flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

3D printed models bring new economic district in Detroit to life

Sports and Recreational Facilities

3D printed models bring new economic district in Detroit to life

The centerpiece is the scaled replica of a new arena that puts a miniature fan in every seat.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 21, 2017

A 3D-printed model of the 21,000-seat Little Caesars Arena in Detroit includes tiny versions of fans in every seat. The level of detail in this concept model was instrumental in selling suites in the arena, which opens in September. Image: Stratasys Direct Manufacturing

This September, the 21,000-seat Little Caesars Arena is scheduled to open in downtown Detroit. The $732.6 million arena will be the new homes to the Detroit Red Wings professional hockey team and the Detroit Pistons basketball team.

The Red Wings is owned by Illitch Holdings, whose Olympia Entertainment division will operate the arena, and whose other holdings include the Detroit Tigers baseball team and the Little Caesars pizza chain.

The eight-story arena, owned by the Downtown Development Authority, will anchor The District Detroit, a 50-block, $1.2 billion, 650,000-sf revitalization project that, when completed, will energize five neighborhoods—Columbia Street, Columbia Park, Woodward Square, Wildcat Corner, and Case Park Village—with new businesses, parks, restaurants, bars, offices, retail, and residential spaces. The District’s event destinations will include six theaters and three multi-use sports facilities.

A unique glass-roofed concourse will connect the arena to the offices and shops around it.

Little Caesars is expanding its headquarters in the District with a new $150 million, nine-story, 234,000-sf office building, the first newly built global headquarters in Detroit in a decade. (Blaze Contracting is this building’s GC. Its completion is expected next year.)

To drum up interest in The District Detroit—which is projected to generate $2.1 billion in local economic impact and 1,100 new permanent jobs—Olympia partnered with Detroit-based Zoyes Creative Group to create The District Detroit Preview Center, whose main feature is two large 3D printed models: one of the arena and one of the District.

 

 

The arena is the centerpiece of The District Detroit, a revitalization of 50 blocks in downtown Detroit that will add 650,000 sf of new offices, retail, residential, sports and entertainment space. Image:  Stratasys Direct Manufacturing

 

These are among the most intricately detailed 3D printed models ever created. They include light columns, office interiors, vehicles, and—the piece de resistance—a representation of every fan who would be seated in the arena at capacity.

Zoyes uses a Fortus 450mc 3D production system printer. But it quickly realized that it needed help to complete this project on time. So it hired Stratasys Direct Manufacturing, based in Valencia, Calif., whose arsenal includes a Fortus 900mc 3D printer, to assist in the concept modeling.

“No other company would have been able to jump on board as quickly as [Stratasys] did,” says Rich Rozeboom, who directs Zoyes’s imaging department.

The decision to create such elaborate 3D models “changed everything,” says Tom Wilson, Olympia’s president and CEO. Olympia’s original plan was that it would take six months to complete the models, after which it would start selling suites within the arena. But Zoyes and Stratasys completed the suite models in 40 days. “That changed all of our methods, all of our success models,” says Wilson.

He adds “3D printing makes the arena come to life just by making it real. That model puts you in real Detroit.” 

The Building Team for the Little Caesars Arena includes HOK (designer), Barton Marlow/Hunt/White (GCs), Magnusson Klemenic Associates (SE), and Smith Seckman Reid (services engineer). A live webcam of the construction can be viewed here.

Related Stories

| Aug 15, 2016

Top 50 Sports Facility Architecture Firms

Populous, HKS, and HOK top Building Design+Construction’s annual ranking of the nation’s largest sports facility sector architecture and A/E firms, as reported in the 2016 Giants 300 Report.

High-rise Construction | Aug 1, 2016

Rising to the occasion: Dubai shows some pictures of proposed 500-step structure

Still in the planning stages, this building would serve tourists and power climbers alike. 

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jul 31, 2016

Shanghai’s latest tourist attraction: an outside, rail-less walkway around one of its tallest skyscrapers

For less than $60, you can now get a bird’s-eye (or window-washer’s) view of the cityscape.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jul 20, 2016

San Diego’s waterfront redevelopment would go beyond a mere ‘project’

Its developers envision a thriving business, education, and entertainment district, highlighted by a huge observation tower and aquarium.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jul 20, 2016

Chicago Cubs unveil plans for premier fan club underneath box seats at Wrigley Field

As part of the baseball team’s larger stadium renovation project, the club will offer exclusive food, drinks, and seating.

Events Facilities | Jul 19, 2016

Houston architect offers novel idea for Astrodome renovation

Current plans for the Astrodome’s renovation turn the site into an indoor park and events space, but a Houston architect is questioning if that is the best use of the space

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jul 18, 2016

Turner and AECOM will build the Los Angeles Rams’ new multi-billion dollar stadium project

The 70,000-seat stadium will be ready by the 2019 NFL season. The surrounding mixed-use development includes space for retail, hotels, and public parks.

Building Tech | Jul 14, 2016

Delegates attending political conventions shouldn’t need to ask ‘Can you hear me now?’

Each venue is equipped with DAS technology that extends the building’s wireless coverage.

Contractors | Jul 4, 2016

A new report links infrastructure investment to commercial real estate expansion

Competitiveness and economic development are at stake for cities, says Transwestern.

Sports and Recreational Facilities | Jun 9, 2016

Swimming may be returning to Melbourne’s polluted Yarra River… kind of

The addition of a pool to the Yarra may help improve people’s perception of the river and act as the impetus to an increase in support for improving its water quality.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




Mixed-Use

A surging master-planned community in Utah gets its own entertainment district

Since its construction began two decades ago, Daybreak, the 4,100-acre master-planned community in South Jordan, Utah, has been a catalyst and model for regional growth. The latest addition is a 200-acre mixed-use entertainment district that will serve as a walkable and bikeable neighborhood within the community, anchored by a minor-league baseball park and a cinema/entertainment complex.

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