LJC - Reverberation 2020

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Fulton East Chicago, IL


SCAD Victory Savannah, GA


Pfizer R&D Facility Chesterfield, MO


Grand Center Arts Academy Plaza St. Louis, MO


Penn State Health Westview Garage Hershey, PA


BlackEdge Capital Chicago, IL


Upshore Chapter Chicago, IL


The Cubes at Troutdale Portland, OR


Gateway Plaza Richmond, VA


Riverfront Fort Wayne - Promenade Park Fort Wayne, IN


24 E Washington - Macy’s Flagship Chicago, IL


REVERBERATION 2020 Lamar Johnson Collaborative, LLC. All rights reserved.




REVERBERATION 2020

1 Introduction 2 Featured Projects 3 Delivery of Design - Culture - Sustainability - Process - Integration - Practice

Table of

Contents


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REVERBERATION 2020

Introduction


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Beyond These Walls Integrated by Design

Every assignment we undertake has its own unique story to tell and we want to share it with you. Our goal is to reinforce the mission, vision, purpose and values of our clients through the projects we create for them. We utilize our Integrated by Design approach to create solutions that inspire and change lives. This Design Annual, Reverberation, is a record of the impact of our recent work, design process, and integrated team. “Reverberation” is defined as: a re-echoed sound that is simultaneously heard and deeply felt…a continuing effect. We hope it resonates with you. LJC’s portfolio represented here spans from coast to coast and embodies the diversity of our work. Every project is the product of our Integrated Design Process and builds on collaboration within the Clayco enterprise. You will find in-depth Case Studies that reflect our experience and expertise with higher education work at Penn State and SCAD; a corporate headquarters for Horizon Therapeutics in Deerfield; planning and landscape efforts for Riverfront Promenade Park in Fort Wayne, Indiana; the historic renovation of Macy’s flagship in Chicago; and the Blue Origin manufacturing facility where liquid-fuel rocket engines are built in Huntsville, Alabama. These examples of the Delivery of Design are the core of what we do as an Enterprise. We solve complex problems through collaborative and unconventional thinking – ensuring a better way forward for our clients and the communities we serve. LJC’s Core Councils were introduced to focus on the core competencies needed to achieve this ambition. They stimulate our design practice throughout all disciplines and collectively, amplify the measurable Effect of our inclusive team. Here, we share the inspiring work our Culture, Sustainability, Process, Integration, and Practice teams are creating. We are proud of our team and hope you are inspired by their passion to make a difference.

Bob Clark

Lamar Johnson

Executive Chairman & Founder

Founding Chairman


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LJC has created a model for architecture, landscape, master planning, and interiors that uniquely combines the collective experiences of our talented and diverse staff. We are thinkers who recognize every design and solution we create must be authentic, effective, strategic, pragmatic, and thoughtful. We are Inspired by Design. We challenge conventional thinking. We don’t accept the status quo. Instead, we seek to understand the core needs of each assignment. We constantly ask ourselves and our clients, “why not?” and “what if?” We “love the problem, not our solution” because in doing so, we assure that we are always seeking the very best for our clients. We are Innovative by Design. We believe that we have a responsibility and obligation to serve the citizens and communities we live in. We are actively committed to supporting the organizations and institutions that make our communities more livable, beautiful, sustainable, just, equitable, and safe. Our active participation through volunteerism and pro bono work benefits our society and enriches our staff. We are Involved by Design. We are collaborative with the entire range of people and companies that contribute to the successful completion of any project. We recognize and respect the critical contributions, which are made by contractors, suppliers, consultants, manufacturers, and vendors. We believe in teamwork and that “none of us is as strong as all of us.” We take particular pride in our inclusive culture which recognizes the true value of diversity and the synergy that it brings. We are Integrated by Design.


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Single Point of Responsibility With an integrated delivery team, there is one point of responsibility for all the different elements. Designers and Builders are working together from beginning to end. Because it brings all of the talents together in one place, there is better coordination and budget control. New technology like cloud modeling allows for design, budget, and construction updates to be seen in real-time so clients, designers, and project managers can make informed decisions quickly and efficiently. We utilize this process because an integrated system ensures vision, values, and the project’s delivery all align; it eliminates inefficiencies between the different phases, no friction between various entities, and improves transparency throughout the process.

Our Partners LJC seeks to reduce inefficiencies and risks inherent in the design and construction process by leveraging its development and construction partners’ knowledge and capabilities to benefit its clients. Where appropriate, we introduce an enhanced integrated delivery approach in concert with CRG and Clayco. Just as frequently, we engage with contractors, consultants, and affiliates in a wide range of projects that help us continue innovating in our industry.


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Integrated by Design The Clayco delivery model is based upon a collaborative team. Financial planners, designers, engineers, programmers, builders and clients working transparently, sharing information and knowledge with the common commitment of exceeding the client’s expectations.

D ev el op

D e s ign

Bu ild

SITE SELECTION

PRE-DESIGN CONSULTING

DESIGN-BUILD

DEVELOPMENT FINANCING ASSET MANAGEMENT

PLANNING ARCHITECTURE INTERIORS

Additional

Clayco Companies

CM@RISK SELF-PERFORM CULTURE OF SAFETY


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An Unlikely Story Clayco was formed July 23, 1984 by Bob Clark, then just 25 years old. In the first year, the company completed $1.2 million in revenue and then dramatically grew the company to 191 employees and $8 million in revenue through mostly industrial, process, and design-build work in the St. Louis metro area. The company grew over 40% per year in 9 of the first 16 years. Offices

Chicago, IL / St. Louis, MO

Current Projects

1984

Clayco is a full-service, turnkey real estate development, master planning, architecture, engineering, and construction firm that safely delivers clients across North America the highest quality solutions on time, on budget, and above and beyond expectations. With $3.25 billion in revenue for 2019, Clayco specializes in the “art and science of building,” providing fast track, efficient solutions for industrial, commercial, institutional and residential related building projects. For more information visit www.claycorp.com.

3.25

2,400

Billion

Team Members

2019 Revenue

1999

Integrated Services Expansion The late ’90s were extensive growth years for Clayco. The firm consolidated all its practices, and Forum Studio is created, expanding the Clayco services even further.

2018


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A History of Building Innovation Forum Studio (Clayco’s original architecture practice) merged with technology firm Bates in 2018, creating BatesForum. In June 2019, Clayco combined the design practices Lamar Johnson Collaborative and BatesForum to create one integrated practice called Lamar Johnson Collaborative. The integration with Clayco’s full-service approach to project delivery enables LJC to provide its clients with an entire complement of services to help remove inefficiencies and risks from the design and development process.

2020 Creating our Future

Fully Integrated LJC is a next-generation design practice redefining client-focused integrated project delivery. We elevate the art and science of architecture, providing integrated delivery and full turnkey solutions, across a multitude of industries:

Institutional

/

Commercial

/

Industrial

/

Community

/

Residential

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20

172

100+

Million

Years

Employees

Design Awards

Projects

last 5 years

30+ States

2019 Revenue

120+


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Integrated by Design

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To boldly and confidently solve our clients’ biggest challenges by leveraging the collective knowledge, ingenuity and expertise of the best and brightest minds — across the spectrum of development, design, and construction.


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Featured Projects Project Upshore Chapter Fulton East Penn State Health Westview Garage Pfizer R&D Facility St. Petersburg Medical Center Horizon Therapeutics

Residential / Mixed Use Corporate / Mixed Use Higher Education Science and Technology Healthcare Corporate Interiors

Riverfront Fort Wayne - Promenade Park

Community

The Brickline Greenway

Community

Oak Brook Reserve Blue Origin Triangle Square 24 E Washington - Macy’s Flagship Aspire Center

Corporate Campus Industrial Residential / Mixed Use Corporate Office & Interiors Community




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Upshore Chapter New Construction

Location Chicago, IL Size 125,000 SF 149 Units

Upshore Chapter

2019

Residential / Mixed Use

Enterprise Partners

Services Architecture Interiors Landscape Architecture Urban Design TAG

Once home to luxury apartment towers and art deco theaters, the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago has gone through many economic and demographic changes over the past century. Although it is one of the densest and most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in Chicago, it was underdeveloped for many years.


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Upshore Chapter

2019

Residential / Mixed Use

Enterprise Partners


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A transit-oriented, mixed-income residential development just steps from the refurbished Wilson Street L station on the north side of Chicago.

Seeing opportunity in the proximity to the lakefront and the easy access to transit, CRG engaged LJC to transform the site of a long-abandoned fast-food restaurant into a new multi-family apartment building. The project, which contains 149 apartments over 12 floors, includes double the required number of affordable units on-site, along with a mix of shared amenity spaces and ground-floor retail. During the design and construction process, the design and development team engaged the community, partnering with the local alderman and chamber of commerce to help benefit the growth of the Uptown neighborhood. This level of investment in the community, along with the contemporary design, help to make Upshore Chapter a good neighbor.

Sustainable Features This project reduces vehicular carbon emissions by promoting alternative transit options; due to its proximity to the Chicago waterfront, nearby public transit accessibility, and multiple ground-level retail spaces, this site encourages walkability and pedestrian use.


Fore more in-depth details on this project, view our case study on page 184.

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Fulton East New Construction

Location Chicago, IL Size 90,000 SF

Fulton East

2020

Corporate / Mixed Use

Enterprise Partners

Services Architecture Interiors Landscape Architecture TAG

A 12-story, 90,000 SF office and retail building located at 215 N. Peoria St. in the heart of Chicago’s Fulton Market District is the nation’s first next-generation office building designed to specifically address employee health, safety, and wellness in today’s post-COVID-19 business environment. Opening in summer 2020, the building features state-of-the-art wellness technology and efficient 10,605 SF floor plates to enable flexible, custom planning options designed to accommodate safe social distancing.


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During the rise of COVID-19 cases in 2020, Fulton East’s development team invested intense research into identifying new, leading-edge products that enhance the health, safety, and wellness of its tenants’ employees. The building now includes the world’s first new-construction installation of Canada-based MAD Elevator Inc.’s Toe-To-Go (T2G) elevator system, which utilizes foot-activated call buttons for a hands-free elevator experience. The project is also the first multi-story office building to employ airPHX nonthermal, plasma technology to reduce cross contaminant risks and provide employees with cleaner air and work surfaces. The airPHX technology is currently in use in hospitals, dental clinics, college athletic facilities, and commercial settings. Fulton East offers tenants dramatic floor-to-ceiling glass providing views of the Chicago skyline while maximizing natural light in each suite. The building features stunning outdoor balconies on each floor and an exclusive 8,000 SF rooftop park – all attractive elements for corporate tenants seeking space in the burgeoning Fulton Market neighborhood.


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Fulton East

2020

Corporate / Mixed Use

Enterprise Partners


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Sustainable Features • LEED Certified • Design decisions including the vegetated rooftop, high-reflectance roofing, and all parking located beneath the building drastically reduced the urban heat island effect for the project.


Fore more in-depth details on this project, view our case study on page 154.

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Penn State Health Westview Garage New Construction

Inspired by the rolling hills of Pennsylvania, the waving spandrels of the building façade are the first architectural element noticed as one drives into the medical health campus. Positioned with prime real estate, the team had a goal for the West campus to improve upon the daily experience of campus arrival and the half-mile walk to the College of Medicine’s main entrance.

Location Hershey, PA

Penn State Health Westview Garage

2020

Higher Education

Size 400,000 SF 191 AC 1,236 Parking Stalls Services Planning Architecture Landscape Architecture Graphics & Wayfinding TAG

Striving also for an economical solution that was innovative and related to the iconic precast campus was a key goal for the architectural team. Wanting to keep costs low and three-dimensional visual effects high, the waved design came to life.

Penn State Hershey Medical Center Innovation Pavilion (Future)

Future Development

Penn State Westview Garage

Tower A

Enterprise Partners

Tower C Tower B


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SW

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East Facade

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North Facade

Form 01

4 Types 4 Panels

Form 04 Formwork Only

Higher Education

Penn State Health Westview Garage

2020

Form 02

Enterprise Partners

Form 03

9 Types 15 Panels

Form 05 Formwork Only

11 Types 15 Panels

Form 06 Formwork Only

10 Types 25 Panels

Form 07

10 Types 26 Panels

Form 08

Type 6A

Type 7A

(x2) N (x2) S

(x3) N (x2) S

Type 4A

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(x1) E

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(x3) N

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Type 4B

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Type 7C

(x2) E

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(x1) N

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Formwork Only

Type 8A (x3) E (x4) W

Type 8B (x3) W

Type 8C (x1) E

Type 8D (x1) W

Type 4D

Type 5D

Type 6E

Type 7E

Type 8E

(x2) S

(x3) E (x3) W

(x3) E (x5) W

(x1) N

Type 4E

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(x3) W

(x1) N

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(x1) W

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Type 4G

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(x1) W

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(x1) E

(x1) E

Type 4H

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(x1) N

(x2) E

(x1) E

(x2) E (x2) W

Type 3A

Type 4I

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Type 7J

(x4) NW

(x1) E (x1) S

(x1) E

(x1) N

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Type 3B

Type 5J

Type 6K

(x1) NW

(x1) S

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Type 5K

(x2) NE (x2) SE (x2) SW

6 Types 14 Panels

(x1) E

(x1) W

3 Types 11 Panels

3C 2B

West Facade

Type 1B

2 Types 2 Panels

3C

(x1) E

Corner Panels : 5 Forms / 29 Types / 47 Panels

Center Panels : 3 Forms / 25 Types / 63 Panels


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The beauty of the design continues inside as well. Maximizing the exterior glass walls at each stairwell adds an element of safety with the ability of natural light to shine in and dance along the vertical wavy wall acting as a sundial as the day progresses. This pattern complements the waves of the exterior spandrel while still being functional as the elevator shaft. Pulling in other natural elements with wood ceilings speaks to the heavily wooded Pennsylvania surroundings.

Sustainable Features Even though the team isn’t pursuing certification, the design of the building and site were guided by Parksmart and LEED principals, including having Electric Vehicle Charging stations, Low energy LED lighting taking advantage of the natural lighting, and Water Detention and sand filtration to capture rainwater.


Fore more in-depth details on this project, view our case study on page 312.

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Pfizer R&D Facility New Construction

Location Chesterfield, MO

Pfizer R&D Facility

2019

Science & Technology

Enterprise Partners

Size 229,000 SF Lab (20,000 SF Pilot Plant) 65,000 SF Office 294,000 Total SF Services Architecture Landscape Architecture Interiors Workplace Strategy TAG Awards Building St. Louis Award, Public/Private over $10M, 2020

In its new campus in Chesterfield, MO, Pfizer Bioplace offers a combination of state of the art lab facilities and office space that supports the research and science of Pfizer Pharmaceutical’s Midwest headquarters. With the design goals of connecting people, science and nature, the stone and glass building surrounds a verdant courtyard and dining terrace that opens to the site’s forested edge. The building’s three story glass façade affords daylight and views to all office and lab spaces. Connecting each floor is an open stair and “Collaboration Link” that provides meeting space, comfortable seating and social refresh. Pfizer not only supports the work of science and thought leaders, but includes amenities such as a work-café, seminar suite, fitness center, archive library, and nurse/wellness center and is a truly collaborative endeavor, representing the holistic efforts of all facets of the Clayco enterprise.


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PďŹ zer R&D Facility

2019

Science & Technology

Enterprise Partners


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Sustainable Features This project carried out highly rigorous measures to ensure excellent air quality by selecting exclusively low-VOC ďŹ nishes, taking measures to ensure healthy air quality during construction, and completing air testing prior to occupancy.


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St. Petersburg Medical Center Master Plan

Location St. Petersburg, Russia Size 125,000 SF 416 Beds

St. Petersburg Medical Center

2019

Healthcare

Services Architecture Master Planning

Located in a dense pine forest within the ‘Forest Greenbelt’ surrounding Russia’s second largest city, the multi-functional Medical Center takes inspiration from its surrounding natural context. The Medical Center’s design maximizes the ecologic preservation of the forested site, while balancing metropolitan values. The 416 bed medical center program integrates a main hospital, two specialty hospitals, a hotel, training center, religious facility, and administrative office building organized around a central campus green. Vehicular drop-offs for each building provide separate points of entry and identity for individual programs, while a 1,500 foot long sweeping pedestrian concourse links all campus buildings, providing weather protected internal campus connections and an enhanced sense of community.


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Training Center Admin Building

Sports Medicine & Rehabilitation Center

Main Hospital Expansion

Main Hospital Oncology Center

Central Utility Plant & Garage Hotel

Cyclotron Plant

Religious Building


St. Petersburg Medical Center

2019

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Healthcare


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Iconic building forms merge with a series of organically shaped pedestrian canopies defining both internal and external garden space. The project reflects a biophillic-inspired design providing a unique patient care experience that allows expansive views and connections to nature and maximizes opportunities for natural daylighting. Inspired by St. Petersburg’s historical parks and open spaces, the master plan follows a strong central axis. However, to honor the genius loci of the site’s arrival sequence, the design transitions from a natural forested edge to a refined landscape, ultimately terminating at an urban plaza near the main entry of the Medical Center. Like the trunk of a tree, a strong spine creates a central corridor, radiating from it are buildings and courtyards that provide a more direct relationship between staff and visitors. The shared building / site design aims to inspire a symbiotic relationship between nature and the built environment by incorporating garden views while functionally interconnecting research and patient care zones.

Sustainable Features This project focused on limited disturbance of the site’s natural ecosystem. Design considerations included the preservation of 1/3 of the site’s trees, the inclusion of 6 different garden spaces, and architecture integrated with the topography of the land.


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Horizon Therapeutics Renovation & Relocation

With a recent rebranding, Horizon’s new space aims to express its new brand and celebrate patient care. The state-of-the-art facility is full of engaging amenities to help attract talent and position the firm as one of the best places to work. LJC’s workplace program accommodates Horizon’s 500+ employees with brand new state-of-the-art furnishings and technology. Building amenities include a Starbucks coffee shop, full-service cafeteria, work café, tech pub, snack pantries on each floor, multipurpose training center, fitness center, game lounge, golf simulators, and an outdoor landscaped terrace.

Location Deerfield, IL Size 450,000 SF Services Interiors

Horizon Therapeutics

2020

Corporate Interiors

The renovation currently includes 450,000 SF of space all within a remarkably tight schedule: from start to finish, the renovation is expected to take just ten months. Capitalizing on technology by presenting multiple life fly-throughs using LJC’s BIM model in realtime while documenting for construction rather than formal paper and slide presentations has had a significant impact on meeting this quick turnaround goal. Generating live fly-through models allowed Horizon to see every square inch of the design and walk away with a full contextual understanding of the team’s design thinking. LJC also played off of its experience working with Horizon on its former Lake Forest U.S. headquarters and Dublin, Ireland global headquarters. This existing client knowledge and ability to listen to and adapt to every required program change has been crucial in keeping the project on track to meet a record-breaking schedule.

Workspace

IT work room

Cafe

Internal Meeting Rooms Storage room Amenity Deck

Tech Pub

Internal Multi-purpose

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Shared Multi-purpose

Horizon Arrival VIP Lounge


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Horizon Therapeutics

2020

Corporate Interiors

Horizon initially challenged LJC to reimagine and change their way of conducting training and collaborative team meetings to enhance their ability to centrally gather for all staff sessions. This has led to repeat business for the client’s Global HQ in Dublin and future U.S. HQ campus in Deerfield.


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Sustainable Features • Renovation of existing LEED Gold Facility • More natural daylight added throughout the campus • Selective demo and design enhancements to existing structures to avoid waste in landfills • Composting and recycling throughout the campus • Multiple Low VOC, Floor Score, HPD, EPD, LBC, GLP, Recycled, Recyclable, USA made, cradle to cradle, LEED interior finishes used throughout.


Fore more in-depth details on this project, view our case study on page 240.

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Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park New Construction Location Fort Wayne, IN Size 6 AC

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

2019

Community

Services Planning Landscape Architecture

Awards ASLA, St. Louis Chapter, Merit Award, 2019

The City of Fort Wayne, Indiana, has a rich history of Native American and European settlers who strategically designed fortified camps at the confluence of three rivers - evolving into the now modern city. In recent years civic leaders recognized the value of creating riverfront attractions that strengthen their downtown into a regional destination. We were selected to re-imagine a new waterfront amenity in Promenade Park along the St. Mary’s River. The goal was to increase recreational use of the river, dining and entertainment venues, programmed events, and ecological restoration. The result is a riverfront that now gives the community direct access to the river and opportunities to experience the ebbs, flows, and sounds of nature an equitable landscape for people of all ages, races, physical abilities, and economic situations.

ASLA, Illinois Chapter, Merit In August of 2019, Promenade Park opened to rave reviews. The Award, 2019 community now enjoys boating, kayaking, biking, commerce, community events, and natural scenery along its river. Promenade ASLA Central States Park now links to the Central Business District, Parks, surrounding Chapter, Award of Excellence, 2019 venues, neighborhoods, and the River Greenway Trails. ASLA, Indiana Chapter, Award of Excellence, 2019 ASLA St. Louis Chapter, Merit Award, Master Plan, 2016


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Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

2019

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Community


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An elevated canopy walk, located north of the river, allows visitors perched views during flood events and provides a panoramic perspective of the downtown Fort Wayne skyline, events on the river, and the abutting sunken playground. A tactile ribbon guides the visually impaired into and through the park. Landscape and flexible seating options adjacent to wide, open walks allow for various programming opportunities. Rain gardens are located parallel to major walkways, daylighting the natural process.

Sustainable Features This project focused on the ecological restoration of the Fort Wayne riverfront to create habitat corridors in urban spaces. Design considerations included native and flood-resistant planting, LiDAR scanning of the existing trees to inform structure placement, and sourcing of local rocks.


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The Brickline Greenway Master Plan

Location St. Louis, MO Size 20 Miles Services Planning

The Brickline Greenway

2020

Community

Awards Progressive Architecture Award, 2020

The Brickline Greenway is 20 miles of urban greenway that knit together a range of St. Louis’ multicultural resources, destinations, and neighborhoods socially and economically. The greenway will become part of St. Louisans everyday experience —helping them reach their schools, workplaces, and the many institutions throughout the city daily. The basic concept is to connect the multiple parks in every direction of the city and overlay those links with a central loop. The idea integrates economic growth, governance, and equitable practice strategies within the planning and design framework along with ecology and sustainability strategies. The heart of the plan is the greenway’s idea to become a green cultural network of and for St. Louis, connecting areas via the growing greenway, bicycle and transit routes, and creating a new destination city full of rich and diverse experiences. The proposed routes are informed by the collaboration with the multiple community wards and neighborhoods, the location of neighborhood amenities, and essential employment centers.


