of the
trellis directly above the most easterly element, without
imposing on it.
The nearly 700 panelsno two
alikefollowed the elements. The panels, ranging from
4 to 8 ft in width and 6 to 24 ft in length, are made from
high-strength aluminum plates, or fins, cut to the profile
defined by Gehrys model. Each fin has a unique position
within its frame, determined by a proprietary algorithm, which
analyzes the solid model surface of Gehrys design. "We
have applied for three patents on the software system,"
says Zahner.
The result is a series of shapes
determined by the computer that are cut and assembled into
frames on the shop floor, using computer numerically controlled
equipment.
The system allows Zahner to make
the surface several months in advance of steel erection. It
works well if issues dont develop with the steel, he
says. On site, crews adjust panel-to-panel alignments to create
a smooth and continuous surface. Crews then cover the front
surface with a total of 5,200 interlocking, stainless-steel
sheets.
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| (Photo
courtesy of A. Zahner Co.) |
Panels are hooked into holes in
compass arms via a two-part assembly that allowed the panel
to roll into position. A fork on the lower end of the panel
going in "grabbed" an anchor with a milled-out steel
ring with a Teflon band, bolted to the top of a previously
installed panel below.
Click
here to view diagram
Crew started installing panels
last May. Substantial completion of the system is set for
the end of the month. "The center was the hardest because
of odd shapes and installing panels overhead," says Zahner.
As they near the end of the
road, some of the players clearly cant wait to get back
to Kansas. One even jokes that his next job is going to be
a Wal-Mart. But along with grousing is an air of accomplishment.
"In legacy projects, there is a certain sense of pride,"
says Wayne Anderson, Walshs senior project manager.
"Nobody can take that away."
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