© Margaret Badore
Construction on what was to
be the world's tallest prefabricated building has been stopped; the workers
have been furloughed, the contractor has locked the doors and blames the
architect, the developer is blaming the contractor, and the whole thing is a
big mess. As a big fan of prefab construction, I am disappointed, but why am I
not surprised?
See a slideshow of the building
under construction here
Fuggedaboutit
Like everything else in life,
there is a learning curve in prefabricated construction. You don't have to do
it Malcolm Gladwell's famous 10,000 times, but you do have to work out the
kinks in the designs, make a few mistakes, eat some bucks and continue. Before
I came to TreeHugger, I worked in the prefab business and learned this the hard
way. It's why I was so skeptical when it was announced that the Atlantic Yards
project in Brooklyn would be built as the world's tallest prefab. Great
benefits were promised, like shorter construction time and lower costs.
Meanwhile the developer is changing architects, suing manufacturers, arguing
with unions and more. I wrote in World's Tallest Prefab To Be Built in Brooklyn?
Fuggedaboutit.
The whole thing boggles the
mind. Having worked in prefab for a number of years, I can tell you that it's
complicated, more than just piling up boxes like Lego. To have changes in
builders and architects, intellectual property battles, and fights with unions
in a City like New York while trying to build the world's tallest prefab and
save time and money? Fuggedaboutit.
I eat my words
I was wrong about it actually
happening. In 2012 I wrote World's Largest Modular Prefabricated Tower Will Be Built at
Atlantic Yards In Brooklyn and I Eat My Words
Forest City Ratner, the
developer, brought in Skanska as construction manager; there is no firm in the
world more experienced in prefabrication. (They are IKEA's partner in BoKloc,
their prefabricated house system). They dealt with the unions. Ratner said that
SHoP architects
had "cracked the code" of prefab. In a statement Ratner said:
With modular, we are also
transforming how housing is built in New York City and, potentially, around the
world And we are doing it, as we do with all of our construction, in
partnership with union labor, the best labor, in the best City in the world.
How did it come to this?
It looks just like a classic
construction dispute over cost overruns, the kind that generate jokes like this
photo. There were signs of trouble in the spring, as construction slowed down. However now it is
completely stopped.
In the Wall
Street Journal, Skanska's Richard Kennedy says "there were
“technological issues” that made it difficult to fabricate the modules, which
he said were the fault of the design."
Kennedy continued: "It
finally got to the point where we said, ‘OK, this project is requiring from us
an investment that is much more significant than anything we ever anticipated
or agreed to." In the New York Times, he says that Forest City never
"cracked the code."
It just doesn’t work the way
it was sold to work,” he said. “We’ve had real challenges with it that’ve
delayed the project and led to cost increases. We finally came to the decision
to stop work on the project until our significant commercial issues are
resolved.”
Forest City says that it was
a fixed price contract, and that Skanska is responsible. A spokesman "
attributed the overruns to Skanska’s “failures and missteps as the construction
manager,” adding that “they are employing a typical strategy to try to weasel
out of that obligation” to pay the costs of the project."
The architects at SHoP are
wisely saying nothing.
In his blog, Atlantic Yards Report, Norman Oder writes:
Forest City's charges sounds like bridge-burning, a prelude
not to mediation but rather to a lawsuit. That would be a significant snag,
since the tower, located at Flatbush Avenue and Dean Street, is only ten
stories complete, less than one-third of the total.. “This is not a referendum
on modular,” Forest City CEO MaryAnne Gilmartin told the Times, “it’s a
monetary dispute. We’re confident we’ll get the building built. But we’re doing
what we have to do to protect the company, the project and the business.”
And I don't take any comfort in the fact that I was right in the first place about the whole thing boggling the mind.
Source: Tree
Hugger
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