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The Brickline Greenway

2020

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Community


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Sustainable Features This project supports pedestrian travel and connects the city’s parks, thereby reducing vehicular carbon emissions. The green space lining the bike trail additionally creates habitat corridors in the urban area that allow for the migration of local species.


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Oak Brook Reserve Master Plan

Location Oak Brook, IL Size 90 AC

Oak Brook Reserve

2020

Corporate Campus

Services Planning Urban Design

Oak Brook Reserve, McDonald’s former suburban corporate HQ site, lies at the heart of the village of Oak Brook, a western suburb of Chicago. The existing complex consists of three late 20th century buildings - a commercial office building, a hotel and conference center, all of considerable architectural quality. The project scope is to rebrand, stabilize, and enhance the campus to generate interest in tenancy. Our design vision and intent is performed through critically reinvesting into the future of the site, by preserving, restoring, and enhancing the existing site assets which define the character of the project, paired with new, strategic landscape and architectural interventions. Our ideas demonstrate short-term tactical enhancements balanced with long-term visionary thinking – fostering adaptation and resilience within uncertain ecological, social, and economic forces – ensuring enduring value and relevance. Looking into the unforeseeable future, we want this site to leave a legacy that helps address major problems facing climate change, sprawl, and a changing workforce/place. When complete, this plan will represent the values and culture we wish to impart on a new generation. Our desire is for this site to flourish into a landmark destination for suburban Chicago.


REVERBERATION 2020

Our Vision is to see the project not just as a singular development, but one that can leave a signiďŹ cant legacy that far outlives anyone involved in its creation. One that recognizes the need for change and actively promotes a new model: educating the next generation, leading by example, showing new ways to live and work towards a better future.


Oak Brook Reserve

2020

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Corporate Campus


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Sustainable Features Repurposed 90 acres of previously developed corporate space, thereby drastically reducing the embodied carbon emissions associated with new construction.


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Blue Origin New Construction

Location Huntsville, AL Size 400,000 SF 46 AC

Blue Origin

2020

Industrial

Enterprise Partners

Services Architecture Interiors TAG

A state-of-the-art liquid-fueled rocket engine manufacturing facility in Cummings Research Park. This facility encloses over 300,000 SF of state-of-the-art fabrication and manufacturing space and approximately 100,000 SF of class A engineering, collaboration, and administrative offices. The building’s infrastructure is capable of receiving, producing, fabricating, assembling, testing, and shipping. With a significant amount of automation deemed necessary, machining, cleaning, assembly integration, avionics component building, and testing, and advanced industrial welding will be part of the facilities process.


REVERBERATION 2020


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Blue Origin

2020

Industrial

The full height, glass atrium entrance bisects the overall building length and height. This ‘spine’ connects operation areas on each side with building length, mezzanine, and an observation platform. The height penetrates the roof providing continuous clerestory daylighting. Connectivity between engineering and manufacturing is amplified by nearly continuous observation glass that minimizes physical separation. Staff collaboration is fostered through numerous large and small meeting rooms and break areas throughout the facility.

Enterprise Partners


REVERBERATION 2020

Sustainable Features • Region-specific design considerations including high-impact glazing on all windows, low-flow irrigation systems and water fixtures, and highreflectance roofing contribute to a climatically optimized facility. • Features including occupancy sensors and an occupant-accessible energy monitoring interface help create an environment of transparency and energy-consciousness in the post-occupancy phase.


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Triangle Square New Construction

Location Chicago, IL Size 400,000 SF

Triangle Square

2020

Residential / Mixed Use

Services Architecture

This stunning new mixed-use residential development commenced construction in summer 2020. The project consists of three components: a seven-story, 300-unit apartment building atop retail and commercial spaces with structured parking; a 32,000 SF retail facility with a drive-through area; and a seven-story, 66-unit condominium building with enclosed parking. The development occupies a formerly vacant site in Chicago’s Bucktown neighborhood, bounded by Webster Avenue on the north, Elston Avenue on the southwest and the Metra train tracks on the east. The uniquely shaped property drove a triangular massing that orients 75% of the apartments with views to downtown Chicago.


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Triangle Square

2020

Residential / Mixed Use

This collection of 72 exceptionally designed homes feature wide-open living areas, ďŹ lled with natural light, perfect for entertaining or relaxing at home. Resident amenities include a private rooftop terrace with city and river views, a fully-equipped ďŹ tness room, dog wash station, and bike storage.

2 Bedroom Type 1

2 Bedroom Type 2


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Sustainable Features Design considerations including a hybrid green roof, a tree-shaded courtyard, and below-cover parking drastically reduced the site’s heat island effect. Access to quality views and daylight were also optimized via the sloping on the south-facing walls, promoting occupant well-being.


Fore more in-depth details on this project, view our case study on page 210.

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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship Adaptive Reuse

Location Chicago, IL Size 740,000 SF

24 E Washington

2020

Corporate Office & Interiors

Enterprise Partners

Services Interiors Landscape Architecture

LJC and Clayco have been working with Brookfield Properties in re-imagining and renovating one of Chicago’s most iconic buildings, the historic Marshall Field’s department store and current Macy’s flagship store in the loop. The renovation includes up to 650,000 SF of premier office space, as well as first in class amenities and a new rooftop deck with expansive views of Lake Michigan. The retrofit and renovation preserves the beautiful historical features that makes this building so iconic, and still brings the critical components for an office user up to class A condition.


REVERBERATION 2020

The name Marshall Field’s is rooted deep in Chicago’s history; its flagship retail State Street building is an iconic place to shop for patrons across the country. Clayco and LJC worked alongside the clients at Brookfield to design and construct a lower level building infrastructure renovation, a new entry and lobby with 14 completely new high-speed elevators forming a modern access way to the top floors, and an office build-out of the iconic structure’s top seven floors, complete with incredible office amenities.


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24 East Washington

2020

Corporate OfďŹ ce & Interiors

Enterprise Partners


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The 10,000 SF amenity deck, 3,500 SF of which includes planting, features a garage door that opens during the warmer months to allow seamless movement between indoor and outdoor areas. Planting design takes cues from the historic nature of the building with a modern twist on formal garden planting design using a variety of color from early spring through late fall. A large shade structure defines zones and is on axis with a synthetic turf lawn with water features terminating the axis.

Sustainable Features • LEED v4 BD+C Core and Shell Silver • Highlights: Repurposed building located in a historic district cuts embodied carbon emissions associated with new construction, while new water fixtures and HVAC units/exterior improvements reduced indoor water consumption by 41% and energy consumption by 7%.


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Aspire Center Adaptive Reuse

Location Chicago, IL Size 30,000 SF

Aspire Center

2020

Community

Services Architecture Landscape Architecture Awards Pritzker Traubert Foundation Chicago Prize Finalist

The Aspire Center for Workforce Innovation aims to transform a site indicative of historic disinvestment into a beacon of resources and economic development for the Austin community. The renovation of the currently shuttered Robert Emmet Public School will restore the existing classrooms to functional spaces that meet current needs for workforce development and training–from advanced manufacturing to small business incubation. A new, three-story lobby will serve as the main entrance and active community hub. It unites multiple tenants with a central gathering location and offers a variety of spaces for hosting public events. This glassy, light-filled space breaks free from the mass of institutional boundaries, reaching up to greater heights and a brighter future. Integral to the renovation of this site into a community hub, the existing, one-story brick façade to the North of the lobby will host a hundred-foot long mural to be commissioned by a local artist, an opportunity to showcase the richness of talent that the Austin community brings to the table.


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Aspire Center

2020

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Community


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Site Concept A welcoming community asset in the form of a pedestrianfocused plaza connects the new main entrance to two major arteries of the Austin Neighborhood. Wide diagonal walkways lead pedestrian traffic from the bus stops at Madison Avenue and North Central Avenue, through a sweeping canopy of shade and ornamental trees, seat walls, lawn areas, and several bicycle racks. This new open space provides both areas of respite and opportunities for flexible programming such as farmer’s markets, art exhibits, and other activities for the Aspire Center and neighborhood.

Sustainable Features Renovation strategies include incorporation of passive daylighting elements, photovoltaic power, and use of exclusively Red List Free finishes- one of the strictest industry guidelines for material health and safety.


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Delivery of Design Core Councils

Mission and Purpose The Delivery of Design - Core Councils are the internal collection of five influential bodies that focus on the core competencies of Lamar Johnson Collaborative: Culture, Sustainability, Process, Integration, and Practice. They were introduced to stimulate our design practice throughout all disciplines and experience levels. Self-organized, the councils inform our senior leadership team from the ground up. Our approach was to develop a mission based on the common ideals of diverse participants. The team then defined aspirational design attributes for LJC work. In order to achieve both the mission and design work that embodies these attributes, each Core Council has organized around four or five focus areas, and each area has a leader and designated team to define its purpose, initiate tasks, and act on them. Reverberation documents the cumulative work of the dedicated members of LJC.


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Delivery of Design Core Council Groups

EFFECT DATA COLLECTION

CULTURE

Professional Development Brand/Social Media Collaboration Community

SUSTAINABILITY

AIA 2030 Performance Research Education

PROCESS

Approach Collaboration Research Effect Point of View

INTEGRATION

Enterprise Cross Discipline Technical Metrics

PRACTICE

Deltek Strategies Project Management Knowledge Communication

Impactful

Sustainable

Innovative

Integrated

Insightful

External Collaboration Fit For Purpose Socially Relevant Engaging Community

Flexibility Performance Based Optimized EfďŹ ciency Positive Environmental Impact

Forward Thinking Material Exploration Grounded Research Work Flow

Informed Collaboration Creative Teamwork Strategic Partnerships Rapid Prototyping

Systems Based Speed Data Rich Performance Metrics Business Analysis

Social Metrics

Environmental Metrics

Next Metrics

Collaboration Metrics

Value / Econ Metrics


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The mission of the Culture Core Council is to : (1) find, recognize, and secure our exhilarating why; (2) attract, nurture, grow, and retain the best and brightest; (3) recognize and respond to the value of all people, factors, and inputs; (4) encourage, organize, and ensure our generous impact; and (5) organize and own our brand and voice.


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Teams

Focus Find, recognize, and secure our exhilarating why. Action Items 1. Collect Previous Alignment data/ideas 2. Facilitate Outreach Workshops with Staff 3. Align with Clayco Enterprise 4. Role Out Communication/ Celebration 5. Monitor Authenticity and impact

Focus

Focus

Attract, nurture, grow, and retain the best and brightest.

Recognize and respond to the value of all people, factors, and inputs.

Action Items

Action Items

1. Identify/Build Relationship with University Pipelines 2. Improve OnBoarding Experience 3. Ensures Successful Personal Development Plan 4. Develop and Execute Staff Mentoring Program 5. Collects and Analyze Talent Data/Needs

1. Build on Work-to-Date/ ConďŹ rm Baseline Metrics 2. Complete Benchmark of Best Practices (AIA/ASLA/ACE/Etc.) 3. Set Short/Long Term Goals 4. Establish Regular Monitoring/Reporting Metrics 5. Host Enterprise-wide Celebration of Our Progress

Focus Encourage, organize, and ensure our generous impact. Action Items 1. Establish Impact Task Force/Establish Baseline 2. Determine Impact Objectives 3. Align Most Impactful Opportunities 4. Execute Annual Impact Plan 5. Monitor ROI/Impact

Focus Organize and own our brand and voice. Action Items 1. ConďŹ rm Voice/Unfair Advantage/Message 2. Coordinate/Leverage with Enterprise 3. Determine Media Strategy 4. Activate Media PR Campaign 5. Monitor ROI

Our Passion

Our Talent

Our EE:DI

Our Impact

Our Voice

Alan Barker

Nic Smith

Richie Hands

Jen Nevil

Halima Shehu

Denise Rocha Laura Stock Matt Grahek Matt Richardson Olivia Freese Paul Bryant Valerie Michalek

Austin Lea Powers-Hickey Eranthis Quigley Karen Howell Matt Grahek Matt Richardson Nic Smith Sandra Marks Sarah Hitchcock

Al Fiesel Audrey DeLapp Theresa Signorino Denise Rocha

Shelby Kroeger Lauren Fishbune Anezka Gocova Valerie Michalek Fatima Moufarrige Pacheco Max Komnenich

Drew Raineri Max Komnenich

Leadership Council Champion : Chip Crawford & Alfred Fiesel


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Summer Internship

100

Job Families

102

Licensure Mentorship

104

Professional Development

106

EE:DI Engagement-Equity-Diversity-Inclusion

112

Global Experience, Local Touch LJC Demographics

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Community Engagement

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Our Voice

1 Culture Core Council


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2020 Summer Internship Co-hosted and Co-sponsored by the Culture Core Council Talent Committee and Internship Committee

LJC sees students as the future of our design culture and invests in a talent pipeline that begins with recruiting at college career fairs for internships, co-ops and full-time positions. We host interns and co-op students throughout the school year and have developed a summer internship program that we committed to sustaining in 2020 despite pandemic-induced challenges. With our summer intern class hosted remotely and in-ofďŹ ce, the program shifted emphasis to a research effort that complemented hands-on project work experience. Each intern contributed to the summer research project, proposing a topic, and developing a production schedule and anticipated outcomes. Throughout the course of the internship, a research committee of full-time design professionals advised the students on their research explorations. At the conclusion of the internship, students presented their ďŹ ndings to LJC for consideration and implementation in future projects.

Research Project : Overarching Narrative

(6) Individual Research Proposals

Intern

Intern

Intern

Intern

Intern

Intern

Final Deliverable : Combined Presentation

Buddy Support System Based on Related Individual Topics


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Cornell University Danilo Velazquez Washington University in St. Louis Megan Folkmann Savannah College of Art and Design Lauren Siatczynski University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Ishan Rakshit Washington University in St. Louis Olivia Reeve University of Kansas Aaron Michalicek Illinois Institute of Technology Mminika Effiong Jazmin Desvars Royg


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Architectural Staff I

Architectural Staff II

AS1

AS2

Designer I

Designer II

D1

D2

DTS

Architect II

Architect III

A2

A3

Design Technology Specialist

Project Architect

Senior Project Architect

PA

SPA

Project Manager

Senior Project Manager

PM

SPM

D3

PD

SPD

Designer III

Project Designer

Senior Project Designer

Architecture Architectural Staff III AS3

JF Following the merger of several design practices, LJC’s discipline leaders collaborated on the creation of a new job family system to organize and establish a common nomenclature for job positions with minimum and preferred role requirements for each. Discipline leaders then designated team members with job positions appropriate to their professional experience and licensure. The job family system establishes career path options for LJC team members and a foundation for advocates and leaders to evaluate professional development and compensation.

Urban Designer 1

Planning & Landscape

Urban Designer 2

Senior Urban Designer

UD1

UD2

SUD

LA1

LA2

SLA

Landscape Architect 1

Landscape Architect 2

Senior Landscape Architect

Sustainability Coordinator I SCI

Sustainability Coordinator II SCII

Energy Modeler EM

Commissioning Specialist

Senior Commissioning Specialist

CS

SCS

Enclosure Specialist

Senior Enclosure Specialist

ES

SES

Engineer I

Engineer II

Senior Engineer

EI

EII

SE

TAG (Technical Assurance Group) Senior Engineer TD

AI

AII

SA

Architect I

Architect II

Senior Architect


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Analyst

Consultant

Senior Consultant

Specialist

A

C

SC

S

Director

Pre-Design Consulting

D

DA

SDA

DAS

Data Analyst

Senior Data Analyst

Data Analytics Specialist

Administrative Assistant

Human Resources Assistant

Studio Coordinator

Executive Assistant

AA

HRA

SC

EA

Project Account

GL Accountant

Senior Accountant

Accounting Manager

PA

GLA

SA

AM

Marketing Assistant

Proposal Coordinator

Marketing Coordinator

MA

PC

MC

Operations

AI

IDI

PLI

OI

DAI

Marketing Manager

Director of Marketing and Comm.

MM

DMC

Operations Manager

Chief People OfďŹ cer

OM

CPO

Architecture Intern Interior Design Associate

IDA

Urban Designer I / Landscape Architect 1

UD1 LA1

Data Analyst

DA

Architectural Staff I / Designer 1

AS1 D1

Interior Design Intern

Planning / Landscape Intern

Operations Intern

Data Analyst Intern Assistant

A

Interns

Interior Design Associate

Interiors Project Manager

Interiors Senior Project Manager

IDA

IPM

ISPM

ID

SID

Interior Designer

Senior Interior Designer

Interiors


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Licensure Mentoring LJC has established a licensure mentorship program to aid in the development of its technical staff. Our program is designed to assist team members in the pursuit of professional licensure across design disciplines while fostering a culture of design and talent development. By pairing Mentees with Mentors, we nurture relationships and ensure valuable professional and institutional knowledge is imparted from one generation to the next. The mentoring program is a working program with the following goals: 1. Career Building: Moving up the ladder • How does one get to the next step? • How does he/she grow within the firm? 2. Advocate within the firm: The Mentor should be a resource and voice for the Mentee • Assist the Mentee in obtaining the appropriate experience • Provide experiences and lessons learned 3. Registration & Professional Development: Provide a “Path to Licensure”


REVERBERATION 2020

2020 Outstanding Emerging Professional Friendly Firm Lamar Johnson Collaborative Also awarded for years 2015-2018

Program Overview

Program Goals

Mentors to Provide: • Accountability • Education • Encouragement

Company: • 75% staff licensed • Meet w/ mentees quarterly • Expand program into career mentoring

Mentees to Provide: • Reverse Mentoring • Goals • Enthusiasm

Mentor/Mentee: • Meet monthly (evaluate together) • Create an outline/schedule • Set testing/IDP goals: - Monthly - Yearly - Professional goals

LJC to Provide: • Intern handbook (in progress) • Testing resources • Mentoring resources • Licensing policies • Licensing/testing compensation Objectives: • 1-to-1 mentoring within respective field • Educate employees on current licensing processes • Mentee driven process • Professional + company goals • Updated Intern/New Hire Handbook

Professional: • Establish a record through NCARB, ASLA, or other licensing venues • Accumulate IDP (if required) • Take exams!


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Professional Development LJC strives to create an all-inclusive, equal opportunity environment for its employees. The Talent portion of the Culture Core Council has determined the following skills are critical for employee and company growth, retention, and success. Along with programs LJC already has in place, we would like to provide additional soft skills resources. Our dedication to refining our employees’ skills should provide invaluable enthusiasm, confidence, and support. These are skills that we will be able to utilize internally and when in the public eye. Our goal is to provide the proper support for employees wishing to elevate these skills:

Communication Skills Effective communication: within the office, with consultants, and with clients, is one of the most important attributes in an exemplary employee. Having the ability to successfully translate ideas, concerns, and produce solutions that can be easily understood is crucial in the fast-paced world of design. Opportunities to practice and advance the skills of our employees may include: internal charrettes, interactive online videos, and seminars are useful activities we are investigating to further strengthen our communication skills. Presentation and Public Speaking Skills When presenting and speaking to the broader community, we strive to showcase our company in an authentic and cohesive manner. We must represent our brand effectively, and in doing so, we will create a stronger community presence. Because of the visibility our employees have in numerous avenues, we believe these skills are irreplaceable. Participation in training and engagement offered through many avenues such as various conventions, retreats, and small group courses, can help improve these skills. Engaging, educating, and encouraging staff to participate in these activities is essential for growth both personally and professionally in the industry. Networking Skills For most, speaking with strangers is not second nature. Engaging with peers “off the cuff” can be daunting and can create anxiety. Communicating with others, however, is the key to: finding, obtaining, and maintaining work and relationships. Because of the importance networking plays in the workplace, we believe it is one of the areas the Culture Core Council should focus efforts. Teaching our

employees how to use their contacts, identify associated networks, effectively communicate with the aforementioned contacts and networks, and understanding how to create new relationships are areas we hope to break down. Decision Making Decision making can feel overwhelming and never-ending. With the correct support and education, we strive to make the process more fluid and natural. When we learn to efficiently make decisions, we immediately open ourselves up better business practices and use of resources, improved responses when faced with a challenge, and more motivated employees. Because we see the benefits of healthy decision making, and because we make hundreds of decisions a day, we will work to provide the company with ample opportunities to become a more effective decision maker. Leadership & Mentorship Skills An effective leader possesses many traits: motivates, builds morale, provides goals and objects, “has a following”, develops exceptional relationships, and nurtures growth. For some, leading is second nature; for many, leading is a learned skill and one that is essential in the workplace. Our current leaders do a fantastic job leading by example and reinforcing the company’s core values. Providing our next level of leaders the means to promote and refine his/ her skills is critical for the company’s growth. By using our internal resources, as well as external opportunities, we strive to support our employees’ desire to grow into strong leaders.


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ENGAGEMENT / EQUITY / DIVERSITY / INCLUSION

Our goal for Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Engagement (DEI+E) is to be present and active within the office, communities and industries we represent. We strive to be a workplace committed to doing the right thing, not just one content to check the right boxes. With this emphasis and focus, we can foster a more diverse and inclusive company – an LJC that reflects our values in its project work and practice. In order to realize this vision, we revisited our initial approach and determined a need to rethink and reorder priorities. We reasoned that by focusing first on Equity and Engagement, LJC’s Diversity and Inclusion initiatives stand a greater chance of success. As such, we are organizing our efforts around EE+DI going forward. Moreover, we will achieve our purpose and mission by: Continuing to be actively involved in the communities we serve; Providing greater benefits and opportunities to undeserved groups and individuals; and,Increasing our overall diversity, top to bottom, while developing talent within the firm


REVERBERATION 2020

INCREASE

ENGAGE PARTNERS

DEVELOP REFINE IN HOUSE TALENT

ENGAGEMENT / Our diversity and inclusion efforts begin with involvement and engagement with our communities, consultants and colleagues. LJC is an organization that is actively involved in and continues to expand its presence within the industries and communities we serve. We do this not because of the positivePR, but because it is core to our values. For LJC to continue to improve, we need to consider expanding our leadership role by:

1. Continuing our involvement in while expanding our support for community and professional organizations. 2. Engaging our consultants earlier to both streamline our process and improve our partner relationships. 3. Training and developing our in-house talent to increase our employee engagement.

