flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

School Project Offers Lessons in Construction Realities

School Project Offers Lessons in Construction Realities

After a rocky start, a reconstituted Building Team completes a tricky project under the watchful eyes of its Main Line neighbors.


By By Jay W. Schneider, Senior Editor | August 11, 2010
This article first appeared in the 200908 issue of BD+C.
The Haverford School campus was active during construction, so the soccer team had to practice within 10 feet of where the Upper School’s site fencing had been erected.


Imagine this scenario: You're planning a $32.9 million project involving 112,000 sf of new construction and renovation work, and your job site is an active 32-acre junior-K-to-12 school campus bordered by well-heeled neighbors who are extremely concerned about construction noise and traffic.

Add to that the fact that within 30 days of groundbreaking, the general contractor gets canned. And one more thing: you have 15 months until the school bell rings.

This nightmare situation is exactly what Mike Rufo faced as construction manager for The Haverford School, a private school for 981 boys, on Philadelphia's Main Line. Rufo, owner of Rufo Contracting Inc. of Conshohocken, Pa., had worked with the school since 1992, when the institution launched a 15-year program to upgrade its campus. The project in question—construction of a new Upper School building and a new library totaling 87,000 sf and the renovation of Wilson Hall, the school's original 25,000-sf, 1903 classroom building—would be his last for the client, and one he would not forget. 
                                          

The brick and glass Upper School (above) angles around to create a nook for the amphitheater. The 87,000 sf of new construction connects to the renovated Wilson Hall (below) to create the school’s new face.


In July 2007, with the original GC out, Rufo's most pressing concern was finding a qualified replacement—fast! Three firms looked at the project schedule and turned him down flat. With less than 400 days before the opening day, Rufo contracted with INTECH Construction of Philadelphia. The new GC took over a job site where demolition had started, the first foundations had been poured, the installation of sheeting, shoring, and soil nailing had begun, and steel was on order.

INTECH also inherited a project located in a residential neighborhood where on-site work was limited to the hours from 8 am to 6 pm, and never on Sunday. Deliveries could not be made using residential streets. Well-connected neighbors made sure these rules were enforced.

INTECH's first task was reassuring the remaining Building Team members—including a number of worried subcontractors and the equally nervous designer—that the project schedule could be met. Philadelphia-based MGA Partners Architects had worked with INTECH before, but they were concerned that the grueling timeline would force INTECH to value engineer the project and make compromising design modifications. 
                                       

Numerous gathering and work spaces scattered throughout the project, including a columned seating area (top) and glass meeting pods (below), are designed to foster collaborative learning and social interaction.

MGA's design called for the combined Upper School building and Wilson Hall to become the new face of the campus. The new brick, glass, and steel facility would be connected to the renovated fieldstone and wood-framed Wilson Hall via a glass and limestone entrance pavilion. The sleek new Severinghaus Library would be tucked behind the 105-year-old Wilson Hall. Extensive glazing and curtain wall construction would open up the buildings to the outside, flooding the well-equipped and highly detailed classrooms, science labs, art studios, study nooks, and gathering spaces with daylight. The architects designed the project to achieve LEED Gold certification (still pending).

Rather than compromise the building's design integrity or sustainability efforts, INTECH instead reworked the schedule to break things down into more manageable chunks, called fragnets—for “fragmented networks of sub-projects”—to sequence the work more effectively. INTECH also asked MGA to provide an on-site architect so that decisions about any absolutely necessary modifications could be made quickly and in keeping with the original design intent. The cost of an on-site architect was not in the school's original budget, but the headmaster, Dr. Joseph Cox, realizing the value of having an MGA architect on site, pushed through approval of the additional expense.

The new sequencing scheme made all the difference. For example, the Building Team reworked the schedule so that interior work on the Upper School building could begin early. Fabrication of the project's cast stone detailing was more closely coordinated with the installation of the brick walls. The millwork and casework packages were reworked to comply with the integrity of the design but at a lower cost. Architectural metals and ornamental stairs were modified so that they could be installed faster, with no negative impact on the design intent.

Last-minute on-site changes like these can kill a project schedule, but the opposite was true at The Haverford School. The entire project was completed in August 2008—just in time for the start of the academic year.

