Few colleges or universities have embraced prefabrication
more wholeheartedly than Valparaiso (Ind.) University.
Few colleges or universities have embraced prefabrication
more wholeheartedly than Valparaiso (Ind.) University. The Lutheran-based
institution completed a $27 million residence hall this past summer in which
the structural elements were all precast. The modular bathroom pods were
manufactured in and shipped from New Jersey.
“The primary motivation for prefab was an accelerated
schedule,” says Andy Frank, Construction Executive with Mortenson Construction.
Much of the structural and exterior work on the 85,000-sf building was
completed before the start of winter, which was critical in an area prone to
blinding snowfalls fed by nearby Lake Michigan.
Manufacturing precast flooring planks and exterior panels
that mimic limestone and brick masonry in a climate-controlled plant saved two
to three months on the construction schedule, says Frank. The modular bathroom
units, made by AmeriPOD, Dayton, N.J., shaved another month off the
construction timetable of the suite-style residence hall. The time savings
enabled the building to be ready for the fall 2014 semester.
FGM Architects and Mortenson collaborated on the
design-build project using 3D BIM modeling to deliver a Collegiate Gothic
structure that blends in with the prevailing campus architectural style. One of
the critical factors in the construction process was leaving wall openings
large enough for the bathroom pods to be transported from a staging area at one
end of each floor through the building to their final position. Workers rolled
the bathroom units through each floor to a preformed depression, where they
were lowered by jacks into place.
Frank attributes the success of the prefab approach in
part to the type of project. “When you have a large number of users involved in
programming the building”—such as an academic building shared by multiple
departments—“you’re going to need a longer design process,” he says. Housing
projects tend be more suitable for prefab because they usually have a limited
number of stakeholders—in the Valparaiso project, primarily residential life
officials and some students.
Source: BDC
Network
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