EXPAND EMPLOYEE BENEFITS

DIVERSE PARTNERS

JUST CERTIFIED

EQUITY / Diversity alone does not lead to increased equity. But by focusing on increasing employee and partner diversity we position ourselves to be more representative of the communities we engage in our design processes. And in engaging clients and communities we identify with, we have the opportunity to advocate for design that is more equitable for the people it serves. At the same time, looking to our peers, we also want to consider expanding LJC’s benefits to appeal to and encompass all walks of life. We want to develop policies and programs that level the playing field and enable us to measure and evaluate if we are becoming a more equitable place for a greater varietyof people. Our steps to promoting equity include, but are not limited to:

1. Expanding benefits for all employees to cover a broader, more equitable spectrum of colleague needs. 2. Collaborating with diverse partners. 3. Becoming JUST certified in order to set goals and directions for improving equity within LJC.


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MORE DIVERSE HIRES

SUPPORT DIVERSE INITIATIVES

BIAS TRAINING

INCREASE DIVERSE LEADERSHIP

DIVERSITY / Diversity encompasses the counting of our people. Presently, we are composed of a larger percentage of minorities than other firms in our industry (as measured across categories of gender, ethnicity and race), but we can and should strive to become an even more diverse firm than we are today. Representation matters – and it’s important we look like and understand the colleagues, clients and communities we serve. By continuing to provide career development opportunities for our minority colleagues and by expanding our recruiting efforts to target new sources of talent, we can be intentional about fostering diversity at LJC, whether at the level of new hires or firm leaders. We can promote our diversity objectives by taking the following steps: 1. Increasing recruitment from historically diverse schools and organizations 2. Continuing support and promotion of diverse initiatives 3. Offering bias training at regular intervals 4. Developing a pipeline to nurture and grow young diverse staff to become future leaders


REVERBERATION 2020

REMOVE BARRIERS

EXPAND VOICES

PROVIDE MENTORSHIP

DECREASE BURNOUT

AT THE TABLE

INCLUSION / If we increase employee diversity and establish the infrastructure necessary to promote greater equity, then the next area for focus is on inclusion. By means formal and informal, we need to seek out ways to encourage all of our colleagues to feel heard, listened to, and engaged in the operation of LJC if we are to provide a truly inclusive workplace. We will realize the work environment we seek when all our colleagues are: treated fairly and respectfully; have equal access to opportunities and resources; and can fully contribute their gifts and talents to the organization’s success. The steps to achieving the inclusive workplace include, but arenot limited to: 1. Increasing internal mentorship and opportunities 2. Promoting participation and leadership in the Core Councils 3. Partnering with local MBE, WBE, DBE firms 4. Ensuring in-office initiatives are led by junior staff 5. Representing LJC in public


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REVERBERATION 2020

IS MAKING THE PEOPLE COUNT.


Together we have

Global Experience, Local Touch A cohort of creative thinkers. Our team brings world-class design talent, expertise at every scale and complexity, and a passion to inspire. We thrive at the intersection of creative innovation and accountable implementation.

We are involved in AAH

CSI

NCIDQ

AIA

EDAC

NOMA

APA

IFMA

ULI

ASLA

IIDA

WELL AP

CLARB

LEED AP

CREW

NCARB

Our professional staff is made up of

Office Locations Countries we’ve lived in

We are graduates of


REVERBERATION 2020

Disciplines & Focus

Statistics

1,017 Total # of Enterprise Employees

46 Languages

39 Countries grew up outisde the U.S.

140 Professional Organizations

We’ve lived in

40 Countries We speak

20 Languages AMHARIC

GERMAN

MANDARIN

ARABIC

HAUSA

MARATHI

CANTONESE

HINDI

NEPALI

CHINESE

IRISH

PORTUGUESE

ENGLISH

ITALIAN

SPANISH

FILIPINO

JAPANESE

TURKISH

FRENCH

KOREAN


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IN OUR COMMUNITIES Our diversity and inclusion efforts begin with being involved and engaged with our communities, consultants, and colleagues. LJC is an organization that is actively involved in and continues to expand its presence within the industries and communities we serve.


TROJAN PARK

POPCOURTS

NIRBHAYA

CHILDREN’S ACADEMIC CENTER

REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study Children’s Academic Center

CAC Children’s Academic Center Location: East St. Louis, IL Services: Architecture Renovation and Landscape Design

Community Partners Include: Christian Activity Center

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REVERBERATION 2020

LJC is honored to work with the Christian Activity Center, a local non-profit for in East St Louis, on the Children’s Academic Center; a renovation to an existing property. The CAC is an early childhood education center that will support an underserved community at the stage of life that can have the biggest impact on their futures. The CAC’s commitment to serving their community is reflected in the

design of the entire building. The use of natural materials in a variety of textures and cool tones emphasizes the connection to nature. This invokes in the children’s curiosity and discovery to reinforce a tactile learning style aimed at fostering successful futures. LJC’s final design showcases many of the existing materials while updating the facilities. This creates an environment that keeps up with

the functional, and educational needs of today without forgetting about the community’s history. CAC is in the process of raising money to fund the Children’s Academic Center. This will allow them to create a space for the entire community to gather and continue to grow.


Case Study Monika Weiss - Nirbhaya

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Since 2019 Lamar Johnson Collaborative has been supporting technical development and production of a forthcoming public project by PolishAmerican artist Monika Weiss, Nirbhaya. Nirbhaya is a monument named after Jyoti Singh, aka ‘Nirbhaya’, who was raped and killed in at the age of 23 in New Delhi in 2012. It is a memorial not for conquerors and war heroes but for forgotten victims of everyday violence. Suggesting an ancient sarcophagus, filled with water, through horizontality, intimate scale, and new media component, the Nirbhaya memorial honors women of all cultures and times who undergo the trauma of rape, torture, and death. A site of meditation and stillness, the monument offers a pathway for reimagining collective remembrance, abandoning victorious monumentality and celebrating horizontal and peaceful future of humanity. The inspiration for the Nirbhaya sculpture comes from the long tradition of triumphal arches, which embody victorious verticality, making wars and colonial invasions into heroic history. In Nirbhaya, I lay a triumphal arch down, mirroring it with its own double, to create a vessel filled with water. In Nirbhaya, the triumphal arch no longer looms above us. Instead, we look down into the water and see a specter of a woman; her body shrouded in long black robe and veiled; her face morphing from one woman into another, making slow, universal gestures of lamentation. She eventually becomes a tree, which later morph back into a specter of a woman. — Monika Weiss. Nirbhaya is a project for which seemingly the most obvious inspiration is India Gate, which was designed by the British architect Edwin Lutyens, who in turn nearly copied Arc de Triomphe in Paris. Located at the most important and the most representative site in New Delhi, the memorial was dedicated to 90,000 Indian soldiers who died during World War I and in the battles with Afghanistan, serving in the British army. The sculpture by Monika Weiss, referring in its form to these historical objects of architecture, expresses the artist’s firm feminist attitude. It is one of the first monuments and memorials dedicated to thousands of women who are victims of violence every day. The use of classical aesthetics, so often employed by the powers in the era of developing colonialism, forces us to broaden our reflection. Monika Weiss leaves us with a question about contemporary functioning of social roles and the oppression that results from them, about the imperceptible suffering that does not receive the right to representation and commemoration. In Monika Weiss’ project, the triumphal arch resting on the ground becomes a water-filled, ancient sarcophagus. India Gate, losing its vertical strength and heroism, turns into a symbol of fluidity. Nirbhaya is also a project about bending over a monumental form that no longer dominates us; about possibilities of memory; about beauty becoming a response to history that viewers do not need to learn, just hear the murmur of water and the silence of the triumphal arch laid down on earth. — Weronika Elertowska, Curator, Centre for Polish Sculpture in Orońsko / National Heritage of the Republic of Poland.

N I R B H AYA by Monika Weiss Location: Orońsko, Poland and USA (TBD) Services: Design Implementation and Construction Documents


REVERBERATION 2020

Monika Weiss, Nirbhaya, 2020- . Forthcoming permanent public project. Cast concrete, fiberglass, water, 4K digital film projection, sound station, 71 x 221 x 35 in. Right: still from video projection. Left above: rendering of the monument. Left below: aerial view of the monument.

Two permanent outdoor pieces of the same name are planned respectively, in Poland and in US. The Center of Polish Sculpture in Orońsko—a National Institution of Culture —is organizing the first permanent version of Nirbhaya in their national sculpture park in 2021. This project is featured in the in the Centerpoint Now issue for the 75th anniversary of the United Nations, to be released in December 2020.


Case Study Popcourts

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POPCOURTS at Chicago and Lockwood Location: Chicago, IL Services: Landscape Architecture

Community Partners Include: Root2Fruit, Austin Coming Together, BUILD, Westside Health Authority, Austin Town Hall Art & Culture Committee, Territory, Walacam, Institute of Nonviolence


REVERBERATION 2020

The site at the Southeast corner of Chicago and Lockwood is prime for an intervention to accelerate the reopening of the Austin neighborhood. Food truck stalls, a exible lawn with casual seating, and a basketball court that doubles as a plaza for markets will sit on top of a geometrically patterned site. A mural on the site’s Eastern wall will extend along the ground plane and

across Chicago Ave to engage the community and invite passers-bye to explore the culture of Austin. The intervention at Chicago and Lockwood is a canvas for community outreach. The angular geometry of the site sets up a language for local artists to mural the East and South walls of the site, a location for an art installation on the corner, and an opportunity for community members to help paint the street.


Case Study Trojan Park

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T R O J A N PA R K Trojan Park Site: Wellston, MO Services: Landscape Architecture


REVERBERATION 2020

Each year the National Recreation and Parks Association (NRPA), as part of their Parks Build Community initiative, conducts a complete park makeover within the city hosting their annual conference. In 2016, thousands of parks and recreation professionals converged on St. Louis for the industry’s largest event. At that year’s conference, a brand new park was unveiled in Wellston, a neighboring suburb of St. Louis. It was the first time that NRPA constructed a new park from

scratch. As part of the process of designing the final section of the St. Vincent Greenway, LJC along with Great Rivers Greenway and Beyond Housing, prepared a concept park design for the 1 acre parcel at the southwest corner of Etzel and Skinker in the city of Wellston. Throughout the year-long community engagement process for the St. Vincent Greenway, area residents relayed their desire for open space and program opportunities that bring the entire community together,

improve overall health and fitness, and provide safe places for the children of Wellston to play. The new park offers excellent opportunities to address all of these aspirations and more. The City of Wellston chose the name Trojan Park for the new civic gem, in honor of the former Wellston High School mascot. Once Trojan Park was completed, visitors found many of the features discussed during the community engagement process.


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We created a variety of mockups to test strategies that are visually appealing as a feed, but also give a complete picture of our work. We gathered precedents from other companies and analyzed how we work as a company in order to create a system that works well for us. The triptych gives us the space to share a complete picture of our work. This also increases engagement by creating multiple opportunities for viewers to engage with our work.


REVERBERATION 2020

0

Studio

1

Studio

2

Studio

3

Studio

4

Studio

5

Studio

6

Studio

S tu di o R e p resentati v e Off ic e C ul t ure OUR MISSION Create a platform for Our Voice Who We Are on the Inside is Reflected on the Outside Create a unified message Inspire and Unify Our Vision

GOALS - Design a process for gathering content - Create a schedule for sharing content - Social media channels that define us - Track our metrics

S h a re d C a le n d a r P roj ect Team

Social Media Management Software


126


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The mission of the Sustainability Core Council is to support LJC in designing beautiful, healthy buildings efficiently, that positively impact the environment and surrounding communities.


128

Teams

Focus

Focus Provide tools, resources, training and culturally integrate sustainability into the practice Action Items Content Library + Training sessions and how to’s

Education

Olivia Freese Halima Shehu Richie Hands Madeline Smith Jazmin Desvars Royg Larry Nordin Denise Rocha

Focus

Integrate sustainability into practice process, establish performance expectations

Push practice to forefront of sustainable design

Action Items

Focus Spearhead AIA 2030 Goal for the design practice

Action Items

Schedule/matrix for staying on forefront of sustainable design standards and concepts

Enhance process + platform to quantify the impact of design decisions proving their value and feasibility, design standards, and concepts

Reporting, sustainable action plan, collaboration with other ďŹ rms

Research

Performance

AIA 2030

Larry Nordin Cristina Martin Brett Horin Kent Lehman Jonathan Meader Javier Torres Gomez

Brett Horin Kekeli Dawes Sarah Hitchcock Jameson Skaife Dan Lyons

Spencer Woods Olivia Warsek Jazmin Desvars Royg Madeline Smith

Action Items

Leadership Council Champion : Kapil Khanna, Dave Junge & Sarah Jacobson


REVERBERATION 2020

130

AIA 2030 Firm Commitment

134

Performance Process Diagram Case Studies Tools

136

Research Sustainability Data Strategies by Sector

2 Sustainability Core Council


Case Study Mercy Virtual Care Center

AIA 2030 Commitment

130


REVERBERATION 2020

4 Well-Accredited Professionals

AIA 2030 Designing Carbon Neutral Buildings

Lamar Johnson Collaborative

AIA 2030 Firm Commitment LJC is committed to solving our client's most challenging problems, while promoting future generations to thrive. It is our policy to conduct business in an environmentally responsible manner, protecting the public, our employees and the shared earth in a comprehensive and transparent manner. LJC understands architects in particular have a great responsibility to model and design buildings with future generations in mind. LJC strives towards a net zero energy and carbon portfolio. LJC is uniquely positioned to achieve this goal through its disposition in a fully integrated enterprise. Through our close relationship with contractor Clayco; our in-house energy modeling, MEP engineers, enclosure specialists, landscape designers and sustainability experts, we have the tools and expertise to effectively problem solve during this environmental crisis.


Case Study Mercy Virtual Care Center

AIA 2030 Commitment

132


REVERBERATION 2020

90+ Sustainable Projects

60+ Well-Accredited Professionals

Lamar Johnson Collaborative

AIA 2030 Firm Commitment All of this is possible due to the top-down collective enthusiasm and passion within our design practice. LJC has identified the following topics as instrumental in our pursuit of a sustainable built environment: • Minimize energy demand: o Establish EUI and LPD targets during Schematic Design o Inform design decisions through continuous energy modeling o Employ strategic programming o Quantify the impact of passive design strategies • Carbon capture • Renewable energy • Native and biodiverse landscape • Sustainable and healthy material selection • Biomimicry


Case Study Mercy Virtual Care Center

Process

Strategies

Metrics

Tools

134


REVERBERATION 2020

tools

metrics

Energy+ IES VE THERM Radiance nce

Energy Use Intensity Heat Transfer IIlluminance Water ate Usage

strategies st s Benchmarking Climate Analysis Massing Daylighting

Performance Process In order to make an impact on projects, we need to address quantifiable sustainability measures. This starts by investigating the strategies unique to a project’s climate and building type, determining the metrics used to score those strategies, and then using the proper tools to simulate those metrics. By using this approach, we’re able to effectively and efficiently quantify how a project will perform.


Case Study Mercy Virtual Care Center

Metrics

136


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study

138

Mercy Virtual Care Center

EUI Benchmarks

Energy

Water

1 Improve Insulation Reduce heat transfer as much as possible. Focus on detailing that reduces thermal bridging.

1 Rainwater Collection Use cisterns to collect rainwater for irrigation and non-potable water usage.

2 Optimize Glazing Reduce the window to wall ratio as much as possible. Consider lower U-values and thermally broken framing systems.

2 Reduce Impervious Areas Reduce parking lots and add landscaping where ever possible.

3 Energy Recovery Take advantage of internal gains to recover usable heat to reduce heating energy.

Waste

Air Quality

Comfort

1 Water Bottle Filling Stations Aim to reduce water waste, as well as plastic waste.

1 MERV Filters Use highly rated MERV filters to greatly improve the indoor air quality.

1 Shading Devices Help reduce glare and optimize solar gains for optimal visual and thermal comfort.

2 Dedicated Recycling Area Provide an area dedicated to collect recyclables to promote recycling and waste reduction.

2 Dedicated Outdoor Air System A dedicated outdoor air system (DOAS), helps maintain continuous ventilation to flush out airborne pollutants.

2 Radiant Heating/Cooling An energy efficient method of providing optimal thermal comfort.

3 Low/No VOC Materials Aim to reduce indoor pollutants and product off-gassing.

3 Improve Daylighting Configure regularly occupied spaces towards the exterior of the building.


REVERBERATION 2020

23.43 2025 Goal 46.86 2020 Goal

Healthcare

234.3 234.3 US Median

70.29 2015 Goal

kBtu/sf/yr

5.29 2025 Goal 10.58 2020 Goal

Office

52.9

15.87 2015 Goal

kBtu/sf/yr 5.96 2025 Goal 11.92 2020 Goal

52.9 US Median

University

17.88 2015 Goal

59.6 kBtu/sf/yr

5.96 2025 Goal 11.92 2020 Goal

59.6 US Median

Multifamily

59.6 kBtu/sf/yr

2.27 2025 Goal

59.6 US Median

4.54 2020 Goal

Industrial

22.7 kBtu/sf/yr 22.7 US Median

6.81 2015 Goal

17.88 2015 Goal

EUI Benchmarks The Energy Use Intensity (EUI) is a normalized metric to compare the annual energy usage of buildings. These EUI benchmarks are unique to project types. By addressing this at the start of a project, we can determine performance targets and help projects achieve them throughout the design process.


140


REVERBERATION 2020

The mission of the Process Core Council is to present analysis of existing process, create a framework for communicating our process both internally and externally, and enhance LJC’s value system for design.


142

Teams

Focus Build an environment where collaboration is fully integrated into our design process

Workflow and Material Exploration

Design Narrative

Deliverable

Deliverable

Deliverable

Case Studies for our Best Work

A framework of collaboration strategies across scales, from casual pinups to firm presentations

Enscape + Infraworks + Parametric +3D Printing

Disciplines + Market White Paper

Approach

Collaboration

Research

Point of View

Effect

Sarah

Max

Anezka

Nicholas

Adam

Halima Shehu Laura Meyer Mulu Woldgeorgis Nicholas Moen Magdalena Aravena

Frank Hu Rory Thibault Taokai Ma Robert Konzelmann

Jameson Skaife Caroline Finck Cheng Cheng Peng

Doh Young Jen Hohol Lauren Fishbune Megan Schultz

Focus Discovery + Analysis + Iteration + Refinement + Delivery Deliverable

Shuying Wu Lindsay Webb Ben Buehrle Kekeli Dawes Lance Yeary

Focus

Focus

Leadership Council Champion : Tyler Meyr

Focus Showcasing Design and Performance Deliverable Awards + Digital Content + Annual


REVERBERATION 2020

144

Approach

270

Collaboration

274

Research

276

Point of View

278

Effect

3 Process Core Council


144

Approach The mission of the Approach team is to present analysis of existing process, create a framework for communicating our process both internally and externally, and enhance LJC’s value system for design.

Design Framework

Smart Start

Discovery

1 Research Design Attributes

Client Goals + Objectives

Representation

Pre-Design

Goals Objectives Performance

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Precedent Material Context Mapping

Climate Program Context


REVERBERATION 2020

in linear format.

Big Idea

Ideation

3 Iteration

Refinement

4 Clarifying

Schematic Design

Design Development

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Delivery

Onward

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Experience Sections Renderings Models Books

Evaluate Systematically

Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys


146

Design Framework

a onw

sm sta art rt

rd

Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys

rch resea

n

1

const ru docum ction admin ents & istrat ion

Precedent Material Context Mapping

ve r y

5

entin

izatio mobil se pha

d e l i ve

pre -de sig n

disco

ry

te ly lua l Eva atica em t s Sy docum

Sections Renderings Models Books

Goals Objectives Performance

2

ag

is

fin em en t

ideation

ys

re

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Climate Program Context

al

schematic design

an

g

di

yin

ra

rif

m

4

cla

m co in nc g de ept sig ua n l

g

t n sig en de opm l ve de

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

3

iteration


REVERBERATION 2020

in circular format.

smart start

onward Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys

Goals Objectives Performance

discovery

delivery Sections Renderings Models Books

Precedent Material Context Mapping

design concept

refinement

analysis

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Climate Program Context

ideation Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison


148

Analysis & Communication

Design Approach

1 2 3 4 5 6

Define what makes a good case study. Reflect on existing process and communication of process. Create iterative beta case studies and framework. Allocate time in schedule to share and document process. Roll-out case study framework for office-wide use. Output of case studies.


REVERBERATION 2020

COMPLETED Analysis of external case studies that feature process to identify key elements that create a compelling case study.

What makes a compelling case study?

Involve Multiple Voices

Keep it Simple Showcase Collaboration

Include the Right Details Narrate Ideation + Experience

Own up to Challenges

Exhibit Mixed Mediums

Uphold Values

Make it Measurable


150

IN - PROGRESS Collect feedback on existing process via surveys of core councils and interviews with speciďŹ c project teams.

When is our process most successful? Why?

When is our process most successful? Why? discovery

analysis

ideation

refinement

delivery

What roadblocks are you encountering during the design process?

What factors or forces inuenced the decision making in the project?

Interviews

Surveys


REVERBERATION 2020

NEXT

STEPS

Identify beta projects, develop and test case study formats and framework.

Case Study Typologies

Multi-Stakeholder Planning Project

Interiors Project

Integrated Enterprise Project

Landscape Project

Architectural Project

Beta Case Study Examples

Brickline Greenway

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Pfizer

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis


Case Studies

152

Approach

About

Case Studies The following section captures four unique stories about process, each selected to illustrate the nuance and responsiveness we use to approach our work.

Discovery

1 Research

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Ideation

3 Iteration

Refinement

4 Clarifying

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Schematic Design

Design Development

Precedent Material Context Mapping

Climate Program Context

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Experience Sections Renderings Models Books

Our process hinges on 5 phases: discover, analysis, ideation, refinement & delivery. Each phase requires a thoughtful approach to design, context and project influences whether that be schedule, community, technology or any of the unique qualities a project may bring. Timing for each phase may vary, the rigor and effort _______________________________________________ Although you’ll find a number of themes, you’ll find one that carries through, collaboration. LJC leverages communication & and strong relationships with clients, consultants and contractors to create the best possible outcomes for our clients and communities. Discover, analysis, ideation, refinement & delivery.


