Calif. Archives - School Construction News https://schoolconstructionnews.com Design - Construction - Operations Tue, 03 Mar 2020 20:39:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.11 San Jose State University Celebrates Science Building Top-Out https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2020/03/03/san-jose-state-university-celebrates-science-building-top-out/ Tue, 03 Mar 2020 14:25:18 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=48040 McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. (McCarthy), a national design-build general contractor, in collaboration with FLAD Architects, recently celebrated a major project milestone with the topping out of a new Interdisciplinary Science Building (ISB) on the San Jose State University campus, the first new academic building on campus in more than 30 years and the first new science facility in almost 50 years.

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By SCN Staff

SAN JOSE, Calif.—McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. (McCarthy), a national design-build general contractor, in collaboration with FLAD Architects, recently celebrated a major project milestone with the topping out of a new Interdisciplinary Science Building (ISB) on the San Jose State University campus, the first new academic building on campus in more than 30 years and the first new science facility in almost 50 years. Hundreds of students, faculty and staff commemorated the occasion by signing the final structural beam before it was lifted to its final resting place.

The eight-story design-build project will serve the 3,000 undergraduate and graduate students within the College of Sciences and STEM majors from across the university, and is the first phase of the San Jose State University’s new Science Park, a science and innovation center highlighting the University’s commitment to dynamic research and innovation. In addition to research and teaching labs, the facility will feature specified rooms provided for student research teams to gather and work away from chemicals and instrument setups to discuss the results of projects called “collaboratories.” Each floor of the ISB will also include collaborative hubs for students and faculty to work together. Throughout its 161,200 square feet, the building will contain modern, state-of-the-art science laboratories and research capabilities in order to meet the needs of students within the disciplines of biology, chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology and high-performance computing.

The project is targeting LEED Gold in order to meet the sustainability objectives of the San Jose State University campus. Located in the heart of Silicon Valley, the ISB will provide opportunities for students and faculty to collaborate with their Silicon Valley industry partners.

“The new ISB aims to transform the way science principles are taught and boost the University’s student offerings to new heights with a top-tier facility,” said McCarthy’s Project Director Jack Carter. “The design-build delivery is a critical component in delivering a superior building that meets the project’s goals of making research, teaching and collaboration inseparable.”

 

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Construction Progresses on Spacious New California High School https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2020/01/09/construction-progresses-on-spacious-new-california-high-school/ Thu, 09 Jan 2020 14:04:35 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47852 Construction continues on the new $86 million Twelve Bridges High School in Lincoln for the Western Placer Unified School District.

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By Lisa Kopochinski

LINCOLN, Calif.—Construction continues on the new $86 million Twelve Bridges High School in Lincoln for the Western Placer Unified School District.

Last spring, a groundbreaking ceremony was hosted by WPUSD. In attendance were HMC Architects’ Brian Meyers, Michael Rath, Sam Wolfgram, Mark Zarzeka and Kris Livingston, as well as representatives from Flint Builders, the general contractor on this project, WPUSD officials, and the city of Lincoln.

With a completion date slated for fall 2021, the new high school will accommodate the growing Lincoln community with room for more than 1,200 students in the first phase and 2,000 students at full buildout.

The first phase of the project—scheduled for completion by June 2021—is approximately 135,100 square feet and will feature classrooms, an administration building, athletic stadium and fields, space for performing arts, and staff and student parking.

The future second phase of the project will include an auxiliary gymnasium, a community aquatic center, completion of athletic complex, and an additional two -story classroom building. The WPUSD is planning for a 2020 bond measure to fund a portion of the second phase.

The design of Twelve Bridges High School was needed to respond to the existing topography, explained Brian Meyers, PreK-12 practice leader at HMC Architects.

“A 15-foot elevation drop created an opportunity to physically separate the public zones atop the hill from the student zones and the core of the campus below. This physical barrier also allowed for opportunities to use the hill for intimate outdoor learning spaces. The design team utilized virtual reality (VR) with users and local first responders to study security and safety vulnerabilities.”

Meyers said the School Resource Officer (SRO) provided recommendations for sightlines and considerations for access on the multi-level site.

“We also placed a design focus on views and scale. The campus will be clearly visible from CA-65 (Highway) and Twelve Bridges Middle School to the south across the natural environmental habitat. The two-story volumes are sited on the lower level appearing as single-story volumes on approach. At the front of the campus approaching from the north, single story buildings create a noncompeting backdrop for the beautiful existing City Library constructed in 2007—which will be used daily by students.”

Construction on this project actually began in 2004. However, the bottom fell out of the economy at that time and the District was left no choice but to pull the plug on the project. The passage of a local bond measure in 2014 allowed the project to reboot.

“The site—after already receiving environmental clearances to initially construct—became repopulated with habitat conducive to the endangered ferry shrimp during the 10-year delay,” explained Meyers.

“This led to an additional year delay and expensive environmental mitigation, compromising the original budget. HMC and our construction partner, Flint Builders, needed to find ways to build the new high school more cost effectively. The administration building, two-story classroom buildings and single-story science buildings were designed modularly, allowing for repetitive components to be fabricated off-site.”

Additionally, Meyers said these buildings are being constructed onto the prior developed building pads and connected to the existing infrastructure.

“The performing arts, student union, and physical education facilities were all combined into one large efficient building, sharing circulation and limiting exterior walls. This large building straddles the existing hillside, with public functions on the upper floor facing the front (north) façade and the school functions accessible from the lower floor to the south. In spite of the year delay, the team was able to deliver the 135,000-square foot facility for $86 million.”

 

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