|
...problems during construction appear
to be more profound, says a senior contractor on a nearby
job. "We know they had problems. They stopped production
altogether [for weeks]," he says, speaking on terms of
anonymity.
"Work stopped early during
vault erection while the contractor jacked up the shells to
allow repairs to columns," says the observer. "They
repaired all the columns with external glass-fiber reinforcing
[and] the deflection of the shell was bigger than expected,"
he adds.
The engineer believes AdP ordered
a complete review of the design before work resumed. AdP had
produced the outline design and, under normal French conditions,
GTM would have taken charge of detailed work. However, GTM
reportedly denies any design responsibility.
By press time, AdP was unable to
provide staff to clarify several of these issues because of
the pressured situation. The company could not predict when
conclusions would emerge from the investigations. GTM referred
questions on construction faults to AdP. Hervé declined
to comment at all.
While AdP has closed Terminal 2E,
the almost symmetrical twin, Terminal 2F, remains functioning.
Completed in 1998, 2F introduced an internally exposed concrete
vault, designed by the then chief architect Paul Andreu, now
an independent practitioner. However, the older terminals
vault is a nonstructural ceiling supported externally by long-span
arching trusses.
AdP reports no problems with
the 2F vault, but changed the design for its new neighbor.
In 2Es 450 x 70-m main building, lighter and easier
to install timber forms the ceiling. The change was done to
save time and cost, says AdPs project architect, Anne
Brison. But Andreus interest in the concrete vault found
itself in the new terminals concourse, though with a
significant difference. As the failure shows, the concourse
vault is structural, unlike 2Fs more resilient ceiling.
|
Moving Far
Beyond
 |
| Andreu |
Paris airports
evolution over the last three decades has been intricately
linked with the career of Paul Andreu, until recently
Aéroports de Paris chief architect. The
collapse of his last major Paris project will be a bitter
blow as he carves out a second career, which took him
to Beijing, where he heard the bad news.
Andreu is an architect who
stretches engineering to achieve his aesthetic goals.
He admits to having little interest in molding designs
to structural purity.
To achieve his goals he is
known for establishing dominance over the design team.
Nevertheless, he is said to be sympathetic to contrary
views. Hes an intelligent man, says
a senior engineer on a current project. He wants
to understand, adds the engineer, but if
you are wrong or not convincing enough you dont
get what you ask for.
Andreu left AdP last year,
having reached the French civil servants retirement
age. The architect is continuing an international career
that began early on with AdP.
His current masterpiece is
the elliptical steel dome that crowns Chinas new
national theater in Beijing. Andreu entered the design
competition for that job in part to prove his range
went beyond air-ports.
|
|