REVERBERATION 2020

Case Study 01

Penn State Health Westview Garage Location

Hershey, PA

Program

Parking Garage

Size Delivery Time

1,300 Spaces Design-Build 2017-2020

Enterprise Partners

Case Study 02

Fulton East Location

Chicago, IL

Program

Office and Retail

Size Delivery Time

90,000 SF Design-Build 2018-2021

Enterprise Partners

Case Study 03

24 E Washington Location

Chicago, IL

Program

Historic Renovation - Office

Size Delivery Time

740,000 SF Design-Build 2018-2021

Enterprise Partners

Case Study 04

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park Location

Fort Wayne, IN

Program

Riverfront Public Park

Size Delivery Time

6 AC Design-Bid-Build 2015 - 2019


Case Study 01

154

Penn State Health Westview Garage

Design Process

Penn State Health Westview Garage Location

Hershey, PA

Program

Parking Garage

Size Delivery Design and Completion

Enterprise Partners

1,300 Spaces Design-Build 2017-2020


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Narrative

156


REVERBERATION 2020

Inspired by Pennsylvania’s rolling hills, the waving spandrels of the building façade are the first architectural element noticed as one drives into the medical health campus. Positioned with such prime real estate, the team had a goal for the West campus to improve upon the daily experience of campus arrival and the half-mile walk to the College of Medicine’s main entrance. The Architects took on the challenge with inspiration from the surrounding iconic precast campus to create a complementary precast façade solution. Striving for an economical solution that was innovative and related to the current campus buildings was a key goal for the architectural team. Wanting to keep costs low and three-dimensional visual effects high, the waved design came to life. To achieve the final design solution, the precast and architectural design teams came together to maximize form sizes, weights, and centers of gravity to keep engineering stability in check yet keeping the overall concept strong. Through that collaborative process, significant cost savings were found by reducing the number of unique molds from 72 to 8 and by increasing the bay size. The scale of the horizontal spandrels and the eight-foot cantilevered overhangs at the entrances illustrate the attention to detail taken by the team using the principles of form following function. The horizontal spandrels play a dual role of safety barrier and structural beam and allow for ample light to enter deep into the garage, thus eliminating dark areas that typically occur in garages. The entrance overhangs offer the structural support needed at the stair towers while providing a canopy shelter and visual cues for entry points without needing post applied signage or other unrelated architectural elements. Desiring an uplifting experience for the daily user, the beauty of the design continues inside the parking garage. Maximizing the exterior glass walls at each stairwell adds an element of safety with the ability of natural light to shine in and dance along the vertical wavy form liner acting as a sundial as the day progresses. This form liner pattern compliments the waves of the exterior spandrel while still being functional as the elevator shaft walls. Pulling in other subtle natural elements like the wood ceilings in the stairs and within the precast canopy entrances, pairs well with heavily wooded Pennsylvania surroundings. Ultimately, the design team presented three design concepts to the client before this final design was selected. The final choice was based not only on the elements described above but also on the shade and shadow studies the team presented that proved the visual interest inside and out. Soon after completing the project, the project is being used in a way no one could have predicted. The first floor of the garage is currently acting as a drive-through COVID testing site. With the larger bays, taller floor to floor height, and well-lit areas, it has been a perfect location to provide a safe space to tend to their community and employees.


Case Study 01

158

Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Smart Start

Discovery

1 Research Design Attributes

Client Goals + Objectives

Pre-Design

Goals Objectives Performance

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Precedent Material Context Mapping

Climate Program Context

YGOLOPYT NIAM

1M

YGOLOPY DILOS

1S YGOLOPYT RENROC

1C

YGOLOPYT YPONAC

2C

Representation

YT EPACSDNAL

YGOLOPYT EPACSDNAL

1L


REVERBERATION 2020

Big Idea

Ideation

3 Iteration

Refinement

4 Clarifying

Schematic Design

Design Development

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Delivery

Onward

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Experience Sections Renderings Models Books

Evaluate Systematically

Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Inspiration Inspired by the rolling hills in Pennsylvania and the crescent building central to the medical campus, the architect blended the two to create a precast concrete skin that blends the garage’s architecture to its surroundings. Due to its prime real estate location, it was essential to create a unique view and experience for those entering and exiting the campus.

Discovery

1

Research

Mobilization Phase

Goal Scope Concept Logistics

160


REVERBERATION 2020

Penn State Children’s Hospital context / material / precedent / mapping Hershey Medical Center

Life Lion Drive

University Fitness Center

Garage

Natural Prairie Landscape Addition to Detention Pond

West Governor Road

Sports Field Addition

The design team’s initial aerial diagram depicting the future project. This parking garage allows the health system to accommodate continued growth on the Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center campus.


Case Study 01

162

Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

After careful evaluation and review of both sites, Site B was selected for the project.

Analysis

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design

Climate Program Context

Original Site - A

Preferred Site - B

Pros 1. 2.

Pros 1.

Less utility rework Shorter walking distances

2. Cons 1. Eliminates future development 2. Poor sight lines from rt 322 to/ from innovation pavilion 3. Requires larger garage due to increased existing parking displacement 4. Cost increase due to larger parking deck 5. Reduced parking net gain

3. 4.

5. 6. 7.

Selected

Preserves desirable location for future development / program space Improved sight lines from rt 322 to/ from innovation pavilion Allows smaller parking deck due to less existing parking displacement More direct connection from bullfrog and life lion entry, reducing campus drive trafďŹ c UniďŹ es the west campus with a pedestrian greenway Potential integration with the university ďŹ tness center Increased parking net gain

Cons 1. More utility rework 2. Slightly longer walking distances


REVERBERATION 2020

Studies of utility impact for both sites were crucial during the decision making process.

Original Site - A LW SPIL

Selected

Impact Summary

AY

- Stormwater - Telecomm TV - Telecomm

Preferred Site - B Impact Summary - Stormwater

TE LE CO M M

- Natural Gas - Sanitary

B

S T O R M W AT E R

LIFE

LION

DRIV

E

CATV

A

STORM

- Water - Communication

WAT E R

- Water and Fire

PAVILION SITE


Case Study 01

164

Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Garage elevation looking east towards the Medical Campus.

Selected

Analysis

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design

Climate Program Context Efficient

Curve

Split

1,134 Spaces 4 Levels 340,000 SF 4,936 LF Perimeter

1,052 Spaces 3 Levels 320,000 SF 4,224 LF Perimeter

1,212 Spaces 4 Levels 390,000 SF 6,102 LF Perimeter

The team studied three layouts to find the right balance between design direction and its costeffectiveness. The efficient layout was the final selection due to cost and ease of construction, and the North-South orientation for easier accessibility.


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Ideation

3 Iteration Schematic Design

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

YGOLOPYT NIAM

1M

YGOLOPY DILOS

1S YGOLOPYT RENROC

1C

YGOLOPYT YPONAC

2C

Y T EPACSDNAL

YGOLOPYT EPACSDNAL

1L

166 116 66


REVERBERATION 2020

Bouldering Wall

Running Stair

Exercise Elements

Fitness exploration on the garage’s east facade. Three design ideas were explored, including a bouldering wall, running stair, and an exercise area. Due to safety and liability concerns, the client did not implement this idea.

Material exploration of the garage facade consisted of precast concrete, glass, metal fins, and a mixture of metal and glass. Precast concrete was selected because of its flexibility in design, shape, and form, and its material connection to the existing campus architecture.


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

168

Process

1’-10”

6’-6”

6’-6”

6’-6”

Softened curvature of typical precast panel

Ideation

3 Iteration Schematic Design

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Wood accent on level 1

YGOLOPYT NIAM

1M

YGOLOPY DILOS

1S YGOLOPYT RENROC

1C

YGOLOPYT YPONAC

2C

Y T EPACSDNAL

YGOLOPYT EPACSDNAL

1L

During the next few design iterations of the panels, the curvature lines were modified to create a more softened look. The canopy panel extrusion depth was also reduced due to constructability and casting requirements from the factory. During the study of wood soffits beneath the entrance canopy panels, it was decided to include the wood accents on level 1 only.

Wood accent on all levels


REVERBERATION 2020

Narrowed down to the horizontal option, this shows all-concrete on the canopy panels in the corner with wooden sofďŹ ts on the ground level only.

Typical Module 1

Typical Module 2

Typical Module 3

Corner Module 1


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

170

Process

2% slope 2% slope

Refinement

4 Clarifying 2% slope

Design Development

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

2% slope

2% slope

Due to the depth of the precast canopy panels at the stair tower entrances, where people enter and exit, drainage became an issue. The study above shows different sloping options for the various directions of rainwater and snow drainage.


REVERBERATION 2020

As the design of the precast panels evolved, a visual issue occurred at the corners. The structural beam became visible from the exterior; therefore, additional reshaping was performed. The image on the right shows the corrected form, which now hides the beam.

A

B 54’-0”

C 48’-0”

D 48’-0”

E 48’-0”

F 48’-0”

G 48’-0”

H 48’-0”

New, 48-foot bay


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

172

Process

Custom Inquiry Report type

Standard

Height

6’-3”109/128 ft-in

Width

8’-11”1/128 ft-in

Length

16’-1ft-in

Material

Concrete_Undefined

Volume Gross

13.88 yd3

Volume Net

13.88 yd3

Area

452.4 ft2

Weight

56212.4 lbf

Geometry inquiry in Tekla to ensure weight and size requirements are met.

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Screenshots of model translation from Rhino to Grasshopper (Tekla Live-Link) to Tekla Structures 2017

Our precast concrete subcontractor uses Tekla Structures for all of their concrete modeling. Understanding Tekla’s interoperability possibilities were critical to the success of this project. After research, collaboration, and sharing of software licenses and knowledge through Tekla tutorial sessions, the precast contractor and our design team were able to come up with a streamlined workflow that not only worked but kept the integrity of the geometry even through many file translations between softwares.


REVERBERATION 2020

NE 3C

3C

1C

4B

7B

4A

7A

1D

7A

6J

7A

4H

7D

North Facade

Form 01

Form 02

Form 03

4 Types 4 Panels

Form 04

9 Types 15 Panels

Form 05

11 Types 15 Panels

Form 06

10 Types 25 Panels

Form 07

10 Types 26 Panels

Form 08

Formwork Only

Formwork Only

Formwork Only

Type 6A

Type 7A

(x2) N (x2) S

(x3) N (x2) S

Type 1B

Type 4A

Type 5A

Type 6B

Type 7B

(x1) E

(x1) N (x2) S

(x3) N

(x1) S

(x1) N (x1) S

Type 1C

Type 4B

Type 5B

Type 6C

Type 7C

(x2) E

(x1) N (x1) S

(x1) N

(x1) N (x1) S

(x1) S

Type 1D

Type 4C

Type 5C

Type 6D

Type 7D

(x1) N

(x1) E

(x1) N

(x1) N

(x1) N

Type 4D

Type 5D

(x1) E

(x2) S

Formwork Only

Type 4E (x3) W

Type 2A

6 Types 14 Panels

Type 8A (x3) E (x4) W

Type 8B (x3) W

Type 8C (x1) E

Type 8D (x1) W

Type 6E

Type 7E

Type 8E

(x3) E (x3) W

(x3) E (x5) W

(x1) N

Type 5E

Type 6F

Type 7F

Type 8F

(x1) N

(x2) E (x2) W

(x1) E (x1) W

(x1) W

Type 4F

Type 5F

Type 6G

Type 7G

(x1) W

(x1) W

(x1) W

(x1) E (x2) W

(x1) W

Type 2B

Type 4G

Type 5G

Type 6H

Type 7H

(x1) W

(x1) W

(x1) W

(x1) E

(x1) E

Type 4H

Type 5H

Type 6I

Type 7I

(x1) N

(x2) E

(x1) E

(x2) E (x2) W

Type 3A

Type 4I

Type 5I

Type 6J

Type 7J

(x4) NW

(x1) E (x1) S

(x1) E

(x1) N

(x1) E

Type 3B

Type 5J

Type 6K

(x1) NW

(x1) S

(x1) N

Type 3C

Type 5K

(x2) NE (x2) SE (x2) SW

(x1) E

2 Types 2 Panels

3 Types 11 Panels

Precast Panel Matrix


Case Study 01

174

Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process Current Specification

Western Hemlock 1 3/8” wide 2 1/4” deep 1 1/4” gap Square Edge

Western Hemlock

1 3/8” wide 2 1/4” deep

1 1/4” gap Square Edge

Harmony Oak

4” wide 12 mm deep

1” gap Flow Along Curve

Harmony Oak

4” wide 12mm deep

0.5” gap Flow Along Curve

Harmony Oak

6” wide 12mm deep

1” gap Flow Along Curve

Harmony Oak 4” wide 3/8” deep 1” gap Flow Along Curve

Refinement

Harmony Oak 4” wide 3/8” deep 0.5” gap Flow Along Curve

Harmony Oak

4 Clarifying

6” wide 3/8” deep 1” gap Flow Along Curve

Design Development

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Dark Brown 4” wide 8mm deep 0.25” gap Flow Along Curve

Dark Brown

4” wide 8mm deep

0.25” gap Flow Along Curve

Pale

6” wide 8mm deep

0.25” gap Flow Along Curve

Pale

6” wide 8mm deep

0.25” gap Flow Along Curve

Pale 6” wide 8mm deep 0.25” gap Flow Along Curve

Pale 6” wide 8mm deep 0.25” gap Flow Along Curve


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Fabrication Collaboration Translation Experience

176


REVERBERATION 2020

Details Exterior Wood SofďŹ t

Stair - Formliner Wall

Tower B Glazing


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Fabrication Collaboration Translation Experience

178


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

Interview

180


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Q / Why did you decide to use precast concrete over any other material? A / The cost has been the main factor. Among the other materials we proposed (Precast, Glass, Metal Fin, a mix of Metal and Precast), precast concrete was the most economical solution. Also, it is the most flexible option. Precast can be in any shape or form and, therefore, provide a variety of design solutions. It can be horizontal, vertical, or a complex geometry that can respond to a specific environment or requirement. Secondly, the precast concrete allows us to unify our architectural concepts with the structural requirement - a single point solution to simplify construction. Thirdly, precast concrete is the preferred material in relationship to the existing buildings on the Hershey Medical Campus. Through iterative studies of the precast mix and color, we achieved a texture that created a visual connection and blending to the Campus.

Q / Was BIM used? Did you find it beneficial in the design phase? Was it more beneficial for the different companies involved? A / Yes. High Concrete Group (HCG) uses Tekla Structures for all of their precast concrete modeling and understanding Tekla’s interoperability possibilities were critical to the success of this project. After research, collaboration, and sharing of knowledge and software licenses through Tekla tutorial sessions, HCG and our design team were able to come up with a streamlined workflow that not only worked but kept the integrity of the geometry even through many file translations between softwares. This was all made possible through Rhino’s Grasshopper script and Tekla’s Live Link plugin in Grasshopper. Again, this enabled maximum integrity of the precast panel geometry and HCG ensured a high-quality delivery by guaranteeing a maximum tolerance level of one inch. In addition, BIM coordination was fully utilized throughout all aspects of the project from start to finish as our standard. We coordinated and transmitted BIM models between trades to ensure all design components were up-to-date and sharing these files on a regular basis allowed every trade to be more effective with their time. Our in-house VDC team (Virtual Design Construction) helped us manage, organize, and check the quality of the BIM model including clash detection and by utilizing many other capabilities to ensure the quality of construction. For example, during construction, sink holes were discovered on site and for this reason, a full, high spatial resolution laser scanning was performed on site of the garage to measure sinkhole-related subsidence in the foreseeable 5-year and 10-year future. This point-cloud based BIM modeling and Cintoo’s cloud-based platform allowed easy collaboration and sharing of 3d data.


Case Study 01 Penn State Health Westview Garage

182

Interview

Q / What were the unique obstacles you had to overcome with this project? A / The primary obstacle that we had to overcome was the technical requirements of the pre-stressed concrete. The prestressed rig was built at a certain size and due to this, our design team went through many iterations of studies to redesign the cross section of the members and meeting the following requirements: 1. 2. 3.

Keeping the design intent of creating a threedimensional visual effect Meeting the technical and dimensional requirements to fit in the pre-stressed rig. Meeting the transportation requirements for moving the pieces from the factory to the site.

Model Workflow Team Collaboration Tree LJC RHINOCEROS Plugin

LJC High sat

3dm

CENTROID DATA

grasshopper

data to subcontractors

LJC

GEOMETRY

High

TEKLA STRUCTURES 2017 SP7 Build 15001

file import

data transfer to subcontractors Geometry Reference

Generation of Families

OPTIMIZED for SHOP DRAWINGS

The panels had to be of a specific thickness, size, and weight. LJC REVIT High High Using a Grasshopper script in Rhino and tools in Tekla, we Clayco were continually monitoring the panels’ weight to not exceed CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS 100,000 lbs while tweaking the shape until we reached the LJC Clayco optimum design. And supplying accurate centroid (CoG) data to HCG for each panel was critical to ensure a successful erection on-site due to multiple rotations required during transport and installation. Initially, we explored using a 3d-printer to create the mold for the concrete panels. However, the mold could not support the concrete’s sheer weight and the heat released during its curing. We then took a more conventional approach using a CNC machine to route wooden boards and create a support structure to sustain the panels’ weight. The mold for the heaviest canopy panel took as long as a month to complete, mainly due to the size but mostly sanding and routing the boards manually to render the curvature, especially between wooden panels to hide the seam. In the end, a combination of a 3d printed rubber model for the water drain and fiberglass cloth were used to make the pouring and lifting and transport of the concrete successful.

Q / Were there any strict scheduling requirements that affected production or your design? A / The most time-sensitive item was the timing and delivery of the optimized 3d modeling of the precast panels to HCG. Transferring the model to HCG for optimization and final production tricky because of software interoperability. Because this was a first-of-a-kind of effort from both the design and construction team, we were certainly exploring the unknown and taking risks. So all the trades were extra careful utilized all man-power and resources to meet the deadline of the opening of the medical campus that had real need for the garage.


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 02

184

Fulton East

Design Process

Fulton East Location

Chicago, IL

Program

Office and Retail

Size Delivery Design and Completion

Enterprise Partners

90,000 SF Design-Build 2018-2020


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Case Study 02 Fulton East

Narrative

186


REVERBERATION 2020

A New Standard for Fulton Market Fulton East is a 12-story, 125,000 SF commercial office building with ground-floor retail and parking. The design team set out to do much more with a 10,605 SF floorplate that is one-third of the size of most office tower plates in the area. From the beginning, the design team wanted to promote biophilic design features that foster healthy workspaces. Additionally, the team wanted to provide amenities on par with the high-end office spaces in Fulton Market and respect the neighborhood’s architectural context while making this boutique building iconic and notable on many levels. A Contemporary Warehouse At the start of the project, the design team tried to incorporate all that people appreciate about old warehouses. The design team drew inspiration from the spatial scale, gridded windows, materiality, and clerestory lighting of traditional warehouses. The approach was then to apply these elements in creative, forward-looking ways to continue the conversation of Fulton Market and Chicago’s future. The design also adopts biophilic principles not found in traditional warehouses. Access to outdoor space and generous daylighting for all tenants were key priorities for this project. Design Challenges as Design Opportunities The design team worked to optimize Fulton East’s 12,000 SF site to match office towers’ amenities two to three times its size and surpass them with forward-thinking design and nextgeneration innovations. At each stage of the design process, challenges were seen as opportunities to apply unique design solutions. The design team optimized the floor plate structure and core alignment to facilitate flexible space planning and required parking. They found innovative systems for cladding the envelope that was cost-effective and eye-catching and adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic by pioneering nextgeneration technologies never before seen in commercial offices in Chicago. Innovation Driven by Collaboration This building’s innovation was forged by seamless collaboration between LJC, the Clayco enterprise, manufacturers, subcontractors, and the client. The design-build process allowed for more direct and time appropriate involvement and coordination of the entire project team.


Case Study 02

188

Fulton East

Process

Smart Start

Discovery

1 Research Design Attributes

Client Goals + Objectives

Representation

Pre-Design

Goals Objectives Performance

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Precedent Material Context Mapping

Climate Program Context


REVERBERATION 2020

Big Idea

Ideation

3 Iteration

Refinement

4 Clarifying

Schematic Design

Design Development

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Delivery

Onward

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Experience Sections Renderings Models Books

Evaluate Systematically

Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys


Case Study 02

190

Fulton East

Process

A New Typology in Fulton Market Fulton East is centrally located in the Fulton Market neighborhood, directly off the CTA Morgan Street’ L’ stop, and within walking distance of suburban commuter train stations, hotels, amenities, commercial and residential properties, and the Chicago Loop. The design team wanted to convey how robust the offerings were in the area and how unique the proposed office typology was. Most office towers in the area have floor plates three times the size of Fulton East. It was the owner’s vision to suggest a new typology of a boutique office tower. The design team’s charge was to develop a project that created the advantages that its size, location, and articulation could offer.

Discovery

1 Research Mobilization Phase

Precedent Material Context Mapping

FR

OM

I- 90

NUTE WALK L MENT Y EASE ING ENTR ING LOAD PARK

FR ST OM AT IO N

RETAIL ENTRY OFFICE ENTRY


REVERBERATION 2020

FR

OM

I-9

0

SUB AREA A

’-0”

149

SUB AREA B 107

’-0

11” 94’1

2 MINUTE WALK 1 MINUTE WALK PU

11’-10”

ENT S EM TRY G EA DIN G EN LOA KIN PAR

BL

IC

AL LE Y

15’-0”

SITE

FR ST OM M AT ION ORG 80 AN 0’

RETAIL ENTRY OFFICE ENTRY

PLATE = 10,165 SF RSF SINGULAR = 9,085 SF RSF MULTI = 8,730 SF

PLATE = 10,165 SF RSF SINGULAR = 8,955 SF RSF MULTI = 8,765 SF

PLATE = 10,165 SF RSF SINGULAR = 9,085 SF RSF MULTI = 8,730 SF

PLATE = 10,165 SF RSF SINGULAR = 8,895 SF RSF MULTI = 8,710 SF

Site Analysis & Core Location Though the location is ideal, the design team needed to consider site logistics early on to make the project feasible. The combination of a smaller floor plate serving parking plates and office plates demanded a reconsideration of typical office cores. The team developed an offset core that created light-filled, fully open floor plates with a deconstructed linear core while allowing for reasonable parking efficiency on the floors below.


Case Study 02

192

Fulton East

Process

Push Pull

Rounded

Corner Office

Offset

Staggered Terraces

Sculpted for Views

Discovery

1 Research Mobilization Phase

Precedent Material Context Mapping

FR

OM

Early Massing Exploration

I- 90

NUTE WALK L MENT Y EASE ING ENTR ING LOAD PARK

FR ST OM AT IO N

RETAIL ENTRY OFFICE ENTRY

The design team explored multiple massing scenarios before adopting a more refined strategy. The goal was to push the client’s expectations of what’s possible on the site and build a library of design elements that could articulate the project program and goals. In doing so, the team was able to clarify what was needed to make the building work and then build on that each step of the way forward.


