On January 19, AmericanAirlines Arena in Miami will relaunch its 23,000-sf East Plaza, which has been retrofitted into a solar pavilion whose canopy includes 14 circular translucent panels that utilize Building Integrated Photovoltaic solar technology.
This transformation is the result of a business partnership between The Miami Heat professional basketball team, which plays at the Arena, and NRG Energy. Last year, AmericanAirlines Arena became the first sports and entertainment facility in the world to be recertified as LEED Gold.
The Heat Group manages this 16-year-old arena, which is county owned and sits on city-owned property. The Heat Group purchased the canopy from NRG, which hired Skanska as the retrofit project’s general contractor. DLR was the architect and structural and MEP engineer.
Jim Spencer, AmericanAirlines Arena’s Vice President of Operations, tells BD+C that the solar pavilion provides a practical answer to the question of how to get more bang out of the open-air East Plaza, which looks onto Biscayne Bay but was being used sparingly because of Miami’s hot, humid, rainy weather conditions.
John Vidalin, The Heat Group’s Chief Revenue Officer, adds that these conditions severely limited the facility’s ability to attract sponsoring partners to that area. (Levy Restaurants is the pavilion’s food and beverage partner, and Barcardi, which is already an arena sponsor, will host a horseshoe-shaped bar in the pavilion’s atrium.)
The canopy offers shade and cover to the East Plaza, and the solar panels, which are 16 to 24 ft in diameter each and take up 5,000 sq ft of cover space, will provide an offset to the arena’s energy consumption. Vidalin and Spencer say the pavilion extends the stadium’s footprint and reinforces the building’s certification story. (All of the furniture in the Plaza are made from recycled milk jugs.)
The canopy, says Spencer, is supported by 12 columns, five of which feature 360-degree nanolumen LED displays. The Heat Group has sold the entitlement rights for the Plaza to Xfinity, Comcast’s high-speed Internet and on-demand service, which will deploy full WiFi for the Plaza and has built an 8x12-ft X-1video wall, where visitors can engage with an activation team and a variety of sports and music streaming events.
The pavilion will be open for all of the arena’s sports and concerts. Vidalin says the canopy now makes the Plaza more attractive for conducting other revenue-generating functions like corporate and charity events, group sales, and post-game parties. “It’s really going to be an elegant space,” he says. He adds that the Arena’s ongoing energy efficiency improvement—which included upgrading its building management and HVAC systems to achieve LEED Gold—is a strong selling point for sponsors.
Vidalin had previously worked with NRG when he was with the Houston Texans and San Francisco 49ers football teams. He notes that the East Plaza pavilion allows the energy company, which hadn’t operated in Miami before this, to “plant its flag” in the city, which is a gateway to Caribbean and South American markets.
“We are in the midst of a social movement that demands attention to clean energy,” says David Crane, NRG’s former chief executive. “As the world’s perspective on energy continues to evolve, it will be critically important for business leaders—foreign and domestic—to see and invest in the incredible potential [of] renewable energy, especially built with a design aesthetic in mind.”
Related Stories
| Jan 13, 2014
Custom exterior fabricator A. Zahner unveils free façade design software for architects
The web-based tool uses the company's factory floor like "a massive rapid prototype machine,” allowing designers to manipulate designs on the fly based on cost and other factors, according to CEO/President Bill Zahner.
| Jan 11, 2014
Getting to net-zero energy with brick masonry construction [AIA course]
When targeting net-zero energy performance, AEC professionals are advised to tackle energy demand first. This AIA course covers brick masonry's role in reducing energy consumption in buildings.
| Jan 7, 2014
Concrete solutions: 9 innovations for a construction essential
BD+C editors offer a roundup of new products and case studies that represent the latest breakthroughs in concrete technology.
Smart Buildings | Jan 7, 2014
9 mega redevelopments poised to transform the urban landscape
Slowed by the recession—and often by protracted negotiations—some big redevelopment plans are now moving ahead. Here’s a sampling of nine major mixed-use projects throughout the country.
| Dec 27, 2013
$1 billion 'city within a city' development approved by Coachella, Calif., city council
The mega development includes 7,800 homes, a retail center, office space, and nearly 350 acres of open space.
| Dec 13, 2013
Safe and sound: 10 solutions for fire and life safety
From a dual fire-CO detector to an aspiration-sensing fire alarm, BD+C editors present a roundup of new fire and life safety products and technologies.
| Dec 10, 2013
16 great solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors
From a crowd-funded smart shovel to a why-didn’t-someone-do-this-sooner scheme for managing traffic in public restrooms, these ideas are noteworthy for creative problem-solving. Here are some of the most intriguing innovations the BD+C community has brought to our attention this year.
| Dec 9, 2013
Tips for designing higher education's newest building type: the learning commons
In this era of scaled-down budgets, maximized efficiencies, new learning methods and social media’s domination of face time, college and university campuses are gravitating toward a new space type: the learning commons.
| Dec 4, 2013
First look: Dubai's winning bid for World Expo 2020 [slideshow]
Dubai has been chosen as the site of the 2020 World Expo. HOK led the design team that developed the master plan for the Expo, which is expected to draw more than 25 million visitors from October 2020 through April 2021.
| Dec 3, 2013
Historic Daytona International Speedway undergoing $400 million facelift
The Daytona International Speedway is zooming ahead on the largest renovation in the Florida venue’s 54-year history. Improvements include five redesigned guest entrances, an extended grandstand with 101,000 new seats, and more than 60 new trackside suites for corporate entertaining.