The Louisiana State Sports Hall of Fame is currently being built in Natchitoches, one of the Old West settlements in the Louisiana Purchase. The $12 million, 22,000-sf project will celebrate memorabilia donated by 250 Cajun country sports heroes and showcase their impact on the state. Trahan Architects of Baton Rouge designed a contemporary, curvilinear building to express not just local materials, but the land of northern Louisiana, too.
When it’s completed next March, the building will be in the form of a curvilinear museum substructure situated in a box of native cypress-timber planks. According to Victor “Trey” Trahan, FAIA, president and principal-in-charge of Trahan Architects, the design of the building itself is meant to recall both the hilly topography of northern Louisiana and the flow of the Cane River, while the exterior box controls light and shadow outside the building. Fluid shapes of river channels are separated by interstitial masses in the curvilinear structure, the same way that delta islands separate the waters of a river, thus creating the organizing principle for visitor circulation and gallery arrangement in the museum.
However, that expressive design required coordination and planning that just wouldn’t be possible without the use of 3D BIM. While this was a traditional design-bid-build project, the owner, the state of Louisiana, and the design architect both wanted a BIM consultant to oversee the creation of the precast concrete panels on the substructure inside the outer box. Trahan also required that five-axis CNC milling be used for the formwork of the exterior panels. Case Building + Technology, a BIM and integrated practice consultancy based in New York, was originally brought into the Building Team by the architect, but eventually became a design consultant and BIM manager for the construction manager, VCC of Little Rock, Ark. Case was founded in 2008 by several former members of SHoP Architects, a firm that delivered some very intricate BIM projects, including the 290 Mulberry Street Condominiums (http://www.290mulberry.com) in New York.
“There needed to be expertise at the level of panel fabrication that typically is just not available to the design architect that early in the process,” said Federico Negro, the partner-in-charge on the project for Case Building + Technology.
Trahan Architects used Rhino 3D (.3dm file format), a NURBS tool, for the free-form, curvilinear exterior skin model of the substructure. Trahan originated that model in Autodesk Maya, a 3D animation software used mainly by the film and gaming industries, and brought it into Rhino to add geometric information. They also provided an Autodesk Revit (.rvt) model of the entire project. Still, without actual field conditions built into the model, the precast concrete panels themselves couldn’t be molded and created with any level of detail necessary for installation. Case analyzed the entire skin model and determined that a total of 1,030 separate precast panels would be needed with 4-8 connections to the underlying steel frame for each panel. The whole surface was analyzed for gaps and constructability questions, and all gaps had to be fixed on the model’s surface. Each pair of connecting panels had to achieve a tolerance of a quarter-inch between them.
They also had to coordinate connections with the model of structural engineer, LBYD of Birmingham, Ala. The support steel had to be analyzed for clash detection with the concrete panels. Two clash detection programs were used on the project: Gehry Technologies’ Digital Project and Autodesk Navisworks Manage. All panel-to-panel clearance detection was done in Digital Project. For trade coordination, which fell under Case’s purview as the overall BIM manager for VCC, Navisworks was used because of its robust import/export capabilities and the sheer numbers of different software packages (14 different programs) the trade subcontractors were using on the project.
“That’s just the way we like to work,” said Case Building + Technology’s Negro. “We’re not going to specify something else for a fabricator or anyone else to learn and use on a project. We want to be as far from top-down as possible. Working directly for the CM and down through all trades gave us a much bigger perspective of the overall project and really integrated everyone on the team.”
Once the design skin model was rationalized, made seamless, and quality-checked for constructability, an automated program then sent a unique shop ticket for each panel to fabricator Advanced Cast Stone of Fort Worth, Texas. The shop tickets were created in Rhino via Rhinoscript. The script took a computer folder of panel file information and automatically created a shop ticket for each panel. The program automatically placed the embed points on the panel, prepared a fabrication file for molds, and created all the cameras and views needed for the visual part of the ticket itself. The script also created a table articulating and explaining all the different embed types on that panel. That information went into the shop ticket and an accompanying .csv file capable of being opened in Microsoft Excel. This automated process created a simple set of points to tell the shop what was needed to create each of the 1,030 panels delivered in a STEP (.step). Four corners and connection points were named and articulated in each shop ticket, and a shop drawing accompanied each ticket.
To track coordination problems between structural, MEP, and fire protection, Case used Web-based tracking tool Jira (https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira), developed by Australian software company Atlassian, which is primarily used for tracking bugs in computer code. However, it worked just as well for tracking clashes as it does for finding bugs.
All the precast concrete panels have now been fabricated, and installation began in early August in Natchitoches. The project is on track to open in March.
“Protecting design intent is always a big factor here,” Negro said. “Having people that can demystify surfaces and geometry is a big part of what we do, and it is hard work on such a complex design, but it’s not impossible to preserve that design. Not even close.” BD+C
Related Stories
Regulations | Oct 4, 2023
New York adopts emissions limits on concrete
New York State recently adopted emissions limits on concrete used for state-funded public building and transportation projects. It is the first state initiative in the U.S. to enact concrete emissions limits on projects undertaken by all agencies, according to a press release from the governor’s office.
Architects | Oct 4, 2023
Architects and contractors underestimate cyberattack risk
Design and construction industry firms underestimate their vulnerability to cyberattacks, according to a new report, Data Resilience in Design and Construction: How Digital Discipline Builds Stronger Firms by Dodge Construction Network and content security and management company Egnyte.
Luxury Residential | Oct 2, 2023
Chicago's Belden-Stratford luxury apartments gets centennial facelift
The Belden-Stratford has reopened its doors following a renovation that blends the 100-year-old building’s original architecture with modern residences.
Giants 400 | Oct 2, 2023
Top 30 Data Center Architecture Firms for 2023
Corgan, HDR, Gensler, Page Southerland Page, and HED top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest data center sector architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Market Data | Oct 2, 2023
Nonresidential construction spending rises 0.4% in August 2023, led by manufacturing and public works sectors
National nonresidential construction spending increased 0.4% in August, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors analysis of data published today by the U.S. Census Bureau. On a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, nonresidential spending totaled $1.09 trillion.
K-12 Schools | Oct 2, 2023
4 design strategies for successful K-12 magnet schools
Clark Nexsen's Donna Francis, AIA, Principal, and Becky Brady, AIA, share four reasons why diverse K-12 magnet schools require diverse design.
Architects | Sep 28, 2023
Nashville architecture firm ESa adds 14 principals
ESa has announced that 14 new principals have been added to the firm’s leadership. “As ESa continues to grow, we are excited to celebrate our newest ESa principals. These individuals embody the characteristics of a quality leader and have shown great leadership in client and team member relationships, project management and mentoring roles,” said Kevin Harney, ESa vice president and principal.
Construction Costs | Sep 28, 2023
U.S. construction market moves toward building material price stabilization
The newly released Quarterly Construction Cost Insights Report for Q3 2023 from Gordian reveals material costs remain high compared to prior years, but there is a move towards price stabilization for building and construction materials after years of significant fluctuations. In this report, top industry experts from Gordian, as well as from Gilbane, McCarthy Building Companies, and DPR Construction weigh in on the overall trends seen for construction material costs, and offer innovative solutions to navigate this terrain.
University Buildings | Sep 27, 2023
Top 170 University Building Architecture Firms for 2023
Gensler, CannonDesign, Page Southerland Page, SmithGroup, and Ayers Saint Gross top the ranking of the nation's largest university sector architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Affordable Housing | Sep 25, 2023
3 affordable housing projects that serve as social catalysts
Trish Donnally, Associate Principal, Perkins Eastman, shares insights from three transformative affordable housing projects.