REVERBERATION 2020

Massing Exploration & Refinement

VI

EW

S

TO

CI

TY

The goal was to have the building feel whole, to integrate the entry level, parking levels, office levels and the rooftop from their interior-driven programmatic needs with an articulation that felt both forward thinking and respectful of the neighborhood context. It was also important to have this smaller volume feel large. To have taller proportions, the glass box extends through the top parking level to the rooftop, where the glass lifts into the clerestory. The solid core, articulated with Prodema, anchors the overall mass by breaking the glass volume, and runs up and into the penthouse structure. The base establishes the relationship to the context with an active ground floor.

MA

XIM

IZE

LEA

SE

DE

PTH

BU

IL

DI

NG

ID

EN

TI

TY

BL O VIE CKE WS D

GLASS VOLUMES

ARTICULATED SOLID

S

ES

C

E

AC

C

I RV SE

CO

NT

EX

TR

ELA TIO

NS

ACTIVE GROUND FLOOR

HIP

SERVICE


Case Study 02

194

Fulton East

Process

NP

Analysis

EOR

IA S TRE

ET

N

2 Diagramming

V IE W

S TO

C IT Y

Conceptual Design

Climate Program Context

B LO

OFF SET COR E TO

ED

V IE

W

HO

X TO

NH

OT

EL

LEA SE D EPT H

VI

NP

MA XIM IZE

CK

Y SB

EW

EOR

SF

IA S TRE

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M CO RN ER

N N


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Facilitating Views The shifted core’s strategic placement addressed the 12-story neighbor to the south and created an open floor plate with expansive unobstructed views of the Chicago Loop to the east and the historic buildings of Fulton Market to the north and west. This strategy was to provide the best possible experience for tenants. More unobstructed views outwards mean more opportunities for daylighting in the building’s interior. Creating a concrete structure with 12’ floor-to-floor height also makes the office floors brighter, lighter, and spacious, making for an experience similar to the historic loft buildings in the neighborhood. The rooftop showcases how the design team created unique opportunities from design features. The shifted core allowed for a generous pedestrianfriendly rooftop amenity deck. Similarly, the clerestory in the shared amenity floor made the amphitheater seating on the roof possible.


Case Study 02

196

Fulton East

Process Materiality Brick is the most common material in Fulton Market, both historically and in newer buildings. Steel and gridded windows and heavy timber are prominent as well. The design team drew tonal and textural inspiration with these materials but sought to apply them in a manner that is both informed by context and innovative. Wood is prominent in Fulton Market, but usually as an accent or interior material. Here, with the Prodema, it is an outward expression that is eye-catching and distinct. This rich, warm material was used to highlight the street-level retail, screen the parking garage, and clad the southern core.

Ideation

3

In articulating the window wall, the super grid echoes the articulated steel structure of the ‘L’ and some other structures in the area. Here, the steel breaks up the glass volume and frames the building’s base, which is activated with Prodema.

Iteration

Schematic Design

Materiality Constraints Modeling Comparison

Fulton Market is a neighborhood of warehouses with large punched windows. The window wall grid follows these warehouse proportions of masonry, but it also references the historic multipaned windows themselves.


REVERBERATION 2020

A New Design Vision for Fulton Market The design for Fulton East both gestures to the tradition of warehouses in the neighborhood and the Loop’s contemporary offices. It also meets the street in a familiar way in how it references that tradition. The cast iron aspects of old Fulton Market are expressed through column and storefront articulations. The decorative brickwork of Fulton Market is translated into the pleated Prodema cladding that conceals the building’s parking garage. The design intent was to be firmly grounded in the context but forward-looking.


Case Study 02

198

Fulton East

Process

Maximize Daylighting

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Clerestories are common in many traditional warehouses and was an asset the design team wanted to introduce in Fulton East’s top amenity floor to give it the edge the client sought. The clerestory adds daylighting to the interior space, creates the amphitheater seating structure on the roof terrace, and provides the building with a particular iconography in the Fulton Market skyline.

8“ PT slab

mullion @ 30” AFF

12’-0” FLOOR TO FLOOR WITH FLAT PLATE/30’ SPAN

11’-4” floor to underside of slab

The minimal structural system allows for stunning, unobstructed views of Chicago’s skyline outside. There are only three interior columns in the office space, and the design team chose a flat post-tensioned slab with these three columns over a dropped beam post-tensioned structure with no columns to create the bright and airy experience the client was after while maintaining budget expectations. The compact core to the south allowed the office footprint to gain as much desirable daylighting as possible.


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 02

200

Fulton East

Process

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

Detail Texture Depth Complexity

Facade Exploration

Selected


REVERBERATION 2020

Making A Design Statement The team chose to feature the warmth of the wood in the lobby, the most visible part of the structure. The design team explored several arrangements of the panelized wood system, Prodema, to conceal the ultra-compact parking floors above the lobby. The three-dimensional folded panel’s randomized composition excited the client and set the direction for how the Prodema panels would be applied. The design team took on the challenge to apply the material, commonly used as balcony railings in Fulton Market, as a full-fledged envelope-cladding material and eye-catching design feature. Just under 10,000 SF of Prodema was used on the southern facade, reaching over 140’ high and covering twothirds of its width, and 2,000 SF used for the folding design cladding on the second and third level of the parking floors on the front facade. The lobby proved to be the most sensitive portion of the design because it was part of the public realm; it remains the most experiential part of the project. It was an opportunity to make a gesture to the Fulton area and to make a statement that highlights the restaurant on Fulton St. This part of the design required the most collaboration and communication between LJC, Clayco, and the client. All hands were on deck from the iterative stages of the lobby’s design through construction.


Case Study 02 Fulton East

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Fabrication Collaboration Translation Experience

202


REVERBERATION 2020

“The process we have makes design more natural. It was a genuine relationship where we’re all in a room, always: Clayco, the construction team, the designer, and the client. There’s no division there. We’re making the decisions together in the room, design-related, cost-related, or feasibility in terms of construction. Everyone’s got a say in how it should go. I think the collaboration part was key, and the client was a big part of the collaboration.”

Jonny Noble Associate Principal

Designing With Prodema Prodema is typically an accent material on buildings. This project changed that, making it a prominent part of the overall architectural/experiential expression. It was also one of the most extensive vertical wall applications, and the pleated Prodema front façade was unlike any previous product installation. To this end, LJC and Clayco led the Prodema designbuild team, working with the same fabricator and installer from Clayco’s Zurich headquarters project. The design-build team used a live SketchUp model to test the feature’s methodology, appearance, and detailing. This allowed for rapid input and full collaboration with all team members. This process and the mockups and shop visits kept the process moving forward quickly, informed, and efficient for all involved. This intense collaboration process helped deliver an assembly system that both LJC and Prodema can use for future projects.


Case Study 02 Fulton East

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting

204


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 02 Fulton East

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting

206


REVERBERATION 2020

Next-Gen Building Systems

• • • • • •

MAD Elevator’s Toe-To-Go Hands-Free System airPHX Non-Thermal Plasma Disinfection Technology Rosslare Touch-Free Key Fob Secure Access System Butterfly Touch-Free After-Hours Secure Access System Sherwin-Williams Paint Shield Sloan Touch Free and SloanTec Protection in bathrooms

Delivery During COVID-19 At the onset of the pandemic, the client pushed LJC and Clayco to adapt the new office tower to the new paradigm. Though construction had topped out at the start of the year, the design team began to research systems and products to introduce in the design. Fulton East was the first office tower in Chicago to apply many of these strategies.

“It was the timing of when COVID-19 hit and the foresight of our client to say this is something we should address. We can adapt to a pandemic, and we should.” Jonny Noble Associate Principal

Many of the pursued design components set Fulton East ahead of the curve for COVID readiness. The generous balcony on each floor is atypical for office towers today and promotes health and wellness. The office tower prioritizes daylighting, and the smaller floorplate and floor-to-ceiling glass maximize the amount of light that reaches the heart of the building. The open floorplate is an excellent asset to organizations looking to arrange flexibly and at a social distance, and the rooftop garden provides a much needed outdoor resource for its tenants. The design features the team applied to Fulton East will promote wellness for tenants long after the pandemic.

“We didn’t have to go backwards since flexibility was inherent in the design. We just had to look at a different future.” Drew Ranieri Associate Principal


Case Study 02 Fulton East

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting

208


REVERBERATION 2020

To get a better perspective on the pivot LJC and Clayco made to respond to COVID, we spoke with Charles Meagher of Clayco. He was part of the team that researched, designed, and oversaw the mechanical systems’ adaptation to promote a healthier and safer workspace.

Q / At what stage of construction did the design team start to pivot in response to COVID-19?

Q / How do the air treatment systems in Fulton East work?

A / All equipment and ductwork was installed and the controls systems were 90% complete. Retrofit applications, such as UV-C lights in the rooftop units, air filtration and other air cleaning solutions, were immediately investigated for effectiveness, safety, and cost. The team spoke to product vendors, consulting engineers and even an industrial hygienist recommended by our St. Louis office while doing our research.

A / It’s a proprietary technology, that, in short, is a black box that draws air through it and kills the virus in the process.

Q / How much time and work did the team commit to making these changes in such a short period? A / The time invested was significant. I met Drew onsite to review the installation; we did research and reached out to vendors often. Once the team set on that path, we went deep into that rabbit hole. The touchless elevators were a last-minute change, and it was the first building in the country to have them. Certainly with Clayco, and what we do, it lends itself to how we could react quickly to what was needed at that moment.

Q / Prior to COVID, how were these systems typically used? A / Before COVID, you generally saw UV-C used only in hospitals and healthcare applications. A typical installation would put UV-C lights on the cooling coils to keep bacteria from growing and sometimes on the outside air intakes to treat incoming fresh air. With COVID, we are now seeing the outside air installation becoming more common.

Q / Do you see this being standard in future projects? A / I think we’ll see air treatment a lot more. More clients have started asking about HVAC options; it’s becoming a topic of conversation. In addition to UV-C and the airPHX system installed at Fulton East, there are other products such as plasma systems and different filtering technologies that can be used.

Q / What other changes are you seeing in your work today? A / Designing ducted return air systems instead of plenum systems is a fairly low cost design option being discussed as an alternative more often. The idea is that by capturing air from specific areas will help confine particles to that area; any pathogens released will be contained rather than, for instance, being drawn across a large open office. I also think airflow modeling (CFD-computational fluid dynamics) may be utilized more often to prove the air movement during design. I’m glad we talked about this, because the changes are happening now.


Case Study 03

210

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Design Process

Historic Renovation & Adaptive Reuse Macy’s Flagship

24 East Washington Location

Chicago, IL

Program

Historic Renovation - Office

Size Delivery Design and Completion

Enterprise Partners

740,000 SF Design-Build 2018-2021


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 03 24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Narrative

212


REVERBERATION 2020

LJC’s scope included the full renovation of 5 levels of office including new elevators, MEPFP systems, an entry experience including the exterior canopy expression, lobby, amenity space & rooftop deck. Embedded in the historical culture of Chicago, The design pays homage to the legacy of the historic department store while providing a new energetic workplace in the heart of the Loop.

Landmarks & Legacy The Macy’s flagship store has a strong and treasured legacy. The buildings themselves illustrate the timeline of growth and innovation of the department store, dating back 125 years. The design team worked closely with landmarks to ensure the legacy of the project stayed intact while providing a state of the art office space with class A amenities. Design queues were taken from the buildings history, paying homage to the architecture and activity that once filled its terracotta walls.

Multi-Disciplinary Approach This project required a multi-disciplinary approach where our architecture, interiors and landscape teams worked together to weave every detail into a composed whole. The scope of the project required close coordination, specifically on the rooftop and amenity level that was challenged by both existing conditions and Landmark status. Success was attained only through our crossdisciplinary and integrated approach.

One Team with and Accelerated Timeline The LJC/Clayco design-build process enabled the project’s accelerated timeline. The design team worked in sync with the construction team and the client from day one, blurring lines and responsibilities to achieve an on budget, on time project worthy of the landmark department store. LJC & Clayco were supported by TAG, Clayco’s Technical Assurance Group, as well as BIM coordinators who ensured smooth coordination between trades and consultants. This collaborative approach freed up the team to focus on emerging design & construction challenges in real time. The final design & delivery of the project is an active workplace that compliments the legacy of the historic department store. There is a misconception that design is solely about creating something new. Sometimes the most innovative and creative designs are the ones that wrap their arms around history.


Case Study 03

214

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

Smart Start

Discovery

1 Research Design Attributes

Client Goals + Objectives

Representation

Pre-Design

Goals Objectives Program

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Context Building Org Program Landmarks

Visioning Program Blocking Landmarks


REVERBERATION 2020

Big Idea

Ideation

Refinement

3 Iteration

Delivery

4 Clarifying

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Schematic Design

Design Development

Precedent Language Materials Experience Landmarks

Detailing Coordination Exploratory Demo Landmarks

Documentation Exploratory Demo On-Site Coordination BIM Design Build

WEIV EDACAF

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B I

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Onward

D

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Evaluate Systematically

Owner Training Experience Monitoring Handover Surveys


Case Study 03

216

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

Marshall Fields Legacy Research was critical to the success of this landmarked building’s adaptive re-use journey from retail to office program. The legacy and evolution of the store was extensively researched through visits to the Art Institute and Chicago’s public libraries where imagery, articles and newspaper stories were collected. This allowed the team to understand the history of the existing five buildings, which had been stitched together into one, and was pertinent to resolving the programming, detailing and constructability challenges while maintaining the original historical design intention. Ample time was spent on-site exploring and documenting the existing conditions.

Discovery

Historic Legacy

1 Research Mobilization Phase

Context Building Org Program Landmarks

06.22.2018 | 24 E. WASHINGTON STREET | PAGE 138


REVERBERATION 2020

SKYLIGHT RESTORATION

ELEVATOR CORE

NEW FACADE LEVEL 10-14 (NOT VISIBLE FROM STREET)

PERIMETER WINDOW RESTORATION SKYLIGHT RESTORATION

NEW ROOF DECK

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NEW CANOPY INSTALLATION E AT ST ST

REMOVAL & STORAGE OF (2) EXISTING NON-HISTORIC WINDOW BAYS

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REMOVAL OF CONCRETE SIDEWALK, PLANTERS (2), AND INFORMATION DISPLAY. NEW PAVERS AT ENTRY

Development of Program Scope

Developing Program Scope At the beginning of the design process, the client leaned on LJC to develop a program and a full understanding of the scope of work required, as well as identifying challenges of that scope. This pursuit resulted in the renovation of 5 floors to office program, a roof deck, a new elevator core, skylight restoration, a new entry canopy & lobby.


Case Study 03

218

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

Building layout Original

Randolph

5 1914

Wabash 4 Building

3

1906

1892

Holden Court (Alley) NORTHBRIDGE 1914

1 1902

SOUTHBRIDGE 1913

State Building

Washington

Wabash

2 1907

The 5 building complex is roughly divided in two by a north-south cross-block alley known as Holden Court. 1. 2.

Half of the building fronted State Half of the building fronted Wabash

State RED DATES INDICATE DATES OF INDIVIDUAL BUILDING CONSTRUCTION

Building layout Vertical Circulation

Wabash Middle Wabash

Middle State

North State

Washington

These two sections were divided into 3 by elevator banks & escalators into six “rooms” (South State, Middle State, etc).

Elevator

Elevator

Randolph

Analysis

Elevator

South Wabash

Elevator

North Wabash

South State

State

2 Diagramming

Building layout Atria

Wabash Middle Wabash

Randolph

Atrium North State

Elevator

Atrium

Elevator

Visioning Program Blocking Landmarks

Elevator

South Wabash

Elevator

North Wabash

Washington

Conceptual Design

Middle State

State

Atrium South State

There are two light wells on State Street side and one central atrium. South: 6 story atrium with Tiffany glass vault North: 13 story atrium Walnut Room is a 2 story atrium located above the Tiffany vault Marshall Field & Company referred to itself as a “Cathedral of all the Stores.”

Building Analysis Careful analysis of existing infrastructure and new programmatic needs drove the selection for the new elevator core location. This placement was key to the project that serves the five levels of office without impacting historic features like the atrium stair cores and historical details. The forgotten space selected allowed for relative efficiency of construction and sequencing, an outcome of the partnership with Clayco. Thorough understanding of the building allowed LJC & Clayco team to serve as a trusted advisor to the client, providing a reliable and knowledgeable source for insight and direction through the entire process.


REVERBERATION 2020

I A D

L

B

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I

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D Landmark staircase

K C

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New mechanical chase in existing elevator shaft Mechanical duct relocation

C New elevator core

I

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New canopy

F

New lobby

G

Landmark marble staircase

H

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I

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J

New escalator

K

Visitor’s center

L

Relocated fountain

LANDMARK ELEMENT AREA OF WORK

0

Development of Program Scope

Historic Condition

50’

100’


Case Study 03

220

24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

B

D B C

E

F A

Analysis A

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design

Visioning Program Blocking Landmarks

A

Mullion extension fins

B

Edge filler wall

C

Exterior metal panel west wall enclosure

D

New roof enclosure

E

Painted curtain wall system

F

ACM metal decorative frame

Complimenting Historic Building As the building is landmarked, any additional work on the exterior needed to be an expression of its time, rather than an element that would blend into the five historical buildings. This led to a clean and simple design for the face of the new elevator core. The dark frame and reveals set themselves apart from the historical buildings while also providing levels of tolerance for constructability.

Facade Design

B


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Building in Tolerance Due to the nature of adaptive re-use projects & the advanced timeline set by the client, all concepts and design had to be previewed through the lens of constructability. The design had to accommodate for exibility so that once selective demolition was completed as well as new information was uncovered, the design could adapt while keeping the project on schedule.


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process STATE ST

WABASH AVE

ROOFTOP MADISON ST

GRO

N OU GR

UND

LEV

EL V

IEW

MONROE ST

DL EV EL VIE

EXISTING BUILDING

STATE ST

WABASH AVE

W

WASHINGTON ST

Section through Washington Street Looking North

Analysis

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design

Visioning Program Blocking Landmarks

Section through Washington Street Looking West

Historic Preservation through Site Lines Site lines & setbacks were critical to designing the roof deck amenity for the office program. This required the team to work closely with Landmarks, including in field tests to verify design assumptions and results. It was imperative that any new design elements did not change or alter the view of the building that pedestrians have from the street. Through careful analysis of the site lines from all points along the sidewalks, the team was able to craft solutions that didn’t impede on the historical presence but created captivating spaces that ranged in scale & program. View shed diagrams were established, taller elements were held back from the edge, and parapets were used intelligently to mask furniture & other plantings.

MICHIGAN AVE

LASALLE ST

CLARK ST

RANDOLPH ST

WASHINGTON ST


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B

C

A

A’

12’-14’ HT. LIMIT 10’-12’ HT. LIMIT 8’-10’ HT. LIMIT 6’-8’ HT. LIMIT

4’-6’ HT. LIMIT

2’-4’ HT. LIMIT

C’

View Shed Diagram

2’-4’

4’-6’

6’-8’

8’-10’

12’-14’

10’-12’

14’-16’

14’ - 4 1/4”

12’ - 4 1/2”

10’ - 2 1/2”

NOTE: 9’ MAX SHRUB HEIGHT

14’-16’

12’-14’

10’-12’

8’-10’

6’-8’

4’-6’

2’-4’

12’ - 3 1/2”

B’

69’ - 10”

SECTION A-A’ LOOKING NORTH SCALE: 1/16”=1’

8'

2’-4’

4’-6’

6’-8’

8’-10’

10’-12’

12’-14’

10’ - 2 1/2”

NOTE: MOCK-UP SHOWED THE STRUCTURE IS NOT VISIBLE FROM STREET

2’-4’

4’-6’

8’-10’

10’-12’

12’-14’

14’-16’

6’-8’

NOTE: MOCK-UP SHOWED THE STRUCTURE IS NOT VISIBLE FROM STREET

12’ - 3 1/2”

4'

14’ - 4 1/4”

2'

12’ - 4 1/2”

0'

28’ - 2 1/4”

28’ - 2 1/4”

SECTION C-C’ LOOKING EAST

SECTION B-B’ LOOKING EAST

SCALE: 1/16”=1’ 0'

2'

4'

SCALE: 1/16”=1’

8'

2'

4'

8'

B

C 7’-5”

0'

+10’2” ht.

+10’2” ht., 12’4” ht.

+12’4” ht.

+14’4” ht.

+14’4” ht.

+10’2” ht., 12’4” ht.

+12’4” ht.

+9’ ht. max

+12’3” ht. A

A’

+12’3” ht. +9’ ht. max +10’2” ht.

2’-3”

5’-0”

10’-5” 34’-1”

69’-10”

30’-0”

30’-0”

33’-4”

2’-3”

C’

B’

Height Restriction Diagram


Case Study 03 24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

224

Process

Ideation

3

Iteration

Schematic Design

Precedent Language Materials Experience Landmarks

Designed for Comfort and Experience Solar orientation, wind, views & adjacency analysis were performed for the roof deck design. The result was a design that focused on two large shade structures with seating design for outdoor lunches and meetings. Flanking the pergolas, a lawn element with ornamental trees and plantings create a place for lawn games and an escape from the dense urban surroundings. Water features at the east and west end of the axis provide a soothing trickle sound that masks the hustle and bustle below. Lastly, nooks with ďŹ re features provide more intimate seating areas for more cozy gatherings.


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PH

OL

ND

RA

ST PH

OL

ND

RA

W AB

ST

H

W AB H

AV E

ST ON

AS

H

AV E

ST

GT

ON

HIN

GT

HIN

AS W

ST

AS W

ST

ST

E AT ST

G

HIN

AS W

ST

AS

E AT ST

E AT ST

N TO

PH

OL

ND

RA

W AB

AS

PAGE 5 | 24 E WASHINGTON S STREET TREET

Views

Solar

Access

ST

AV E


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

Historical Wheat Motif CHAMPAGNE FINISH METAL PANEL 50% OPEN PERFORATED METAL SCREEN

PRE FINISHED COMPOSITE METAL PANEL (CANOPY)

PRE FINISHED ALUM. WINDOW MULLION

SECONDARY PRE FINISHED ALUM. WINDOW MULLION

VIRACON (GLASS) VE 24 - 2M

CREAMY MARBLE LOBBY FLOOR FINISH

GRAY/DARK STONE CURB PAVING

Entry Study - Flat Centered

Ideation

3

Iteration

Schematic Design

Precedent Language Materials Experience Landmarks

Paying Homage The entry to the office lobby serves as a new icon along the building’s facade. The design team made critical decisions to make the new entry way stand out while complying with Landmarks by focusing on proportion and balance. The canopy is meant to feel light but have visual weight. Its depth was carefully selected to contrast the existing canopies while still providing protection from the elements. And lastly, the canopy details were a subtle nod honoring the original Marshall Field’s and now Macy’s legacy . The wheat icon that was insignia of Marshall Field’s was found throughout the building in historical details. That symbol was taken and abstracted into a new pattern that became a key iconic pattern utilized on the facade design in both the screen and the underside of the canopy.


