flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

14 great solutions

14 great solutions

Welcome to the third installment of Building Design+Construction’s “Great Solutions,” highlighting 14 innovative technologies and products that you can put to work in your next project.


By By Amy McIntosh, Associate Editor and Raissa Rocha, Associate Editor | December 9, 2012
This free-form floating ceiling uses aluminum to add drama to healthcare think t
This free-form floating ceiling uses aluminum to add drama to healthcare think tank.
This article first appeared in the December 2012 issue of BD+C.

Welcome to the third installment of Building Design+Construction’s “Great Solutions,” highlighting 14 innovative technologies and products that you can put to work in your next project. Readers are encouraged to submit entries for future Great Solutions; if we use yours, you’ll earn a $25 gift certificate, as Corky Bradley, AIA, LEED AP, did for his contribution (see page 26).

 

NET-ZERO ENERGY BRANCH BANK

Prototype cashes in on energy-neutral trend

 

PNC Bank has 118 LEED-certified buildings,  more than other any company in the world. In a few months, the bank will open its first net-zero branch, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The 4,900-sf building will be powered by solar PVs, with daylight harvesting linked to solar shading and dimmable light fixtures. Recycled structural and shell materials are locally sourced. The facility will have a quarter-mile garden walking path for use by customers and local residents. Designed by Gensler, the building will use 50% less energy than a typical PNC branch and is expected to produce enough energy to power a 1,600-sf house for a year. The prototype will serve as a model for future PNC branch installations in the U.S.

[pagebreak]

HIGH-EFFICIENCY CEILING FANS

Big you-know-what fan goes small this time

 

Touted as “the first small fan that deserves to be called a Big Ass Fan,” Haiku is a 60-inch commercial ceiling fan from the maker of industrial large-diameter, low-speed fans. Unlike most ceiling fans that use low-cost AC motors and require 100 or more watts at top speed, Haiku fans use concealed, cool-running motors for increased energy efficiency. They come in advanced composite materials or hand-finished, laminated bamboo.

The fan won a Red Dot Product Design Award for Interior Design and an Australian International Design Award. It was named a BuildingGreen Top 10 green product for 2013 and was featured in BD+C’s “GreenZone” at Greenbuild in San Francisco.

[pagebreak]

DIGITAL WAYFINDING

iPad-like touch screen signage serves as guide for hospital guests

 

State-of-the-art technology has turned key public areas of St. Luke’s Hospital of Kansas City, Mo., into a virtual iPad-like touch screen experience for patients and visitors. At the center of the signage and wayfinding program is a wall that incorporates photos and video clips that narrate the facility’s nearly 124-year history. Directional kiosks provide visual instructions on how to get from Point A to Point B within the hospital; guests can also print out detailed directions to any part of the hospital. Design firm Forcade Associates, Evanston, Ill., combined the pioneering technology with traditional interior and exterior signage to help patients and visitors navigate through the 1.2 million-sf hospital.

[pagebreak]

CONCRETE MOCKUPS WITH RECYCLED CONTENT

Building’s LEED Platinum journey starts with green building mockups

 

The J. Craig Venter Institute in La Jolla, Calif., is currently under construction, aiming for LEED Platinum certification. McCarthy Building Companies Inc. has assisted in this endeavor by completing construction and testing of the concrete, wood window, and wood siding building enclosure mockups. The mockups used locally sourced wood and poured-in-place concrete containing 30% fly ash. The high fly ash content contributes two points to the recycled content category for LEED certification.

 

 

 

[pagebreak]

REPURPOSING MATERIALS FOR USE IN BUILDINGS

By-products are given a new life through recycling

 

Whether using advertising billboards as tarps on construction sites or crafting a banister from a ski lift cable (as shown at left), Colorado-based Repurposed Materials Inc. finds creative ways to reuse waste materials. Conveyer belts, pool covers, wine barrels, and snow fences can all be given a second chance with this economical, eco-friendly solution that gives a second life to by-products and waste materials.

 

[pagebreak]

EDUCATION PROGRAMS BUILD GOODWILL FOR MANUFACTURERS, CONTRACTOR

Wind energy, LEED, and BIM are grist for the scholarly mill

 

Honeywell Building Solutions and Lake Region State College, Devils Lake, N.D., have broken ground on an on-campus 6 MW wind turbine (like the one shown here) that will also act as a teaching tool for the school’s wind energy technician program. LRSC will sell excess power to the local utility, thus enabling the college to cover turbine construction costs within 15 years. When the turbine is ready, students will no longer have to go off campus to get hands-on wind energy training.

InPro Corporation has developed a program to bring sustainable design into the classroom. The School of Green is a one-day education session designed to teach middle and high school students in its home town of Muskego, Wis., about green initiatives that benefit new building construction. Students take a quiz at the beginning of the class to gauge their prior knowledge of green standards and LEED ratings, then take the same quiz at the end to measure what they’ve learned.

In the Boston area, construction manager Tocci Building Companies held a free one-day BIM training symposium for project management, procurement, and facilities staff at Tufts University, in Waltham.

