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Thinking Ahead
By William J. Angelo, Editor-in-Chief
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| ANGELO |
Smart growth and
green building are more than just industry buzz words, they
are serious concepts that can be applied effectively in many
ways to improve projects and the built environment. The stories
showcased in this issue of Design Build demonstrate several
unique ways of making the concepts work.
The cover story examines a large government-owned sustainable-development
project in California. Solano County chose design-build project
delivery for its $113.5-million government center in Fairfield
to consolidate 16 departments that were spread over 15 office
locations. Smart Growth was the objective and
that is what the county achieved.
Stretching three city blocks long and including a large public
plaza, the multi-structure project was the largest in county
history. It is located adjacent to an existing courthouse
and justice center and a large multi-modal transportation
center. Officials believe that it will become an important
public gathering space and the catalyst for downtown development.
The center will be LEED certified and was built by integrating
into design-build three seemingly disparate elementsa
construction manager, bridging documents and a union-only
project labor agreement.
On the East Coast, the North Carolina Department of Transportation
has another version of smart growth. Over the last five years,
this proactive state agency has used design-build to deliver
time-sensitive projects that are a critical part of its $1
billion annual budget. The success of these projects caused
NCDOT to analyze the results and apply the lessons learned
from them to build some new improvements into its traditional
design-bid-build project delivery system. They include a mix
of best-value procurement, maximized contractor innovation,
higher levels of trust, targeted designing and life-cycle
considerations.
Perhaps more fundamentally, the agency is developing a new
mindset modeled on how design-builders work. This goes so
far as to limit the size of some meetings to just several
people instead of a couple of dozen so that something actually
can be accomplished and not rechecking all of the design details
that a professional engineer already has signed off on.
In New York City, architects are learning to become proactive
about design-build and take a project leadership role, even
though that runs counter to traditional professional views
about overseeing construction.
The American Institute of Architects currently is holding
seminars in the U.S. and Canada to teach architects design-build
basics and to encourage them to enter the market gradually
as team leaders. The reward for taking such a risk could be
a quadrupling of profit and a better connection with owners.
Many seacoast communities are plagued with pollution problems
resulting from septic tanks, poor soils, high water tables
and adverse weather conditions. Instead of installing traditional
gravity flow sewers Ponte Vedra, Fla., opted for a $10-million,
low-cost, low-maintenance vacuum sewer system that eliminates
deep excavations and large-diameter pipes. The county chose
design-build delivery because it was a new technology to the
area and it needed an experienced and cooperative team to
guide it through the process. The approach saved lots of time
and money and a difficult excavation. It was smart and green.
These kinds of smart growth and green construction projects
and approaches are here to stay and will be growing exponentially
in the coming years as project owners and the public demand
those elements. Design-builders should be building this kind
of expertise into their firms and teams now. It is a factor
that can tilt a best-value team selection in their favor.
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