The 118,000-sf Seaholm Power Plant, an Art Deco industrial facility originally designed by Burns & McDonnell, provided power to Austin, Texas, from 1951 to 1989. It served as a training center through 1996, when it was shuttered. In 2005, Austin’s city council selected Seaholm Power LLC—a joint venture with four principal investors—to restore the site.
The power plant was on the National Register of Historic Places and is a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark. Its redevelopment marked the first time that Austin had made preservation of a historical landmark a significant objective. The city worked closely with the developers over a three-year span to formulate a master development agreement.
What emerged from those talks was an adaptive reuse of the plant as part of a 7.8-acre neighborhood development.
The plant was converted to four floors of office space for its main tenant, the healthcare tech company athenahealth, and software subtenants Patient IO, Umbel Corp, Able Lending, and Vox Media.
A two-story contemporary glass-and-steel building offers 68,000 sf of mixed-use space for retail (including a 33,000-sf Trader Joe’s grocery) and offices (including MapMyFitness, a subsidiary of Under Armour).
The neighborhood also encompasses a 30-story, 615,000-sf high-rise with 280 luxury condominiums over a 7,000-sf True Food Kitchen. The high-rise was completed this past June, but all the condo units had been reserved by November 2013. The decision to change the residential tower from apartments to condos added $8 million to the budget.
A one-acre public plaza adds vitality to the development.
The project had its share of obstacles to overcome, chief of which was a nine-year, $13 million cleanup of hazardous materials. Seaholm was the first facility in the nation to receive a Ready for Reuse designation from the U.S. EPA and the Texas Commission on Environment Quality under the federal Toxic Substance Control Act.
Courtesy of Casey Dunn Photography.
powering up the ENERGY savings in Austin
By updating the walls and glazing, the renovated power plant was made 24.3% more energy efficient. Underground parking minimized heat island effect and helped reduce the energy use in the low-rise building by nearly 30%. Ninety-six percent of construction waste from the power plant and 74% from the high-rise were diverted from landfill.
Rainwater is harvested from all three buildings into storage tanks with a 325,000-gallon capacity; it is used to irrigate the entire site and surrounding streetscape vegetation.
STG Design (architect) retained much of the character of the historic building and its extensive industrial elements, notably a massive gantry and a series of pipes bent into unique patterns that frame the turbine hall windows. Floor openings were enlarged in the hall to let more light into the power plant.
“This project was successful due to the owner’s persistent vision to maintain the historic integrity and bring vitality and function to a grand Austin icon,” said Emily Little, FAIA, a Principal and historic preservation architect with Clayton & Little Architects, Austin.
Reconstruction Awards judge Krista Gnatt, LEED AP, with Western Specialty Contractors, said, “Converting a massive, abandoned, energy-hungry, historic masonry facility to a vibrant, sustainable community space shows extreme ingenuity.”
On September 15, Seaholm Power LLC and CIM Group, a Los Angeles–based investor that joined the project as a co-developer, announced that they had sold the mixed-use development, excluding the residence tower. (They did not disclose the buyer or purchase price.) That transaction repaid 100% of the eligible incentives the city provided to make the project happen.
PROJECT SUMMARY
Gold Award Winner
Seaholm Power Plant Redevelopment | Austin, Texas
Building Team: STG Design (submitting firm, consulting architect); Seaholm Power LLC (owner); Charles Rose Architects (design architect); Structures + Haynes Whaley (SE); Bay and Associates (MEP); Capital Project Management (CM); Flintco (GC).
Details: 800,000 sf. Construction cost: Confidential. Construction time: April 2013 to June 2016. Delivery method: Negotiated bid.
Related Stories
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
Patient friendly: The University of Chicago Medicine Center for Care and Discovery adds 203 new beds
Strict infection control and life safety measures were implemented to protect patients on other floors as work proceeded.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
The birthplace of General Motors
The automotive giant salvages the place from which it sprang, 131 years ago.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Mama mia! What a pizzeria!: It started as a bank nearly a century ago, now it’s a pizza parlor with plenty of pizzazz
The first floor features a zinc bar and an authentic Neapolitan pizza oven.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Honor Guard: San Francisco’s historic Veterans Building pays homage to those who served in World War I and other foreign wars
The Veterans Building houses the War Memorial staff, the city’s Arts Commission, the Opera’s learning center and practice/performance node, the Green Room reception venue, and the 916-seat Herbst Theatre.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 20, 2017
Eyes wide open: Students can see their new home’s building elements
The two-phase project revamped an opaque, horseshoe-shaped labyrinth of seven buildings from the ’60s and ’70s.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Gray lady no more: A facelift erases a landmark’s wrinkles, but not her heritage
The Building Team restored the granite and terra cotta façade and reclaimed more than 500 double-hung windows.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Elegance personified: New life for a neglected but still imposing retail/office space
The building was in such disrepair that much of the reconstruction budget had to go toward structural, mechanical, and electrical infrastructure improvements.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2017
Back to the '20s: Coney Island gets a new eatery reminiscent of the past
This project included the restoration of the landmark Childs Restaurant.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 15, 2017
Foyer fantastique: Faded images provide the key to a historic theater's lobby restoration
The restoration relied heavily on historic photos and drawings.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2017
Hallowed ground: A Mormon temple rises from the ashes of a fire-ravaged historic tabernacle
Parts of the tabernacle’s exterior shell were the only things that survived the blaze.