University of Georgia Archives - School Construction News https://schoolconstructionnews.com Design - Construction - Operations Wed, 17 Jan 2024 19:53:58 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.7.11 University Of Georgia Wraps New Poultry Science Building https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2024/01/24/university-of-georgia-wraps-new-poultry-science-building/ Wed, 24 Jan 2024 11:51:55 +0000 https://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=52226 McCarthy Building Companies along with project partners Newcomb & Boyd, Koons Environmental and FLAD Architects jointly announced the delivery of the 70,000-square-foot Poultry Science Building at the University of Georgia’s College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences.

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By Eric Althoff

ATHENS, Ga.—McCarthy Building Companies along with project partners Newcomb & Boyd, Koons Environmental and FLAD Architects jointly announced the delivery of the 70,000-square-foot Poultry Science Building at the University of Georgia’s College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences.

The $54 million facility features classrooms incorporating the latest technology, laboratories as well as collaborative meeting spaces. The six-floor building is also home to cold storage rooms, avian vivarium, biosafety labs, and staff and support offices. Specific areas are devoted to graduate and postdoctoral study areas, with large conference rooms also accessible throughout the building.

The builders applied a green energy model to ensure that the Poultry Science Building would meet certification from the Georgia Peach Program. The recognition demonstrates that a state-owned or -managed building delivers on energy efficiency, utilizes construction materials from within the Peach State, as well as respects the state’s natural resources throughout its construction process—and will also be efficient in terms of resource consumption moving forward.

Bobby Campell, business unit leader and executive vice president at McCarthy’s Atlanta location, said that the pandemic, materials delays and additional cost overruns threatened to detail the project timeline, but the firm was able to maximize its team power to ensure timely delivery of the Poultry Science Building in time for spring classes.

“We are proud to deliver this project to the students and faculty at the University of Georgia, as the new Poultry Science Building stands as a testament to the university’s dedication to advancing agriculture in Georgia, a state at the forefront of poultry production in the nation,” said Campell.

“From the office to the jobsite, we did our best to respect the environment and tap in our extensive Georgia Peach building expertise to exceed sustainability,” added Lizzy Burge, project director at McCarthy’s Atlanta location. “We are excited to be a part of this exceptional building and the future it will provide for its students.”

The Poultry Science Building is McCarthy’s first construction buildout at the University of Georgia, and the company will soon commence work on the school’s West Campus Parking Deck II as well. The firm has completed various Georgia State Financing and Investment Commission (GSFIC) projects and Board of Regents (BOR) educational work such as West Georgia Technical College’s Carroll Campus, Georgia State University’s College of Law and Petit Science Center Building, and Georgia Institute of Technology’s Krone Engineered Biosystems Building.

McCarthy, which is owned by its employees, has been in business for over 150 years, and is America’s oldest privately held national construction company.

 

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University of Georgia Reburies Remains Found During Construction https://schoolconstructionnews.com/2017/03/22/university-georgia-reburies-remains-found-construction/ Wed, 22 Mar 2017 17:55:09 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=42306 The University of Georgia commemorated the 105 likely slaves whose bodies were discovered during construction.

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ATHENS, Ga. — A year and a half after an expansion of the University of Georgia (UGA) Athens’ Baldwin Hall uncovered the graves of 105 likely slaves, the university has commemorated the deceased and reinterred their bodies at the nearby Oconee Hill Cemetery.

Immediately following the discovery of the remains in November 2015, the university looked to the State Archaeologist’s Office for guidance on what to do with the findings, according to a statement from the university. A team of faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students — led by Dr. Laurie Reitsema from the university’s anthropology department — formed to study the remains, examining ancestry, age, gender and other characteristics. The team was able to analyze the DNA of about a third of the remains, concluding that a majority was of African descent.

The university is now moving into a second phase of research to better understand how these 105 individuals lived and to find their connection to the Athens community, according to a statement. Leading this second phase, UGA Vice President for Research David Lee will assemble a team of faculty members in the coming weeks to conduct a follow-up study.

“Since the first remains were discovered, the university has been actively seeking to learn as much as possible about these individuals,” said UGA President Jere W. Morehead in a statement. “That is why we sponsored the initial research and have the information we have today. We hope this next step in the research process will lead to a more complete story of who these individuals were, how they lived and how they came to rest on the Baldwin Hall site.”

Later this spring, Morehead also plans to meet with university members, city officials and other local leaders to explore new ways to partner on opportunities of mutual interest such as educational and economic development. Initiatives already in place between the university and Athens-Clarke County include Experience UGA, which aims to bring every Clarke County student (PreK-12) to UGAʼs campus every year. Faculty and students from the university also work regularly with local organizations to complete service-learning projects that address important community needs.

Alvin Sheats, president of the local chapter of the NAACP, told Yahoo News that he wants the university to offer reparations in the form of tuition for descendants of the 105 people. Sheats also disagreed with reburying the remains and would have liked the gravesites to be kept in their original place.

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