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

G H G

J J

PAINTED STOREFRONT SYSTEM

G

HERCULITE DOORS

H

STRUCTURAL FRAME SUPPORTING GLASS SYSTEM AND CANOPY

J

CLEAR INSULATED CLEAR INSULATED STOREFRONT GLAZING STOREFRONT GLAZING

O

O G O H

G

Storefront + Structural Frame System

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

B

D

Detailing Coordination Exploratory Demo Landmarks

E F

VESTIBULE CEILING WITH UNDERSIDE LIGHTING

B

ACM/METAL PANEL CANOPY COVER

D

PERFORATED METAL SCREEN

E

ACM/METAL PANEL WITH BRANDING ON THE UNDERSIDE

F

LOWERED VESTIBULE CEILING

N

New Canopy Element H

H

A

Creating a Presence

A

B

B I

I

C

C

F

F D

E

D

E

The detailing of the canopy was approached in the same way as the facade of the new elevator core, with a careful consideration of constructability and respect for the historic facade while maintaining room for tolerance. The new system fits within the historic openings and in line with the existing storefront. The canopy structure was carefully coordinated to not impact the historic building which is enhanced by its floating design.


REVERBERATION 2020

WASHINGTON ST EXISTING ELEVATION

NEW ENTRANCE LOCATION

ALIGN TO EXISTING STOREFRONT

WASHINGTON ST PROPOSED ELEVATION

50% PERFORATED METAL SCREEN FRONT, SIDE AND UNDERSIDE/INTERNALLY LIT

A

ACM/METAL PANEL WITH BRANDING ON THE UNDERSIDE

B

PAINTED STOREFRONT SYSTEM

C

10’ HERCULITE DOORS

D

SIDEWALK STONE PAVING

E

PAINTED METAL REVEAL FRAME AROUND OPENING

F

BRANDING ON SIDEWALK PAVING

G

NEW PERFORATED LOUVERS OVER EXISTING WINDOW + LOUVERS

H

ACM/METAL PANEL CANOPY COVER

I

H

H

A

A

B

B I

I

C

C

F

F D

G

E

D

E

G


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

14th Floor Bar & Lounge

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

Detailing Coordination Exploratory Demo Landmarks

H

14th Floor Elevator Lobby & Grab & Go

H

A

A

B

B I

I

C

C

F

F D

E

D

E

14th Floor Lounge


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C A

B

A

Fitness Center Entry

B

Locker Rooms

C

Studio

Amenity Design The amenity oors balanced uncovering the existing architecture & creating palettes that spoke to historic Marshal Fields legacy with greens, golds and warm tones hearkening back to the original brand. The design weaves rich textures and smooth modern lines, a balance that was reďŹ ned with time and iteration to achieve the perfect composition. Material Palette


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

WHITE ONYX

WHITE GLAZED BRICK WALLS

MATTE BLACK WOOD SEATING

BLACK LEATHER SEATING

CORTEN STEEL PLANTERS AND BASE

TERRAZZO FLOORING LIMESTONE PLANTERS

BRONZE FABRIC MESH AT ELEVATOR WINDOWS GREENERY BLACKENED STEEL AT ELEVATOR FACADE

Material Selection

Refinement Furniture Selection

4 Clarifying

Uncovering History Design Development

Detailing Coordination Exploratory Demo Landmarks

H

H

A

A

B

B I

I

C

C

F

F D

E

D

E

Exploratory demolition unveiled that the new location of the lobby & elevator cores once served as a secondary, VIP entrance for motor cars. Beautiful glazed brick, approachable but elegant, was uncovered, revealing a glimpse into the original experience of the place. The design was re-thought to incorporate the find, the street below, glazed brick on either side & the sky above. The light ceiling element, meant to invoke the feeling of the sky, was studied through quick iteration. The outcome is a lobby that speaks to the history of not just the building with the incorporation of curated digital content but of the physical place and the legacy and excitement of the original department store.

Ceiling Design Iteration


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24 E Washington Macy’s Flagship

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Documentation Exploratory Demo On-Site Coord. BIM Design Build

Feature Design Designing the featured installation for the Macy’s lobby required close collaboration between the manufacturer of the resin panels, the installer of the frame, the fabricator of the clock mechanism itself, and, of course, our partners at Clayco. Panels need to be large, have a printable surface, and have a transparency to rival glass. A custom time piece was created that matched the profile of the historical hands. The clock installation was a delicate and detailed piece and would not have been possible without our commitment to working through each step with the suppliers, fabricators, and installers.


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Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration Documentation Exploratory Demo On-Site Coord. BIM Design Build

Thorough Documentation

Anticipating Existing Conditions

The documentation efforts were carefully coordinated with details highly important to the landmark process. It was critical to thoroughly illustrate the connections to the historic building. The team utilized detail drawings as well as exploded axonometric drawings to translate design concepts. Those drawings became the basis for shop drawings. The team leaned on fabricators to ensure the best solutions for each design problem were resolved using their expert opinions all while meeting the tight design & fabrication schedule.

Due to the challenging and sometimes hidden existing conditions, a combination of 3d scanning, BIM and manual field verification were used to ensure that the project could be constructed as designed. The design team and construction team anticipated unseen existing conditions and exhibited flexibility by leveraging collaboration to ensure the project remained on schedule throughout demolition and construction.


REVERBERATION 2020

LJC

TAG

Brookfield

Clayco

VDC

One Team From the onset of the project, each party was dedicated to acting as a single team, relying on one another for expertise. LJC brought design rigor to the conversation backed with a thorough understanding of the challenges and requirements to construct this Landmarked project. Working hand in hand with Clayco, and the client, LJC established goals for budget, timeline & design excellence that were met only through the ability to be flexible and nimble.

Advanced Coordination

Point Cloud overlayed with Revit model

To understand existing conditions and streamline workflows, the team had to be thoroughly coordinated which started with a point cloud scan of the existing building. The data served as the basis for the collaborative model, enhancing accuracy and decreasing time required for coordination.


Case Study 03 Macy’s Flagship

Interview

238


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Q / How did the historic legacy of the project play into the design process? A / We had multiple design iterations over the life of the project. Most of the concepts centered on using traditional/classic materials in a new way including brick, steel, wired glass mixed with rich modern textures. This is most evident in the new lobby. The entrance to the Brookfield space was previously Holden Court, old streetscape running North and South informed a lot of the detailing & direction early on and we expanded from there.

Q / What challenges did working on a historic landmark building create and how did you solve the? A / The legacy of Marshall Field’s influenced our true first priority: Safety. As much as conservation is a key focus for historical and landmark buildings, there were blatant egress and fire hazards throughout the abandoned upper floors. After the final location of the new elevator core had been decided, the next task was implementing Chicago Code (2019, not 1919) emergency egress for future tenants. The design of the elevator lobbies, bathrooms and amenity floors could only be as successful as the Life Safety plans, they were derived from.

Q / How did the collaboration between Clayco and LJC inform the process? A / Clayco needed to go & fast! We sprinted to permit sets to keep them going & had to refine drawings/ details after permit. Any structural penetration or addition to the building had to be adapted to field conditions. LJC being on site full time was essential to completing the project. Lines between architect & builder were very fuzzy, because they needed to be flexible. VIF on a drawing quickly became LJC’s responsibility to verify with the carpentry foreman or Clayco super.


Case Study 04

240

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Design Process

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park Location

Fort Wayne, IN

Program

Riverfront Public Park

Size Delivery Design and Completion

6 Acres Design-Bid-Build 2015 - 2019


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Narrative

242


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History The City of Fort Wayne, Indiana, has a rich history of Native American and European settlers who strategically designed fortified camps at the confluence of three rivers - evolving into the now modern city. In recent years civic leaders recognized the value of creating riverfront attractions that strengthen their downtown into a regional destination. Goal LJC was selected to re-imagine a new waterfront amenity at Promenade Park along the St. Mary’s River. The goal was to reconnect the community to its river, creating a new urban attraction for the entire region, bringing people from all walks of life to this unique feature. The result is a riverfront that achieves ecological restoration, and now gives the community direct access to the river and opportunities to experience the ebbs, flows, and sounds of nature, and an equitable landscape for people of all ages, races, physical abilities, and economic situations. Ideation Following the creation of a conceptual master plan, our team provided landscape architectural design and documentation for Phase 1 of the St. Mary’s riverfront improvements - a new waterfront amenity, Promenade Park. Through a series of design charrettes and presentations, the team generated design solutions to meet the expectations of the local community. The outcome of the charrettes was to increase recreational use of the river, provide dining and entertainment venues, allow programmed events, be universally accessible, restore river ecology and enhance bio-diversity through sustainable design. The result is a riverfront that now gives the community direct access to the St. Mary’s river and opportunities to experience the ebbs, flows, and sounds of nature, and an equitable landscape for people of all ages, races, physical abilities, and economic situations. Collaboration The landscape architects led the development of the design, documentation and construction administration for all site improvements. The design process included a collaborative approach with experts in landscape architecture (LJC), architecture (Design Collaborative), art, civil engineering (Engineering Resources, INC.), structural engineering (Hoch Associates), soils, lighting, MEP, branding, graphics, and way-finding. During construction, the landscape architect worked very closely with the contractor, client and other allied professionals to deliver the project on time and on budget. This project was a collaborative and inclusive dialogue between the design team, the City of Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne Parks and Recreation, USACE, the Implementation Committee, the Community Foundation, selected stakeholders, and government agencies. Elevated Experience In August of 2019, the Fort Wayne community celebrated the Grand Opening of its $20 million Promenade Park by attending a weekend packed with planned events and live entertainment. The final result was exhilarating, notably surpassing the client’s and the community’s expectations. As residents move back into downtown, they are connecting with the St. Mary’s River and creating economic development for the city of Fort Wayne. This community was starved for this type of development within its public realm and now enjoys a wide array of programmed activities including boating, kayaking, biking, commerce, community events, and natural scenery along its river. With the completion of Phase I of the Riverfront development, the three rivers, Maumee, St. Joseph, and St. Mary’s, are becoming the center of local life once again, and Promenade Park is the city’s newest and most vibrant destination.


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244

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process

Big Idea Smart Start Discovery

1 Research

Design Attributes

Client Goals + Objectives

Analysis

2 Diagramming

Framework

Mobilization Phase

Conceptual Design

Goal

Precedent

Program

Scope

Material

Feasibility

Concept

Context

Scale

Logistics

Mapping

Adjacencies Framework

Representation

Pre-Design


REVERBERATION 2020

Ideation

3 Iteration

Refinement

4 Clarifying

Delivery

Onward

5 Documenting

Schematic Design

Design Development

Construction Documents & Administration

Concept

Detail

Fabrication

Owner Training

Exploration

Constructability

Collaboration

Experience

Materiality

Texture

Translation

Monitoring

Function

Depth

Experience

Handover

Evaluate Systematically

Surveys


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process

Smart Start

0 Pre-Design

Framework

Goal Scope Concept Logistics

246


REVERBERATION 2020

Background “Our design for the Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park was comprised of implementable and affordable ideas that unified the client’s and the community’s desire to draw people back to the river, build pride in the community, create new reasons to come downtown, and to create an open space that would stimulate new opportunities and be a catalyst for development.”

Chip Crawford Managing Director

LJC’s involvement in the Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park improvements included the design and implementation of the first phase in a series of riverfront development efforts, subsequent to a conceptual masterplan for the St. Mary’s Riverfront, developed by SWA. The City of Fort Wayne has a rich history associated with its riverfront. It used to be a hub for commerce, transportation and city life until the lure of suburban living pulled the residents away from the downtown and the riverfront. The intent of the masterplan and the riverfront design was to make the riverfront a desirable destination again, to connect people to the water’s edge, and create activities for everyone to engage in, as a part of a larger goal to draw people back to the river.

Historic Map of Fort Wayne

Raft Race Culture in Fort Wayne

Previous Condition at Riverfront


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Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process

Discovery

1

Research

Mobilization Phase Downtown Experience Analysis around Project Area

Goal Scope Concept Logistics

1 - 37 38 - 67 68 - 73

Design Collaborative Hoch Associates Engineering Resources

Design Research and Public Engagement Initial research consisted of precedent studies – analyses of other successful public riverfronts in similar cities and similar-sized rivers - which allowed the team to make scale, program, and cost comparisons and better understand the site, programming requirements, and potential spatial adjacencies. Through public engagement meetings and feedback from the clients, the design team could come to a clear idea quickly and decide on programmatic elements to accommodate gathering, recreation, shelter, food, beverages, play, and discovery.


REVERBERATION 2020

Preliminary Ideation Preparing for multiple interviews to acquire the project had given the LJC team opportunities to invest essential time and effort into the design early on in the process. They were also able to get wellacquainted with the site, the stakeholders, and the clients’ requirements. The team conducted a series of site development studies, which underlined design goals, and helped pave the way for a highlevel concept, the core of which was carried through to the end.

Ideation 1 Band

Establish Strong Connections to River

Strengthen Open Space Connections / Network

Maximize Viewsheds

Maximize Pedestrian / Bike Access

Manage Flood Control

Catalyze Private Development

Ideation 2 Island

Selected

Ideation 3 Terrace

Preliminary Ideation of Site Design

Site Development Strategies


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process

250

Programming and Feasibility Studies Collaboration within the internal team and with the external project partners was crucial to determine the programmatic site elements that would fulďŹ ll the project requirements – a pavilion to provide shelter, interactive waterscapes to connect the visitors with water, playscapes for children, performance venues for concerts, plazas and other spaces for gathering, dining, and participating in a host of active and passive recreational activities. Overlaying the overall design concept with spatial design ideas and layouts pertaining to the site program allowed the team to explore feasibility and variations in scale, arrangement, circulation and adjacencies of these programmatic elements to develop the design further.

Analysis

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design

Program Feasibility Scale Adjacencies Framework

Programmatic Elements


REVERBERATION 2020

Laser Scan to Identify High Value Trees The planting design utilizes native plants, focusing on ood-resistant species along the river’s edge. LiDAR scanning of the existing trees was used to inform feasibility and placement of the piers and the meander of the elevated walk among the existing tree canopy.


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process

Concept

Circulation

Analysis

2 Diagramming Conceptual Design Activation Program Feasibility Scale Adjacencies Framework

Phasing

Floodplain and Plantings

Rain Garden Plantings

Floodplain and Riparian Plantings


REVERBERATION 2020

A framework strategy was utilized to develop the park, allowing for smart growth and programmatic spaces that would facilitate various activities for all groups of people and at different times of the year. An essential idea in the design was to respond to the realities of uctuating water levels of 7+ feet by creating a series of amphitheater steps and spaces at different elevations that would compensate other areas underwater at certain times of the year. In response to water levels, circulation was also analyzed to make the approach and movement in the site seamless. These studies are a exible urban public space, which is now an equitable oasis for all to enjoy. The park continues to spur additional redevelopment along its borders.


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254

Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Process Design Concept Despite testing various strategies and ideas, the design always circled back to the original concept – creating spaces of varying scales and functions, and tying them together with an integrated, accessible circulation system. The design constitutes open spaces such as the amphitheater and the exible lawn for the larger community to enjoy and more intimate sheltered spaces, for smaller groups and families. Art has been integrated throughout the park. The effectiveness of these design decisions is currently being validated by the crowds of people that utilize the riverfront destination, not only to attend events such as farmers markets, festivals, concerts, and educational programs but also to engage in day-to-day recreational activities.

Riverfront Terrace Sketches

Ideation Rill Section Seating Study

3

Iteration

Schematic Design

Concept Exploration Materiality Function

Rill Section Entry Wall Study

Rill Long section

Dock Seawall Edge Section

North Dock Section


REVERBERATION 2020

Riverfront Terrace Flexibility has been built into the design to allow the parks district to tailor programs and events to their desire. Considerable effort was also put into ADA accessibility and lighting design to make the riverfront park accessible for all people at all times of the day.


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256

Process

View from Treewalk Canopy Trail

Ideation

3

Iteration

Schematic Design

Concept Exploration Materiality Function

View from Riverfront Terrace

Aerial View of Overall Promenade Park


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B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K.

S

T +758

n riso Har

V

+753

e ridg et B Stre

L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X.

Compass pavilion & porch Parking for people with disabilities Fire pits (add alt.) Dining garden Superior street gardens Kid’s canal - water rill Little creek - urban bioswale Gamess - ping pong, foosball, bags, etc. Seat wall planters Comm missioned sculpture Urban streetscape with parallel parking g & food truck access Harriso on street lawn Shade structure & performance space Promenade plaza The ste eps - riverfront terraces Greensscape riverfront terraces South launch / dock Urban swings & hammocks Trailhea ad restrooms W Childre en’s play area Treewa alk canopy trail Restore ed riparian zone e Riverfro ont greenwayy North dock

U

+746

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a .M

St

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+745

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+756

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A +761

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+759.5

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+763

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Main M ain E Entry n

N


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

258

Process

Refinement

4 Clarifying Design Development

Detail Constructability Texture Depth

Universal Accessibility and Long-lasting Material Palette

Designing for Universal Accessibility The riverfront design was further reďŹ ned through studies of composition and materiality of individual program elements. The design utilizes concrete, steel and hardwood to create a durable and lasting space that deects water and debris, and is easily maintainable. Universal accessibility was a key design element in the park that contributed to the overall design. Tactile markers have been used along pathways and the river edge docks, and the lawn has been reinforced for easy access by wheelchairs, crutches and strollers.


REVERBERATION 2020

A custom designed water feature becomes a source of life and happiness, activating the park along it’s spine as it marches its way toward the St. Mary’s River.


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Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Fabrication Collaboration Translation Experience

Riverfront Terrace Construction


REVERBERATION 2020

Implementation and Administration Every detail was thought out and coordinated – from selecting each boulder used in the water rill, to tagging each tree for the designed landscape. The LJC team had the advantage of working with local partners to conduct frequent site visits and help coordinate the construction effort for the entire team. A soil specialist provided soil specifications and visited the site to ensure that soil was placed correctly. The soils ended up being changed for engineered soils and fiber turf reinforcement under lawn areas to help stabilize the soil, improve weight distribution, avoid compaction, and maintain airflow during times when the riverfront would have large crowds. As with any project, the construction process included several challenges. One challenge was posed by an elevated deck that housed movable tables and chairs. Access to the deck was through a vanishing stair, ranging from a flush condition at one end, to an 18” high seat wall condition at the other. On the side facing a planting bed, the elevation exceeded 30” in height, so the team raised the soil, creating a ledge and removing the fall hazard. The parks district still had reservations about this and has since installed a railing on the elevated deck platform’s high side. Such issues and other discrepancies in construction drawings were resolved on-site during site visits in the construction process. Rock Tagging


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262

Process

Delivery

5 Documenting Construction Documents & Administration

Fabrication Collaboration Translation Experience

An elevated canopy walk on the north bank of the river allows visitors perched views during ooding and provides a panoramic perspective of downtown Fort Wayne, events on the river, and the abutting sunken playground with breathtaking views of Fort Wayne’s skyline day or night.

Collaboration Landscape Architecture: Lamar Johnson Collaborative RDG Management Lead, Architecture & MEP: Design Collaborative Architecture, Structural Engineering & Rendering/Animation: Hoch Associates Civil & Structural Engineering, Permitting/Regulatory: Engineering Resources, INC.


REVERBERATION 2020

Bottom: Construction Detail of Treewalk Canopy Trail


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

264

Interview

The children’s playground negotiates the grade change from the riverwalk to the canopy walk above, providing several climbing and sliding opportunities. This area was designed to receive high water levels during ood conditions.


REVERBERATION 2020

Q / Which part(s) of the process stood out and informed the overall outcome? A / We had a strong concept from the very beginning – it was an informed idea formulated through design exploration and vetted through research. We had a very smart start, which saved a lot of time and effort. We did a lot of sketches to get to the main idea. These sketches, in the end previewed exactly what got built. A / The park was well conceived, designed and documented. The team was very excited about this project from the start and that same level of enthusiasm extended into the implementation phase. Personally, not being involved in the project until construction administration, it was challenging to get up to speed on all of the design decisions and technical details. However, the client and our collective group of contractors, designers and engineers had a unified vision and team approach to delivering this park to the public. Everyone worked together to make timely and informed decisions to resolve field issues as they arose. All of the hard work paid off and the park was met with an exceptional response from the community. Q / How did the collaboration between internal team members and external team members inform the process? A / We were engaged in multiple design team meetings - workshops, charrettes with the other consultants, the clients, and the community, which shaped our design aspirations. We had talented local partners who cared about the outcome. We also had a graphic design / public engagement firm that was very wellrespected in the community, generated a lot of media attention, and got the community excited. We had several open houses and made public presentations to a design advisory committee that helped us set goals, evaluate alternatives, and lockdown ideation and programming based on their community values and needs. It was also helpful that our clients were a healthy and intentional parks district, and so, building on a dependable foundation of trust with them was important. A / The project was a collaborative one in which the entire team had the best interest of the project and the community in mind. I would sum it up as a sense of ownership, a civic duty to deliver this project on time, and I budget to the citizens of Fort Wayne.

Q / Describe some unique project design challenges and how you tackled them. A / One challenge was the design team’s staffing changes, but we still delivered an award-winning project through our collaboration process. Other people with tested construction knowledge also stepped in to help deliver this project. Because of this, we were able to avoid client frustrations. In fact, they were delighted by our agility and collaboration process. I think this reflects our resilience and our ability to serve a client without missing a step. A / One unexpected design challenge was the numerous trees were large caliper (6”) and had +60” diameter root balls. As the construction progressed, some of these large trees had exposed root balls above grade due to the angle of the slope they were planted. To resolve this, we devised an aesthetic and functional solution without adding cost. Working with the GC and landscape contractor, we sourced local stone boulders and created small retaining walls, or planting pockets, that lifted the soil, covered the rootball, creating a less severe slope to plant the tree.


