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Raphael Viñoly’s serpentine-shaped building snakes up San Francisco hillside

Raphael Viñoly’s serpentine-shaped building snakes up San Francisco hillside


May 18, 2011

The hillside location for the Ray and Dagmar Dolby Regeneration Medicine building at the University of California, San Francisco, presented a challenge to the Building Team of Raphael Viñoly, SmithGroup, DPR Construction, and Forell/Elsesser Engineers. The 660-foot-long serpentine-shaped building sits on a structural framework 40 to 70 feet off the ground to accommodate the hillside’s steep 60-degree slope, while custom earthquake isolation devices will keep tremor damage at bay by allowing 23 inches of lateral movement. To accommodate a strict schedule and budget, the Building Team saved money and streamlined construction by moving a mechanical level, originally designed to hang below the structure, to the office level to avoid construction conflicts. They also reclassified the 80,000-sf building from hazardous occupancy to business, utilizing new building codes. The $123 million project is targeting LEED Gold.

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| Aug 11, 2010

Minneapolis Public Housing authority, Honeywell launch energy retrofit program

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| Aug 11, 2010

Shepley Bulfinch announces merger of Merzproject

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| Aug 11, 2010

Skanska Promotes Richard Kennedy to COO for NY/NJ Metro Area

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| Aug 11, 2010

The New Yorker's David Owen: Why Manhattan is America's greenest community

David Owen is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of 14 books, most recently Green Metropolis: Why Living Smaller, Living Closer, and Driving Less Are the Keys to Sustainability, in which he argues that Manhattan is the greenest community in America. He graduated from Harvard and lives in Washington, Conn., where he chairs the town planning commission.

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Brown Craig Turner opens senior living studio

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