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Metal cladding tiles help unique airport facility’s design take flight

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Metal cladding tiles help unique airport facility’s design take flight

Airport officials had design guidelines to ensure a visual connection between the new structure and others already in place.


By Petersen Aluminum | October 8, 2019

Photo: bergphoto.com

Loading docks generally aren’t known for their stylishness, but a new such structure at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport is breaking with that tradition. The addition of glass curtainwall and a protective overhang clad in copper-toned metal tiles create a real visual pop in the middle of the airport’s runway area.

“This is a new building type that’s trying to address increasing security concerns and the difficulty of combining traffic types,” says Philip Koski, AIA, project designer with Miller Dunwiddie, the Minneapolis architecture firm behind the facility’s design. “Only three or four similar facilities have been built nationwide, so this is on the cutting edge for airports.”

Beyond program requirements, airport officials also had design guidelines to ensure a visual connection between the new structure and others already in place. In general, these call for precast concrete construction with horizontal, corrugated metal panels finished in an aged-copper color. The Miller Dunwiddie team opted for a livelier arrangement of metal PAC-CLAD Precision Series Tiles from Petersen in a palette of three standard Kynar finishes, along with a custom Aged Copper color that matches the airport’s standards. The tiles’ cupped profile enables a unique play of light and shadow that creates a sense of movement across the face of the building’s sizable overhangs. Some 7,000 sq. ft. of the tiles were installed on the building.

“The idea was to have a range of colors that, if you stood back and squinted, it would look natural, like a green tree canopy,” Koski says.

Similar tiles have proved popular in several prominent area projects, including the Walker Library, which opened in 2014. “I can think of at least a dozen buildings with them, off the top of my head,” says Lauren Fleming, AIA, Miller Dunwiddie’s project architect for the job.

Getting the tile’s patterning right took some close coordination between the architects and installers from Otsego, Minn.-based Progressive Building Systems, according to that firm’s project manager and drafting director Dan Schwartz. It turns out that getting what appears to be a randomized color pattern isn’t as easy as throwing all the tiles up in the air to determine which one to install next.

PBS also installed the overhang’s soffit – with panels featuring a unique, four-sided reveal – and fabricated their own trim for the installation.

Fleming says she worked closely with Petersen throughout the job, to both determine the best options for standard finishes that would complement the required Aged Copper color and help ensure the patterning worked according to the plans. PBS’s color-coded shop drawings were followed precisely, she says. “And when the boxes showed up on site, they just put them on in the packaged order.”

The architects recently toured the completed loading dock facility, along with airport staff, and Fleming says the project received positive reviews. What is typically a non-descript building type is, instead, a visual highlight in its between-runway location.

 

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