Education programs like these can bind your company more firmly to the communities you serve.

[pagebreak]

PATIENT LIFT PENDANT

New lift system saves money, backaches for care providers

 

The Patient Lift Pendant (PLP) is a new combination boom and lift developed by Amico Corp. that increases real estate in the ceiling to allow for installation of additional medical equipment and lighting in patient rooms. The PLP assists with repositioning, turning, and transferring immobilized patients without any lifting by nurses or other hospital staff. It also eliminates the need to install tracks in the ceiling by integrating the patient lift track into the pendant arm. The PLP is capable of utilizing a patient lift motor rated to lift up to 1,000 pounds. A direct power source ensures the lift is always charged and ready for use.

 

 

[pagebreak]

QUICK-PACED MICRO-UNIT PREFAB

Apartment building stacks up four stories in four days

 

The SoMa Studios is a 23-unit apartment building in San Francisco’s trendy SoMa (South of Market) district, built at a Sacramento factory in just three months and assembled on site in four days—a fraction of the estimated 13 months to build the same project using traditional construction. Developer Panoramic Interests, Berkeley, Calif., partnered with green modular builder ZETA to create the urban infill complex, which the Modular Building Institute says is the first of its kind in the U.S. The LEED Platinum building offers 300-sf “micro-unit” studios to overcome the housing crunch for Bay Area urban singles, such as those who work at Twitter’s nearby HQ; typical studio units run 450-500 sf. Green features include solar hot water heating, recycled materials, natural light, and high-performance windows.

 

 

[pagebreak]

FILTERED WATER DRINKING FOUNTAIN AND BOTTLE REFILL UNIT

Public water bottle refill stations encourage residents to ditch disposable bottles

 

Manly, N.S.W., a northern suburb of Sydney, wanted to reduce the amount of waste from plastic water bottles by encouraging residents to reuse water bottles. The Manly Council Filtered Water Sustainability Initiative led to the installation of Aquafil filtered water refill stations with Culligan water filtration systems in public places. The refill stations can display advertisements and feature an optional drinking fountain attachment. The idea is spreading: Corky Bradley, AIA, LEED AP, Senior Associate with RB+B Architects, Fort Collins, Colo., photographed this unit on a beach in Tauranga, New Zealand.

 

 

 

[pagebreak]

USING RESEARCH TO DEMONSTRATE KNOWLEDGE LEADERSHIP

Innovative consumer research spans time and technology

 

Technology, social media, and the passing of time all influence the ways in which consumers interact with retail brands. In the latest research from WD Partners, Dublin, Ohio, the buying trends of Millennials and Boomers were analyzed to determine what brands can do to retain customer loyalty in the digital age and across generations. The reports also address specific demographic groups, such as the Hispanic Millennial. From clothing and entertainment brands to grocery stores, WD Partners’ studies establish the architecture firm as a thought leader in retail design. Is there such a study in your firm’s future?

 

 

[pagebreak]

TIGHT SEAL FOR BUILDING ENVELOPE

Window assembly units can weather the storm

 

Proglaze ETA from Tremco is a pre-engineered transition assembly for windows and walls, designed to absorb thermal movement and wind loading stresses. It is composed of aluminum and silicone materials that are mechanically attached to windows to ensure a tight, secure seal. The Camp Pendleton Replacement Naval Hospital at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, in San Diego, chose Proglaze ETA, as the facility required a window system that was energy efficient, while in compliance with California’s seismic safety standards. It also had to control air and moisture infiltration to protect patients from mold and mildew. Proglaze ETA was named one of BuildingGreen’s Top 10 green products for 2013.

 

[pagebreak]

FREE-FORM FLOATING CEILING

Suspension technology uses aluminum to add drama to healthcare think tank

 

In 2011, the Building Team of SmithGroupJJR and DeMaria Building Company set out to recreate an old structure on Henry Ford Health System’s main hospital campus, in Detroit, into an innovation center, with the aim of integrating the building’s architectural heritage with the new innovation zone. The result: a new free-form, floating ceiling system, designed in partnership with Armstrong World Industries. A Revit 3D model was utilized to develop the suspension system, which is shaped into a folded plane and formed using articulated pieces. Aluminum extrusions replaced wood when the latter proved too heavy for use in the ceiling installation.

[pagebreak]

ENHANCING BIM WORKFLOWS VIA ARCHITECTURAL METROLOGY

New firm practices the art and science of architectural measurement

 

“We measure difficult subjects” is the tagline of architectural metrology business Glapin Milphrey LLC, a startup company that provides architectural measurement services to AEC professionals looking to improve their BIM workflows. Formed earlier this year, Glapin Milphrey is the brainchild of architect Doug Brinley, who has developed workflow processes for digitally measuring 3D spaces and converting the spatial information for direct transfer to modeling applications. Based in Seattle, Glapin Milphrey’s spatial datasets are purely electronic and are collected using reflectorless, robotic  electronic distance measuring technology.

