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The quincy austin full#
“The Rainey Street District has evolved into a thriving, organic, walkable neighborhood full of unique bars, restaurants, hotels and housing adjacent to Lady Bird Lake on the hike and bike trail. Lady Bird Lake is easily accessible as is its renowned Ann & Roy Butler Hike & Bike trail. Also nearby are the Austin Convention Center and two hotels-Hotel Van Zandt and Fairmont Austin-as well as popular restaurants. In its vicinity, a new Whole Foods Market is slated for Saltillo, another Endeavor development located between 4th and 5th streets, along Interstate 35. The site on Red River Street is bounded by Driskill Street to the north and Davies Street to the south. The tower, anticipated to open in the first quarter of 2021, will be the first in the area to combine retail, office and residential uses, all in one building. (One such objective was to maintain the project schedule-outside of weather delays.) Through value engineering and a high level of coordination, Ceco also helped the GC prepare for additional challenges due to the developer’s expectation of a higher-than-specified level of exterior finish.Endeavor Real Estate Group and MetLife Investment Management, MetLife Inc.’s institutional asset management business, have broken ground on The Quincy, a 30-story mixed-use tower in Austin’s Rainey Street District. The Ceco crew achieved a seven-day framing and 10-day pour cycle for each of the typical 21,100-square-foot tower levels.īecause the Ceco team identified potential tolerance and concrete finish issues during the budget phase, Ceco and Rogers-O’Brien were able to work together to ensure the team had a mutual commitment and estimate to achieve their quality objectives. Typical floors needed to be poured nearly every week, which meant the pace of vertical formwork and pours was critical to the schedule. Scheduling was also a major concern, as the overall project duration was fast and there was little laydown room for specialized shear wall and column forms. However, Ceco’s early involvement in the project enabled the team to provide value engineering that resulted in redesigning some of the columns into more standard “L” and “C” cross-sectional shapes. The shapes and sizes of the perimeter columns required special, individual forms to be built. The mockup became a valuable reference tool throughout construction.Ĭeco worked with suppliers and vendors to design and acquire formwork that would both easily provide a quality finish and help maintain the vertical component of the project framing schedule. The original mockup did not include the critical exterior finish areas so the Ceco team worked with Rogers-O’Brien to redesign the mockup and show areas highlighting those surfaces. During the budget phase, Ceco held multiple meetings with general contractor (GC) Rogers-O’Brien Construction’s preconstruction team to identify areas of concern related to the exposed concrete finish and detail a plan, including design changes, to achieve the desired results.Īfter the project was awarded, Ceco held additional coordination meetings with project teams to develop a project-specific quality plan. Because of this design feature, it was determined early on that the ACI class of finish desired by the developer would be a critical challenge during construction. The building’s design makes use of both glass and concrete to create prominent vertical features out of the perimeter columns and fin walls. These vertical elements create visible architectural line cues to draw one’s eye, and their exposed finish was critical to the structure’s overall appearance. Additionally, EFCO wall forms were used to form exposed shear walls and perimeter columns in multiple sizes and with atypical sloping and cross-sectional shapes. Formwork systems included Ceco-owned HV and perimeter tables (decks) and steel-plated panels for walls and columns. When complete, the project also will incorporate a 1,200-square-foot mural designed and painted by local artists as part of a public art project.Ĭonstruction began March 2019, with Ceco responsible for providing complete formwork services and pouring vertical elements.
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Situated near the popular Rainey Street District, the 30-level Class A mixed-use tower brings eight levels of parking, 10,500 square feet of retail space, 73,000 square feet of office space and 347 residential units (349,000 square feet) to the rapidly growing city. The scope of work included creating a challenging exposed concrete finish that needed to exceed contract specifications. Ceco has nearly completed work at The Quincy mixed-use tower in Austin, Texas.