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

266

Interview

Q / What were some best practices, highlights or lessons learned from the design process of this project? A / We were able to get a smart start on the project using a concept that we had outlined before we launched, followed by goal setting, conceptual thinking, ending with a strong finish. Todd Myer, a former employee, had spent a lot of time learning the city, getting acquainted with decision-makers, and understanding how the community works. His work made a big difference in why we got selected, and this approach of familiarizing ourselves with critical stakeholders served as an important lesson learned down the road. A / During the CA process, we always strive to improve details where possible, making small revisions that have a big impact. This is especially true when it focuses on public health, safety, and welfare. The project included many sloping sidewalks/stairs/seawalls. These were detailed well, but a few proved challenging due to environmental impacts when constructed. In specific locations, the hardscape slopes parallel each other, from flush to a raised condition. During particular times of day, the sun/shadow angles would render the elevation change as a flat surface, creating a tripping hazard. We identified several alternatives to resolve the issue. The preferred solution was low cost with high impact. A six-inch-wide strip of outdoorgrade white paint was used as a visual marker to call attention to the elevation change.

Q / How has this project proved important for the firm or yourself? A / The Riverfront Fort Wayne project is paramount for our Planning + Landscape team because it legitimizes our waterfront experience, which is a specific market type. It was a stepping stone for our group to have an award-winning built riverfront project. It highlights what services we can provide to the public realm and the role parks and open spaces play in bringing a city to life. It’s enriching that we got to design something that is so emotionally important to the residents of Fort Wayne, a space that serves as their new go-to destination in the city. A / Riverfront Fort Wayne is important to us because it’s our first-ever built riverfront projects. The project garnered a lot of attention – with news coverage of its grand opening in various articles in magazines, websites, and newspapers such as USA Today and The Chicago Tribune. The project was also the recipient of six (and still counting) significant design awards, showcasing our design firm capabilities. For me, there was a lot to be gained from visiting the site and seeing how things were constructed, solving problems on the fly, and collaborating with contractors and other design professionals to come up with solutions to problems.


REVERBERATION 2020


Case Study 04 Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

Interview

268


REVERBERATION 2020

Opening weekend hosted some 35,000 visitors. Native and adapted plantings root the park in its local context while providing access to and enjoyment of the St. Mary’s River. The park is now a place for play, entertainment, nature and respite.


270

Collaboration 1 To spread awareness of

ongoing projects to everyone in LJC. 2 To connect people with others in the ďŹ rm who would be good collaboration resources. 3 To foster more inter-ofďŹ ce communication and cross-project dialogue.

Collaboration

To spread awareness of ongoing projects to everyone in LJC To connect people with others in the firm as collaborative resources To foster more inter-office communication and cross-project dialogue To establish a framework for people to easily share their work within the firm, that feeds into external facing content


REVERBERATION 2020

L

S

Size

Who?

Team Key Colleagues Project Team

Studio

Office

Studio Key Colleagues

All LJC Staff

Community

Studio Crits

Design Process Presentations

Weekly

Monthly

Engage experts outside of the firm Outside Community

What?

Pinups & Deskcrits

When?

Constantly

Where?

Studio Huddle Rooms Webex

Studio Meetings

Office

Why?

Progress Design

Improve Design

Present Design

on

sm

rd wa

ar t

sta

Lecture Series Guest Presenters

Quarterly

LJC Offices LJC Communities

Expand Design Impact

rt Community OfďŹ ce Studio Team

constr u docum ction e admin nts & istratio n

ation mobiliz e phas

n t sig en de opm l ve de

co nc de ept sig ua n l

ery

d e l iv e ry

pre -de sign

discov

e luat ly Eva atical m te Sys

schematic design

en

an

em

aly

fin

sis

re t

ideation


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ALL-FIRM

ALL-FIRM

ALL-FIRM

COLLAB RITIQUE

COLLAB RITIQUE

COLLAB RITIQUE

v. 1.3

v. 1.3

09.23.2020

v. 1.0

09.23.2020

@12pm

07.21.2020

@12pm

B R I C K L I N E G R E E N WAY

@12pm

B R I C K L I N E G R E E N WAY

CARPENTER’S UNION TRAINING CENTER

Come join the third in a repeating series of firm wide

Come join the third in a repeating series of firm wide

LJC critiques focusing on increasing our multi discipline

LJC critiques focusing on increasing our multi discipline

collaboration efforts across offices and practice areas.

collaboration efforts across offices and practice areas.

Webex

Come join the first of a repeating series of firm wide LJC critiques focusing on increasing our multi discipline collaboration efforts across offices and practice areas.

Webex

Invite to follow

Webex

Invite to follow

Invite to follow

ALL-FIRM

ALL-FIRM

v. 1.0

v. 1.1

STUDIO 0 A D V A N C E S T R AT E G I E S & P L A N N I N G

COLLAB RITIQUE

COLLAB RITIQUE D I S COV E RY

CARPENTER’S UNION TRAINING CENTER

A N A LYS I S

collaboration efforts across offices and practice areas.

LD

PK

W

IE

Come join the second in a repeating series of firm wide LJC critiques focusing on increasing our multi discipline collaboration efforts across offices and practice areas.

Webex

Invite to follow

STUDIO 2

STUDIO 2

STUDIO 2

ARCHITECTURE

ARCHITECTURE

ARCHITECTURE

COLLAB RITIQUE

COLLAB RITIQUE

COLLAB RITIQUE RF

HORIZON THERAPEUTICS - DEERFIELD

Invite to follow

Invite to follow

TE

@12pm

D E L I V E RY

Webex

Webex

ES

REFINEMENT

Douglas Park in Chicago has been the site of Riot Fest since 2015, which has left the park with hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages every year, and rendering the park unable to be used weeks at a time by the community of North Lawndale. This project starts to reimagine how this park can both, be improved for the community it serves, as well as more suitably apt for festivals like Riot Fest and a better place for community gatherings and festivals. We are looking for new ideas on how we can responsibly improve this park for festival and community use, and anything we might be missing in our process up to now.

LJC critiques focusing on increasing our multi discipline

CH

I D E AT I O N

DOUGLAS PARK

Come join the first of a repeating series of firm wide

MASTERPLAN

08.25.2020

@11am

@12pm

WILDHORSE VILLAGE

COLLAB RITIQUE

07.16.2020

07.21.2020

BUR

KH

AR

DT

PL

08.05.2020

08.12.2020

@3pm

09.16.2020

@3pm

@3pm

SOUTH WEST AXON

D I S COV E RY

A N A LYS I S

I D E AT I O N

REFINEMENT

D E L I V E RY

D I S COV E RY

WILDHORSE

A N A LYS I S

I D E AT I O N

REFINEMENT

ADAMS CENTER

Wildhorse Village is 1.7 million square feet of office, retail and residential that will be a new center of development in chesterfield MO. The masterplan has recently been approved and we are now looking to develop the first residential properties on the site. We are looking for feedback on the 3-4 story residential building that wraps two courtyards and is made of 220 units.

D I S COV E RY

A N A LYS I S

I D E AT I O N

Given the ongoing health crisis; the team is especially interested in feedback regarding the design of an urban office tower, and what considerations should be taken to support healthy and safe office environments.

LJC has recently started an effort with First Tee of Greater Chicago to renovate a portion of the Sydney Marovitz golf course clubhouse at Waveland into a permanent First Tee facility with an indoor simulation and an outdoor short game area. On Friday we received sign-off on programming, and started the ideation phase of this short effort. Please come prepared to discuss interior design opportunities for this amazing oportunity.

WILD HORSE CREEK

Webex / Maries / Colorado

Webex / Hudson WEST ELEVATION

REFINEMENT

FIRST TEE

Adams Center is 38 story office tower adjacent to Willis Tower that focused on diverse floor plate sizes to attract a variety of tenants. This is an Enterprise pursuit that’s being reviewed for project feasibility.

What are the wellness focused attributes and amenities that can make this unique to the other residential buildings? Also we are open to any and all architectural comments that would address the desire of the city to be contextual with a new urbanism feel development while also being forward thinking and contemporary.

D E L I V E RY

Webex / Hudson NORTH O WEST S AXON O

D E L I V E RY


REVERBERATION 2020

STUDIO

0

Studio

1

2

Studio

Studio

3

Studio

4

5

Studio

Studio

6

Studio

ADVANCE STRATEGIES & PLANNING

ARCHITECTURE

ARCHITECTURE

ARCHITECTURE

HEALTHCARE

INDUSTRIAL

INTERIORS

SHUYING WU

SARAH HITCHCOCK

MAX KOMNENICH

HALIMA SHEHU

PRANAV SHAUCHE

JUNGSUE KIM

LANCE YEARY

The collaboration team will partner with each studio’s “Design Champion” to help facilitate regular studio reviews, and share lessons learned with the larger collaboration team.

ALL-FIRM All-Firm reviews will be presented though a loose template organized around our design process. The process highlights the 5 following components to each project:

Discovery

Analysis

Ideation

Refinement

Project teams will be encouraged to involve all team members in presenting their work in roughly 30 minutes, with brief pauses between each section for questions and lessons learned. Time will be allocated for a project related discussion at the conclusion of the presentation, followed by a brief +/Δ on the format.

Delivery


274

Research The mission of the Research team is to utilize technology to improve the design process. This year the team focused on analyzing, improving and documenting existing workows and researching ways to automate tedious tasks.

NAME Ryan Taube

TUTORIAL Start a project (geolocate in Rhino,Revit, Sketchup)

Frank Hu

Get GIS data for a project (buildings, roads, contours, etc.)

Frank Hu

Contours- how to clean up data, how to create surfaces in Revit and Rhino

Frank, Anezka, Taokai David Frank Hu Chang Rory Deeksha, Priasha, Ryan, Caroline

Grasshopper Scripts for modeling (paving, walls, topography, patterns) Sun, Thermal comfort and Wind studies (grasshopper/butterfly) Quick context maps Excel to GIS (are there any processes we could automate here?) Drone footage- how to integrate into a 3D model Revit planting schedule-

Ryan Taube

Revit furnishing, hardscape SCHEDULE

Ryan Taube

Revit- bring in 3d models from other software

Taokai, Rui

Enscape- best workflow- where to save your material.. etc.

Doh Young

InDesign- templates and best practices for making presentations

Rob

Massing Rhino

Rob

Illustrator symbols

Rob

Revit display options

Frank Hu ---

Materials (Rhino)- mapping How to set up a model to be 3 printed:

Rory, Robert

Workflow between Rhino to Cura to 3 printing

---

Camera tracking- After Effects and Illustrator

David Doh Young

Agent based- crowd simulation (applied to planting) Diagramming

Megan

AUTOCAD

Megan

Plot styles (how to autocad,...)

Chang + Deeksha

Excel Tutorial

Chang + Deeksha

Excel to InDesign (create plant sheets)


REVERBERATION 2020

Hosted byy th h e Process C ore C ouncil - Rese e arch Team.

12PM CST Speaker

R YA A N TAUBE Topic

REVIT - RHINO INTEGRATION + G E OLOCAT I NG G A REVII T FILE LE


276

Point of View Industry Exeprts Inside LJC & Clayco Enterprise

Consultation With Other Core Council Teams

Industry Experts

Goals of POV What are the most important issues facing our clients today? What trends do we see affecting or predict will affect the business’ markets? Where do we see the most significant opportunities in the coming years? What do we feel are the best design responses to these factors? The Point of View (POV) initiative is set up to help LJC quantify these ideas and communicate them in short, easily digestible publications. These can be shared individually or combined as part of larger qualification packages.

Role of POV Committee The POV committee was created to help our Market Leaders and teams filter out the “what, why, and how” of design decisions made every day. Our goal is to help create POV packages for as many market sectors as possible within the firm. Market Leaders and their teams are the experts controlling the message. The POV team simply serves as an intermediary to usher the team’s published insight into existence. The next page features the Science & Technology POV.


REVERBERATION 2020

Market Leader Experts

Important Points + Issues for Markets

POV Document

Your group may be next!

POV Committee


278

Effect Awards Improve structure & process, Continue award submissions Reverberation 2020 Publication Digital Content Refresh visuals and content using existing WordPress framework


REVERBERATION 2020

AWARDS 2 019

Trojan Park Blackedge Capital Penn State Health Westview Garage UHSP in St. Louis

-

2 0 2 0

ULI International Urban Open Space Award, 2020 Crains Chicago’s Coolest Offices, 2019 PCI Design Awards - Parking Structures (All-Precast), 2020 AIA St. Louis Architecture Honor Award, 2017 ASLA Central States Merit Award, 2017 Building Enclosure Council Award, 2018 AIA Central States - Design Excellence Award Program, Merit Award, 2018 Tilt Up Achievement, 2019

Riverfront Fort Wayne - Promenade Park

ILASLA Merit Award, 2020 Central State ASLA FUSE Award, 2020 Fast Company Innovation by Design Honoree, 2020

SCAD FORTY Confidential Global Financial Corporation Aspire Center The Brickline Greenline (formerly Chouteau Greenway)

Award of Excellence in the High Rise Building – ACI, 2020 Tilt-Up Achievement Award, 2020 Pritzker Traubert Foundation’s Chicago Prize Finalist, 2020 Progressive Architecture Award – Architecture Magazine, 2020


Design Awards Trojan Park

280

Urban Land Institute (ULI) International Urban Open Space Award, 2020


REVERBERATION 2020

TROJAN Trojan Park Site: St. Louis, MO Services: Landscape Architecture


Design Awards BlackEdge Capital

282

BL ACK EDGE Blackedge Capital Site: Chicago, IL Services: Executive Architect, Interiors


REVERBERATION 2020

Crains Chicago’s Coolest Offices, 2019


Design Awards Penn State Westview Garage

PCI Design Awards - Parking Structures (All-Precast), 2020

Enterprise Partners

284


REVERBERATION 2020

P E N N S TAT E Penn State Health Westview Garage Site: Hershey, PA Services: Architecture, Landscape Architecture, Wayfinding


Design Awards UHSP

286

UHSP University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis Site: St. Louis, MO Services: Architecture, Interiors, and Landscape Architecture


REVERBERATION 2020

Tilt Up Achievement, 2019 Building Enclosure Council Award, 2018 AIA Central States - Design Excellence Award Program, Merit Award, 2018 AIA St. Louis Architecture Honor Award, 2017 ASLA Central States Merit Award, 2017


Design Awards Riverfront Fort Wayne Promenade Park

ILASLA Merit Award, 2020 Central State ASLA FUSE Award, 2020 Fast Company Innovation by Design Honoree, 2020

288


REVERBERATION 2020

RIVERFRONT Riverfront Fort Wayne – Promenade Park Site: Fort Wayne, IN Services: Landscape Architecture, Planning


Design Awards SCAD FORTY

SCAD The Savannah College of Art and Design - FORTY Site: Atlanta, GA Services: Executive Architect, Landscape Architecture, Planning

Enterprise Partners

290


REVERBERATION 2020

Award of Excellence in the High Rise Building category – American Concrete Institute (ACI), 2020


Design Awards Global Financial Corporation

292

Tilt-Up Achievement Award, 2020 Enterprise Partners


REVERBERATION 2020

GFP ConďŹ dential Global Financial Corporation Site: Sioux Falls, SD Services: Architecture, Interiors, Landscape Architecture


Design Awards Aspire Center

ASPIRE Aspire Center Site: Chicago, IL Services: Architecture, Landscape Architecture

294


REVERBERATION 2020

Pritzker Traubert Foundation’s Chicago Prize Finalist, 2020


Design Awards The Brickline Greenway

296

Progressive Architecture Award – Architecture Magazine, 2020


REVERBERATION 2020

BRICKLINE The Brickline Greenway (formerly Chouteau Greenway) Site: St. Louis Services: Landscape Architecture, Planning


298

Paper Cover - Doosung Paper GA Kraft Board - Silver Wall - 310 grams / m2 This paperboard is characterized by natural color and an expressiveness created by flecks of natural material. It is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council as FSC Recycled, containing 100% verified recycled pulp.

Text - Moorim P&P Neo Star Coat - 80 grams / m2 Pulp-Paper integrated product, fresh pulp used, lowcarbon eco-friendly and energy efficient paper, vivid color expression,fast ink dryness, superb printing gloss.

Hologram The hologram lamination on recycled matte paper creates a strong brand image. The side profile is also hologram laminated to create an appealing look. Back

Front

Blind-Embossing The layout has been simplified with 2020 text now being horizontal. This allows future editions to have a consistent and similar look. The embossing is a nice way to give an extra touch to the look and feel of the book. Back

Front


REVERBERATION 2020

Reverberation 2020 LJC’s design influence is seen as a continuing effect, repercussion – a reverberation of ideas and techniques that, while emanating from a source, bounce off many to create an impact and solutions-driven culture.


300


REVERBERATION 2020

The mission of the Integration Core Council is to continuously improve the design and delivery process; creating a framework for communicating this process both internally and externally, and integrating performance factors that enhance LJC’s value system for design.


302

Teams

Focus

Focus

Technical Delivery, QA/ QC and Education (This incorporates and builds upon the work Larry and Ben have been doing with studio technical liaisons).

Case Studies on the Integrated Delivery Model (How can this be measured: cost, time, schedule, error, etc.)

Deliverable

Technical

Larry Nordin Ben Revelle

Deliverable

Metrics

Jonny Noble Lance McOlgan

Focus Focus Develop a way to best tell the story of integrated design delivery. How do we work better with Clayco/CRG/Ventana/CSI?

Identify enterprise allies, engage Clayco and CRG to build better relationships and learn more from one another.

Deliverable

Deliverable

Enterprise

Cross-Discipline

Sarah Doriani Jonny Noble Nick Casaletto Larry Nordin

Sarah Doriani Ben Revelle

Leadership Council Champions: Kapil Khanna & Sarah Jacobson


REVERBERATION 2020

304

Global Financial Corporation Design Performance Platform

312

PďŹ zer Integrated by Design

324

The Cubes Industrial Project

330

SCAD Victory SCAD Victory

4 Integration Core Council


304

A Case Study on Global Financial Corporation

Design Performance Platform GLOBAL FINANCIAL CORPORATION Enterprise Partners


REVERBERATION 2020

Purpose 1. Apply a baseline set of design parameters to all projects and expose all possible opportunities for enhancing design performance, value, and quality. 2. Connect multiple known certiďŹ cation systems into a more cohesive and inclusive platform. 3. Leverage our integrated delivery process by offering services and design quality on every project that our competition will not be able to duplicate.

EFFECT DATA COLLECTION

Culture

Professional Development Brand/Social Media Collaboration Community

Impactful

Sustainability

AIA 2030 Performance Research Education

Sustainable

Process

Approach Collaboration Research Effect Point of View

Innovative

Integration

Enterprise Cross Discipline Technical Metrics

Integrated

Practice

Deltek Strategies Project Management Knowledge Communication

Insightful

Equity / Just

LEED NC v4.0 Gold

Art: A sense of delight

BIM LOD 400

$$$ / GSF

Social Engagement

Net Trees

Biophilia: Tie to Nature

Estimate - GMP

Value & Life Cycle

Duration

Human Need

Energy Savings

Human Comfort

Immunity

Madeline to Inform**

Healthy Materials


306

Culture

Professional Development Brand/Social Media Collaboration Community

Impactful

Corporation for public service

Equity / Just

Equal workspace offerings and tools across all floorplates Amenities for all - social, fitness, nutritional, connection to nature, quiet

Human Need

8 SF amenity per person Access to wellness rooms Choice of workplace: outdoor/indoor, open workstations / private rooms 100% of workstations have access to outside view Circulation diversity High ceilings Regular air flow Workplace choice Contact free choice

Immunity


REVERBERATION 2020

Sustainability

AIA 2030 Performance Research Education

Sustainable

Location & Transportation

Sustainable Sites

Water Efficiency

Priority parking for

Employed sustainable

37.34% reduction from

green vehicles

and natural rainwater

baseline for interior

control mechanisms

water use

Bicycle parking

(native landscaping)

67% reduction from

High connectivity

ADA accessible sidewalk

baseline for exterior

and walkability to a

path to promote

water use

number of diverse

walkability

establishments including

Because of these

a child daycare center,

Educational signage

changes, this office

a university, several

posted in the amenity

building will save

apartments, and a gym.

space educates and

11,964,941 gallons of

promotes human

water per year.

interaction

Certification Ecology

LEED v4.0 gold / - Tree Count - Bird Safe - Hydrology - Site - Water - Energy -Embodied Carbon - Construction Waste

Energy and Atmosphere

Materials and Resources

Indoor Environmental Quality

Optimized building

Over 85% landfill

Use of low-VOC

energy performance by

diversion rate for

construction and finish

38%

construction waste

materials to minimize

health risk

Purchased Green Power

Mixed recycling program

and carbon credits to

with disposal site for

Office design utilizing

offset on-site energy

electronics and batteries

natural light and access

production

to quality views.

Focus on using

Commissioned all

construction

MEPFP and envelope

materials/finishes with

systems to ensure

Environmental Product

optimal efficiency

Declarations, Health

and function of all

Product Declarations,

components; provided

products made from

owner training to ensure

renewable/recycled

ongoing proper function

material, etc.


308

Design Narrative The driving vision of this project was to create a dynamic workplace that adds to the happiness and wellness of employees. The environments support a diverse range of work styles, improves engagement, and attracts the next generation of talent with a dynamic working environment. The design utilizes tilt-up construction for a four-story office. The system achieves a textural and tonal depth with great precision and ease of assembly.

Process

This project was the first new building to implement the client’s new workplace strategy, which is more dynamic, flexible, and prioritizes communication and interaction. To better connect the inhabitants of all floors, the building

Approach Collaboration Research Effect Point of View

features a monumental staircase that serves as a social hub at the heart of the building. The new strategy prioritizes environments that promote health and wellness with active spaces rich with daylight and furnished with warm and natural materials. It was important to make connections from the interior to the

Innovative

exterior as strong as possible. In warmer seasons, the actively programmed food service and luncheon space continues outside onto an amenity lawn and generous canopy.

Art

A sense of delight 100 pieces of local or native American art; 1 per 9 occupants Monumental stair is central social connection as well as link to views, amenities and sunlight

Biophilia

Tie to Nature 30 hours / week daylit work time Lighting controls and balance with daylight?