“They did a great job on schedule,” said Building Team Awards judge Tracy Nicholas, VP, Alter Construction Management of Skokie, Ill. “There was great collaboration. Logistically, this was a difficult job with multiple departments, and they still did it all in 15 months.”

Related Stories

| Aug 11, 2010

Blue-Light Schoolhouses

Add the explosion in the number of school-aged kids nationally to the glut of huge, vacant stores in many communities and what do you get? Big boxes being turned into schools. For districts facing population pressure, these empty retail buildings can be the key to creating classrooms quickly, and at a significant cost advantage.

| Aug 11, 2010

Great Solutions: Green Building

27. Next-Generation Green Roofs Sprout up in New York New York is not particularly known for its green roofs, but two recent projects may put the Big Apple on the map. In spring 2010, the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts will debut one of the nation's first fully walkable green roofs. Located across from the Juilliard School in Lincoln Center's North Plaza, Illumination Lawn will consist ...

| Aug 11, 2010

Dream Fields, Lone Star Style

How important are athletic programs to U.S. school districts? Here's one leading indicator: In 2005, the National Football League sold 17 million tickets. That same year, America's high schools sold an estimated 225 million tickets to football games, according to the American Football Coaches Association.

| Aug 11, 2010

Back to Nature: Can wood construction create healthier, more productive learning environments?

Can the use of wood in school construction create healthier, safer, more productive learning environments? In Japan, there's an ongoing effort by government officials to construct school buildings with wood materials and finishes—everything from floors and ceilings to furniture and structural elements—in the belief that wood environments have a positive impact on students.

| Aug 11, 2010

High School in a Hurry

One of the more compelling arguments for charter schools is their theoretical ability to streamline decision making. Eliminate all those layers of bureaucratic fat that clog the arteries of most public school systems, the argument goes, and decisions can be made to flow much more smoothly, even when it comes to designing and building a major school project.

| Aug 11, 2010

Bronze Award: Garfield High School, Seattle, Wash.

Renovations to Seattle's historic Garfield High School focused mainly on restoring the 85-year-old building's faded beauty and creating a more usable and modern interior. The 243,000-sf school (whose alumni include the impresario Quincy Jones) was so functionally inadequate that officials briefly considered razing it.

| Aug 11, 2010

Managing the K-12 Portfolio

In 1995, the city of New Haven, Conn., launched a program to build five new schools and renovate and upgrade seven others. At the time, city officials could not have envisioned their program morphing into a 17-year, 44-school, $1.5 billion project to completely overhaul its entire portfolio of K-12 facilities for nearly 23,000 students.

| Aug 11, 2010

Financial Wizardry Builds a Community

At 69 square miles, Vineland is New Jersey's largest city, at least in geographic area, and it has a rich history. It was established in 1861 as a planned community (well before there were such things) by the utopian Charles Landis. It was in Vineland that Dr. Thomas Welch found a way to preserve grape juice without fermenting it, creating a wine substitute for church use (the town was dry).

| Aug 11, 2010

High Tech High International used to be a military facility

High Tech High International, reconstructed inside a 1952 Navy metal foundry training facility, incorporates the very latest in teaching technology with a centerpiece classroom known as the UN Theater, which is modeled after the UN chambers in New York. The interior space, which looks more like a hip advertising studio than a public high school, provides informal, flexible seating areas, abunda...

| Aug 11, 2010

High-Performance Modular Classrooms Hit the Market

Over a five-day stretch last December, students at the Carroll School in Lincoln, Mass., witnessed the installation of a modular classroom building like no other. The new 950-sf structure, which will serve as the school's tutoring offices for the next few years, is loaded with sustainable features like sun-tunnel skylights, doubled-insulated low-e glazing, a cool roof, light shelves, bamboo tri...

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




K-12 Schools

Inclusive design strategies to transform learning spaces

Students with disabilities and those experiencing mental health and behavioral conditions represent a group of the most vulnerable students at risk for failing to connect educationally and socially. Educators and school districts are struggling to accommodate all of these nuanced and, at times, overlapping conditions.

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