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Best of 2005 Awards
U.S. District Courthouse - Cadman Plaza
Award of Merit: Public Works and Facilities
It
took a long road to complete the U.S. District Courthouse
for the Eastern District of New York. The building in Brooklyn's
Cadman Plaza at the approach to the Brooklyn Bridge, went
through several redesigns, delays, and contractors.
The end result is a monumental $265 million, 632,000-sq.-ft.
structure that features a new 15-story tower and a six-story
building linking to an existing federal courthouse facility
next door.
Members of the Best of 2005 jury called it "a gorgeous
building" with "a phenomenal design." They
also blamed troubles that beset the project - including its
completion over budget and off schedule - on a scope that
kept expanding and the original general contractor's bankruptcy
in 2003.
Original plans called for the new facility to house 17 courtrooms,
but the scope eventually grew to include 25 courtrooms overall,
as well as 28 judicial chambers.
The project began with demolition of a four-story office
building and connecting structure. The new tower and connecting
building provide space for a U.S. Court of Appeals library,
administrative offices, jury rooms, and prisoner holding and
transport. Three below-grade levels house the U.S. Marshals
Service, offices, and a 250-space parking garage.
The tower has a steel structural frame and concrete floor
plates, along with a gently curved limestone-clad façade
and a coated aluminum-and-glass curtain wall. The connecting
facility and below-grade levels use cast-in-place concrete.
The connecting structure serves as the main entrance to the
entire complex. The entrance and atrium feature travertine
marble walls and terrazzo floors, while a massive marble stairway
links the levels.
"That staircase is remarkable," one of the jurors
said.
The chambers and courtrooms sport high-end finishes and millwork,
with floor-to-ceiling wood paneling and coffered, 18-ft. ceilings
in the courtrooms.
The jury lauded the final product despite the project's broader
difficulties with the scope - administered by the U.S. General
Services Administration and the Eastern District judges -
and the original contractor, J.A. Jones Construction, which
went into bankruptcy. New York-based Bovis Lend Lease took
over as construction manager and general contractor, ultimately
finishing the project in October.
Key Players
Owner: United States
General Services Administration
Architect-Engineer-Planning-Interiors:
HLW International
Electrical Contractor:
Five Construction Manager-General Contractor: Bovis Lend
Lease Star Electric
Design Architect: Cesar
Pelli & Associates Architects
Structural Engineer:
Narov Associates
HVAC: ASM Mechanical
Services
Drywall-Carpentry:
Cord Contracting
Millwork: Petersen
Geller Spurge; Hird/Blaker Architectural Woodwork
Plumbing: WDF/Greene
Mechanical
Marble-Tile: Port Morris
Tile & Marble
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