 

[pagebreak]

CARDBOARD (YES, CARDBOARD) BICYCLE

Israeli inventor gears up to introduce world to cardboard bikes

 

OK, we’ll admit it, this one looks a bit off target in a building-oriented magazine. But consider what Izhar Gafni, an amateur cycling enthusiast from Israel, has accomplished: the development of a prototype bicycle made almost entirely of cardboard. Using folding principles similar to origami, Gafni spent years developing a bicycle formed with specially cut and treated cardboard that could support the weight of a rider. After the shape is formed, a proprietary blend of materials is applied to strengthen the cardboard and make it waterproof and fireproof before being painted. The brake mechanism and wheel and pedal bearings are made from recycled parts that are free of metal. The tires come from reconstituted rubber. The bicycle weighs 20 pounds and uses about $9 worth of materials.

What’s next, an office tower made from paper towels? You tell us. +

Related Stories

Government Buildings | Mar 24, 2023

19 federal buildings named GSA Design Awards winners

After a six-year hiatus, the U.S. General Services Administration late last year resumed its esteemed GSA Design Awards program. In all, 19 federal building projects nationwide were honored with 2022 GSA Design Awards, eight with Honor Awards and 11 with Citations.

Transportation & Parking Facilities | Mar 23, 2023

Amsterdam debuts underwater bicycle parking facility that can accommodate over 4,000 bikes

In February, Amsterdam saw the opening of a new underwater bicycle parking facility. Located in the heart of the city—next to Amsterdam Central Station and under the river IJ (Amsterdam’s waterfront)—the facility, dubbed IJboulevard, has parking spots for over 4,000 bicycles, freeing up space on the street.

Healthcare Facilities | Mar 22, 2023

New Jersey’s new surgical tower features state’s first intraoperative MRI system

Hackensack (N.J.) University Medical Center recently opened its 530,000-sf Helena Theurer Pavilion, a nine-story surgical and intensive care tower designed by RSC Architects and Page. The county’s first hospital, Hackensack University Medical Center, a 781-bed nonprofit teaching and research hospital, was founded in 1888.

Project + Process Innovation | Mar 22, 2023

Onsite prefabrication for healthcare construction: It's more than a process, it's a partnership

Prefabrication can help project teams navigate an uncertain market. GBBN's Mickey LeRoy, AIA, ACHA, LEED AP, explains the difference between onsite and offsite prefabrication methods for healthcare construction projects.

Women in Design+Construction | Mar 21, 2023

Two leading women in construction events unite in 2023

The new Women in Residential + Commercial Construction Conference (WIR+CC) will take place in Nashville, Tenn., October 25-27, 2023. Combining these two long-standing events aligns with our mission to create an event most impactful for women in the $1.4 trillion U.S. commercial and residential design and construction industry.

Mass Timber | Mar 19, 2023

A 100% mass timber construction project is under way in North Carolina

An office building 100% made from mass timber has started construction within the Live Oak Bank campus in Wilmington, N.C. The 67,000-sf structure, a joint building venture between the GCs Swinerton and Wilmington-headquartered Monteith Construction, is scheduled for completion in early 2024.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Mar 17, 2023

Aurora, Colo., recreation center features city’s first indoor field house, unobstructed views of the Rocky Mountains

In January, design firm Populous and the City of Aurora, Colo. marked the opening of the Southeast Aurora Recreation Center and Fieldhouse. The 77,000-sf facility draws design inspiration from the nearby Rocky Mountains. With natural Douglas Fir structure and decking, the building aims to mimic the geography of a canyon. 

Architects | Mar 16, 2023

HKS launches partner diversity program to create a more diverse workforce and partnership network

Design firm HKS has launched a new partner diversity program that will work to build a more diverse AEC ecosystem. The HKS xBE program will give xBE firms (a term encompassing all disadvantaged businesses) and their members “access to opportunities to build relationships, pursue new work, and bolster innovation within the architecture and design professions,” according to HKS.

Sustainability | Mar 16, 2023

Lack of standards for carbon accounting hamper emissions reduction

A lack of universally accepted standards for collecting, managing, and storing greenhouse gas emissions data (i.e., carbon accounting) is holding back carbon reduction efforts, according to an essay published by the Rocky Mountain Institute.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Mar 15, 2023

Georgia State University Convocation Center revitalizes long-neglected Atlanta neighborhood

Georgia State University’s new Convocation Center doubles the arena it replaces and is expected to give a shot in the arm to a long-neglected Atlanta neighborhood. The new 200,000 sf multi-use venue in the Summerhill area of Atlanta is the new home for the university’s men’s and women’s basketball teams and will also be used for large-scale academic and community events.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Healthcare Facilities

Watch on-demand: Key Trends in the Healthcare Facilities Market for 2024-2025

Join the Building Design+Construction editorial team for this on-demand webinar on key trends, innovations, and opportunities in the $65 billion U.S. healthcare buildings market. A panel of healthcare design and construction experts present their latest projects, trends, innovations, opportunities, and data/research on key healthcare facilities sub-sectors. A 2024-2025 U.S. healthcare facilities market outlook is also presented.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021