Human Comfort

Adhered to stringent acoustic performance criteria Choice of open or private environments Choice of posture when working - sit, stand, lounge


REVERBERATION 2020


310


REVERBERATION 2020

Integration

Enterprise Cross Discipline Technical Metrics

Team

Develop CRG

-

Design

-

Build

LJC

Integrated

Practice

Deltek Strategies Project Management Knowledge Communication

Insightful

Clayco Concrete Strategies

BIM LOD 400

Most advanced, holistic delivery during and following project completion.

Duration

23 Months Lean construction methodology Fast track delivery - milestone decisions and management Estimate + eGMP + fGMP

$$$ / GSF

Site, C&S, Interiors

Safety Stakeholder Engagement Value / Life Cycle

Enhanced design services for specialty programming Future prooďŹ ng Adaptability Materiality Modularity


312

Integrated by Design Clayco Enterprise Partners and Collaborators

Pfizer was looking for a design-build relationship with a developer, where the developer would assume all responsibility for the architectural and engineering design, permitting, construction, delivery and financing for a laboratory, office space and a pilot plant. They found the entire solution in the CRG/LJC & EwingCole/ Clayco/CSI/Ventana team. The integrated nature of our development team allowed us to communicate and challenge each other to drive better results for Pfizer. CRG, Clayco, EwingCole, LJC, and Stock & Associates form the nucleus of our design and development team. Each of these firms offer a specific benefit to the project.


REVERBERATION 2020


314


REVERBERATION 2020

The desire for a perfect solution. A balancing act. Clayco Builder CRG Developer / Lease Structures LJC Site Design Building Design Landscape Architecture Workplace Strategy Interior Design

The Clayco team submitted its initial development proposal to Pfizer for the research building in June 2016. Next came a period of discovery and finalization of the scope with the Pfizer team. During the discovery period, the team developed scope and estimates for the project. Through this process, the team worked diligently and quickly to design and vet out all potential options to be positioned for construction. There were several day-long work sessions with the Design-Build team, the Design-Build subcontractors and the client/user group to identify and evaluate the scope items that were needed and those that were not needed in order to get the project within budget. Pfizer played a significant role in this process as the collective team finalized the scope with the goal of aligning it within the budget. Concrete Strategies, Ventana and key Design Build MEPFP partners were also instrumental in this budgeting process. It is important to note that as the budgeting process was occurring, the design progression and local jurisdictional approval process did not stop, as the schedule constraints were as important as maintaining the budget.


316

This 294,000-SF state-of-the-art research and development facility reflects Pfizer’s highest standards for excellence, quality, safety and value.

Solar Study

Pfizer, Inc., one of the world’s premier innovative biopharmaceutical companies hired the integrated Concrete Strategies/Clayco/ CRG/LJC team to design, build, finance, and lease their world class, 294,000-SF stateof-the-art facility that reflects Pfizer’s highest standards for excellence, quality, safety and value. Pfizer is committed to environmental sustainability, innovative performance, and employee engagement. The site concept integrates the new laboratory building with this unique site and its natural beauty, sunset views, and dramatic topography. The building program is strategically organized to provide operational efficiency and enhance cooperation. Unique collaborative spaces both inside and outside provide opportunities for innovation. Connecting nature, program, and people will enhance employee’s experience and the company’s productivity. The building design is fundamentally based on the Continuous Lab Concept, where the linear lab zone runs uninterrupted, parallel to a continuous office zone, separated by a generous corridor serving both lab and office. This approach allows maximum flexibility for the labs to change size over time. LJC has developed a workplace strategy that optimizes space which will manifest in centralized office supplies and storage, a dining facility on the first floor and a centralized cafe on all other floors. An observation study was completed on all labs, office and amenity spaces to identify improvement that supports the nature of work.


REVERBERATION 2020


318


REVERBERATION 2020

Solar Study on Facade

Visual Line

Ventana designed, manufactured, and installed the exterior wall systems for the building. The facility houses Pfizer’s BioTherapeutics Pharmaceutical Sciences group, which is responsible for advancing Pfizer’s biologics, vaccines, and gene therapy portfolio by developing manufacturing processes and dosage forms by applying analytical technologies, conducting non-GMP manufacturing, and scale-up studies.

Frit Pattern

Ventana supplied and installed 59,000 SF of custom designed, unitized curtain wall for the new Pfizer Facility.

The exterior skin consists of Ventana’s MWS180 system, which is a seven-inch deep, highperforming, unitized curtain wall system. The project materials were sourced locally in the United States. The system was fabricated by Performance Architectural in Alabama and the glass was provided by Viracon in Minnesota. The 59,000-SF project features 1-1/16 inch thick low-iron, insulated glass units with Viracon’s VNE-53 low-E coating applied on the number two surface. VNE-53 provides an outstanding performance with a Visible Light Transmission of 52% and a Solar Heat Gain Coefficient of 0.23. Further, five different custom frit patterns were provided in the spandrel areas of the project and the typical 1/4 inch outboard lites were replaced with 5/16 inch outboard lites in order to provide a façade with a flatter appearance.


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Prefabrication saved the project over $1 million and cut the schedule by approximately 3 months. Clayco worked with its partners, including the engineering team, vendors, trade partners, LJC, and EwingCole, and identified components of the project best assembled off-site: Core wall lab utility chase, cell bank wall panels, MEP equipment racks, pump skids, piping racks, electrical gear, & plumbing fixture carriers. The most impactful and innovative system of which is the utility core wall that will be located in the labs. Traditionally, core wall frames are placed in the field then are piped onsite by the various trades. Our team developed a method that permits all of this to occur off site at a shared facility where the lab vendor supplies the framework and it is assembled in sections that are sized per lab but also sized to maximize shipping and on-site installation efficiencies.

The trades then pre-pipe and cap all utilities in preparation for shipping. Once on-site, the lab fixtures are added along with the core wall ‘skin’. This solution eliminated issues due to lead times, complex assemblies, and high labor costs over long durations. Using BIM, we engaged Pfizer in selecting these best options for their building. Because our selections were built off-site in an environment with rigorous quality requirements, prefabrication also proved a higher quality solution.

Prefabrication


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Lease Structure

CRG competed against other developers and won in part by offering a variety of different lease structures for consideration allowing for a custom structure for Pfizer. All options were reviewed and discussed in CRG’s transparent approach, including lease pricing and financing options/cost. This process ensures CRG’s clients always get the most competitive and best fitting outcome for their needs. In this particular case, Pfizer chose to own their site rather than lease it.

Benefits of BIM

Harnessing the power of a digital model can only be as effective as our ability to democratize the process of information sharing and use. The entire set of models Architectural, Structural, MEPFP was coordinated not only for conflict resolution and pre-fabrication sequencing, but also for optimal field experience and integration into future CMMS (Computerized Maintenance Management System) and CAFM (Computer-Aided Facility Management) processes, thus responsible for translating digital into physical and back.


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Leadership in Technology Clayco’s technology team was instrumental in conducting performance analysis of proposed curtain wall system and submitting ďŹ ndings to designers, taking the lead on re-formulating industry best practices for digitally enabled layout and the use of drones during several very critical phases of site development and underground scope.

Cost Control & Mission Critical Delivery Cost control and mission critical delivery dates are a signiďŹ cant part of the project requirements. CSI and Ventana were involved from day one and work with the design team to help drive a best value solution and are performing the work on an open book basis to ensure that cost control, quality, and schedule are maintained.

The site concept is to integrate the new laboratory building with this unique site and its natural beauty, sunset views, and dramatic topography.


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Workplace Strategy & Interiors A workplace strategy was developed for the Pfizer R&D Facility based on evidence collected by LJC on the existing nature of work, industry best practices and direction from Pfizer leadership. The open work-office is balanced by directly adjacent focus rooms and small group collaboration spaces. The Collaboration Link on each floor is connected by an open stair and provides meeting space, comfortable seating, and a place for community and social refresh. The 1st floor also includes a work-café and integrated seminar suite with views and connections to nature. Well-being is infused into the entire workplace through the use of sitto-stand workstations, a fitness center, nursewellness center, and the availability of natural daylight and views of nature.

Planning & Landscaping Architecture The unique natural setting on the west side of the site provides opportunities to bring Pfizer’s talent outdoors in collaborative spaces for working groups or as individuals for contemplation. The facility is integrated into the landscape yet situated at the highest point of the site to provide bluff like views across the adjacent woodland treetops. The campus master plan establishes the main entrance off Chesterfield Parkway with a formal entry leading up to distinct drop off plaza. This front door connects though the lobby to a courtyard that provides collaborative working spaces, outdoor dining, and landscape terraces visually connecting down to the existing woodland.


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Developing for the Demands of Next Generation The Cubes industrial brand is owned and developed by CRG. The Cubes represents CRG’s philosophy of developing for the demands of next generation industrial users. The Cubes are designed with an emphasis on sustainability and state-of-the-art building specifications with consumer centric logistics strategies. With the end user always in mind, The Cubes offer superior access to logistics networks and strong, qualified labor supplies.


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16.2 Million SF of Buildings

1,114 Acres of Land

Pipeline

5.9

A New Industrial Standard As the industry begins to measure cubic feet and maximize racking space, CRG’s “The Cubes” industrial brand is part of its leadership effort to meet this tremendous demand in the speculative warehouse market. In addition to The Cubes, CRG plans to build a minimum of 10,000,000 SF on an annual basis worth about $650 million of its Class A industrial product per year.

Million SF of Buildings

Cubes Locations


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Concept Tenant Configuration Corner Entry Hierarchy

One - Tenant Configuration Primary entry corner addressed for singular tenant. elevated architectural feature. South facade visible to main road and highway.

Two - Tenant Configuration Primary and secondary entry corners for two tenants. Secondary entry piece is elevated and visible from highway with same architectural feature as primary corner but a smaller version.

Three - Tenant Configuration Third entry corner is less visible with subtle architectural feature on the lower level.

Four - Tenant Configuration Third and fourth entry corners on the north facade addressed with subtle architectural feature on the lower level.


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Painted tilt panel

Steel bracket welded to embed plate

Steel beam

Cantilevered steel beam Recessed tilt leg


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Featured Projects

Etna 70

Locust Grove

Lehigh Valley

Bridgeport

2,400,000 SF Columbus, OH

1,000,993 SF Locust Grove, GA

450,000 SF Greenwich, NJ

2,000,000 SF Coweta County, GA

CRG is developing The Cubes at Etna 70, a 155-acre land development centrally located in Etna Township, a Columbus, Ohio submarket.

Locust Grove Distribution Center 1 will feature 36’ clear ceiling height, totaling 1,000,993 SF, with 236 trailer or 379 auto spaces, and 146 dock height doors.

With excellent access to US Route 22, I-78 and I-476, the site is strategically located 60 miles from the Port of Newark.

The mega-site can accommodate building sizes exceeding 2 million SF.

DuPont

Harmony Road

Inland 85

Troutdale

1,600,000 SF DuPont, WA

252,750 SF Greenwich, NJ

500,280 SF Duncan, SC

350,000 SF Portland, OR

A strategic regional logistics hub, The Cubes at DuPont is located in immediate proximity to Interstate 5.

The Cubes at Harmony Road enjoys a location not only adjacent to a mature interchange on a major freeway but regionally proximate to alternative routes such as the New Jersey Turnpike and I-95

Once completed, the expandable 500,280SF warehouse will have a 36’ clear height, ample trailer storage and car parks associated with the new state-of-the-art distribution theme built throughout the country.

The Cubes at Troutdale is a premier development opportunity that continues to drive the Portland industrial real estate market and enhances CRG’s industrial portfolio in the dynamic Pacific Northwest Market.


Case Study SCAD Victory

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Integrated by Design

SCAD Victory Drive Student Housing

SCAD VICTORY Filling an entire City block within the Streetcar Historic District of Savannah, GA, the project consists of two residence halls totaling 650 beds in addition to a variety of supporting program elements: 260 space parking garage, enclosed courtyard, resident director apartment, student lounges, study rooms, art studios, meeting rooms, laundry rooms, management ofďŹ ces, and covered bicycle storage. The residential halls are four and ďŹ ve story buildings comprising of 4-bed / 2-bed semi-suites and 1-bed studios totaling approximately 250,000 SF in addition to the 96,000 SF parking garage.


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1 2 5

3

4

In accordance to the amended TC2 zoning requirements, the project has been designed as five separate buildings. To further embed the project into the neighborhood context, the first four floors have been broken into several visually distinct segments of a neighborhood-appropriate scale.

(75' R/W)

DRIVE CT VICTORY V

DORMITORY AND PARKING GARAGE


Case Study SCAD Victory

Integrated by Design

Location Savannah, GA Size 650 Beds 260 Parking Stalls 250,000 SF Residence 96,000 SF Garage Services Architecture Interior Design Landscape Architecture Technical Assurance Group

The project is a mix of construction types including wood stud framing, ďŹ re treated wood/steel, and precast concrete. The exterior composition consists of brick, storefront, aluminum windows, metal panel, stucco, wood, and board formed concrete. The design and construction utilizes the full design-build resources of Clayco / LJC to meet the owner’s fast paced schedule without compromising design quality.

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Case Study SCAD Victory

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Integrated by Design

Construction Administration Architect’s Construction Administration tasks typically include... Submittal / shop drawing review Drawing updates Requests for Information * Pay app reviews * Field reports with exceptions / observations * Questions from field team * Punchlist * Certificates of substantial completion * Requires site visit


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Request Photos Facetime Sessions GoPro Videos

Daily

Request drone footage of speciďŹ c areas

As Needed

Request jobsite camera locations

Weekly 24 / 7

Pay App Review Site Observations Reference for RFIs

Tracking Inputting exceptions to the construction progress Punchlist


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The objective of the Practice Core Council is to streamline project management processes, improve performance tracking, and develop more effective communication. It is made up of four subcommittees: Project Management (PM) Process, Operations Strategies, Performance Tracking, and Communication.


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Teams Focus Focus Refine the project management process. Deliverables

Focus

Integrate our project management and financial reporting system across the firm.

Gather historic data to aid in developing project fees. Deliverables

Deliverables

Deliverables

• Develop historic fee database • Keep database continuously updated

• Compile a training and reference package with best practices for project managers • Establish standards for the use of communication tools available to the firm • Organize regular training focused on developing more effective communication skills

• Compile the best tools from both offices into a single spreadsheet for management of fees, teams, agreements, and schedules • Document forms and processes into a methodology document • Develop a policy and procedure for selecting M/W/ DBE firms for participation on projects

• Adjust Deltek settings to support project managers • Establish standard reports and views with easily accessible and digestible information • Training to build proficiency for data input and extraction

Expected Outcomes

Expected Outcomes

• Streamline the project management process • Establish consultant diversity goals

• Streamline work planning • Improve management of staff and resources

PM Process

Operations Strategies

Amy Luchun

David Hirschbuehler Larry Nordin Lance McOlgan Matt Grahek Shannon Riddle

Improve project team communication, both internally as well as with clients, consultants, and contractors.

Focus

Jen Nevil & Jessica Statz

Scott Voss Dan Wojciechowski George Halik

Expected Outcomes • Be able to track overall project success

Expected Outcomes • Build trust within the firm • Reinforce the growth of our colleagues • Build stronger relationships with client, consultants, and contractors

Performance Tracking

Communication

Stephanie Bass

Josh Oliver Ryan Taube Kelsey Upchurch

Leadership Council Champion : David Hirschbuehler, George Halik, & Sarah Jacobson

Denise Rocha

Rachel Walter Rebecca Johnson Larry Nordin Matt Grahek Abigail Haakenstad Paul Bryant Doh Young Kim


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Subcommittees

342

Client Testimonials

350

Tools

354

Thank you, Clients

5 Practice Core Council


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PM Process The PM Process subcommittee is tasked with streamlining project management tools. Their focus this year has been to compile the best tools for easy and effective project management into a single spreadsheet. Additionally, they are compiling a list of M/W/DBE firms in the market areas where we work and encouraging leadership to come up with guidelines for participation goals on projects. They are also working with IT on proper protocols for communication through Microsoft Teams for internal team communication and Sharepoint for external team communication.

Operations Strategies The goal of the Operations Strategies subcommittee is to integrate our project management and financial reporting system across the firm, to improve the management of people, projects and resources in real time. This year the committee has focused on data transfer and data input from prior platforms into one seamless program, trained employees on new ways of managing and recording information, and developed reports and charts that support real-time monitoring of our resources. Future work for this group includes: improving transparency of our project performance financially, evolution of our reporting documents, and additional data integration from our peer councils.


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“LJC has been a vital addition to our development team. Their approach to architecture and intimate collaboration pushes the boundaries of residential real estate development. In an extremely competitive industry, having a strategic design and careful planning is paramount to the success of a project.�

Derek Sulo Principal / Sulo Development Embry West Loop


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“We value LJC as a long term design partner who truly understands our brand essence, our design aspirations and how it defines our way of working throughout our global workplaces.”

Tim Walbert Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Horizon Therapeutics


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Performance Tracking The Performance Tracking subcommittee works collaboratively across all markets to support the tracking of project performance objectives. Utilizing an online data collection platform, they review project fees, work plans, consultant partnerships, and other metrics to determine overall project success.

Communication The objective of the Communication subcommittee is to streamline project team communication, both internally as well as with clients, consultants, and contractors. Working together with the other three subcommittees, they are currently leading the effort to compile a training and reference package outlining best practices for project management. This group also organized a series of presentations for project managers to walk them through the various virtual communication tools that our firm has at its disposal, and are collaborating with the PM Process subcommittee in the effort to establish protocols for the use of Microsoft Teams and Sharepoint.


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1 9 2

7

8

6 3

5

4

Labs / Utilities Office / Breakroom

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

Product Inbound

Staging

Freezer Storage

Cold Room

Inbound

Accession

RNA Extraction

PCR Support

Outbound

“LJC/Clayco was instrumental in the design and construction of the project. Their exceptional ability to drive the schedule and keep the contractors focused during the numerous design changes allowed us to open the facility in record time. This is a tremendous win for our company and would not have been possible without the LJC/Clayco team.” Adam Studt Project Ultraviolet

Our Committment and Emergency Response Plan Plan 1

Plan 2

Plan 3

Plan 4

Plan 5

Early collaboration with local building officials allowed construction to start quickly.

Utilize readily available materials and systems to meet schedule.

24/7 timeline of Architect and GC. Drawings issued in the AM and Building in the PM.

Rapid review and response to issues, shop drawings, and material procurement. delays.

Immediate response to owner requested design changes 24/7.


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Project Ultraviolet BSL 2 Laboratories

COVID-19 labs designed and delivered in 20 days. Re-purposing a distribution center for a BSL 2 COVID Testing facility.

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, this confidential client responded quickly with an emergency response plan to protect its employees while maintaining critical operations. Project Ultraviolet is a rapidly deployed diagnostics laboratory for analyzing specimens in the face of this pandemic. The LJC/ Clayco team worked collaboratively with the client’s scientist to develop a 30,000 SF suite within an existing distribution center to receive, process, and analyze samples for the Coronavirus presence. Given the risk imposed by this disease, it was paramount to quickly develop a design that supported an immediate start of construction. The lab features multiple testing lines optimizing the flow of samples, people, and materials. The suite’s heart includes two labs, RNA Extraction and Accession, designed in full compliance with all Biosafety Level 2 requirements. Surrounding these core functions are a collection of support spaces, including agent mixing, PCR, refrigerated storage, sample inventory, UV processing, offices, and a dedicated entrance. With robust and in-house laboratory planning, our team worked collaboratively with the scientist to define needs, rapidly explore options, and search for readily available systems to deliver the project in just 20 days. This intense collaboration is critical to this project’s success and demonstrates our commitment to fulfilling project requirements and exceeding the client’s expectations. A testament to the client’s satisfaction, they have engaged LJC and Clayco to develop a prototypical diagnostics laboratory for implementation at multiple sites within their organization.


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MS Word MS Excel MS PowerPoint MS Visio Adobe Photoshop Adobe Illustrator Adobe InDesign Adobe Lightroom Adobe After Effects Adobe Acrobat Bluebeam Revu Bluebeam Revu CAD Cisco Webex Microsoft Teams Rhino 3D Rhino - Grasshopper Sketchup Pro Autodesk - AutoCAD Autodesk - Vehicle Tracking Autodesk - 3ds Max Autodesk - Infraworks Autodesk - Revit Autodesk - Revit Dynamo Autodesk BIM 360 Design (Modeling) Rhino Render OTOY Octane Render Enscape Render Lumion Render V-Ray Render Autodesk - Cloud Render Autodesk - Arnold Render Revit - Cloud Render Autodesk - Design Review (DWF) Autodesk - BIM 360 Glue Autodesk - BIM 360 Docs Autodesk - Navisworks OCE Direct Print Pro KIP Request Deltek Cosential Autodesk - Revit Clarity Autodesk - Revit Energy Analysis Keynote Manager Ideate Explorer Ideate Sticky Ideate Apps CTC BIM Suite Xrev PyRevit


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01 Survey

Chicago g and St. Louis

As we grow our practice, our tools grow with us in number and complexity. Understanding the value of each type of tool becomes fundamental in how to best use them across our work and how our work can beneďŹ t from their use.


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“Every meeting, every conversation, I am continually impressed by LJC’s team. They understand our concerns and they go out of their way to see around the corner to make sure that we are designing the very best building we can for our product. Excited to continue working with them on the next project.” Jeremy Jacinth, AIA Development The X Company


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Acibadem Project Management American Electric Power Aria Group Associated Wholesale Grocers Austin Coming Together Beacon Capital Partners BlackEdge Capital Blue Origin Brookfield Properties C&S Wholesale Grocers Cardinal Care Carpenters Union Centene Central Baptist Church Chicago Department of Planning and Development Police Memorial Foundation Christian Activity Center Clayco / CRG City of Fort Wayne City of Olivette Clickspring Design Collegiate Development Group Contegra / Lexington Realty Trust Corrigo Investment Partners CORTEX CRG & Maxine Clark DePauw University Dollar General Dominion Energy Enea Environmental Systems Design (ESD) Equity Office Express Scripts Fern Hill Development First Tee - Greater Chicago Focus Development Garnet Health GNP Realty Partners Grand Center, Inc. Great Rivers Greenway Greater Chicago Food Depository Gulfstream Harbor Freight Tools Higgins Development Horizon Therapeutics Horrigan Instant Group Intersport Jet Aviation Johnson & Johnson KDG Real Estate Levy LMC Lowes Lumeris Lundbeck Manulife Mayo Clinic

St. Petersburg Medical Center Apple Grove, Tulsa, Fort Wayne, Lima, Mt. Pleasant Shake Shack AWG Freezer Expansion Aspire Center, Popcourts at Chicago and Lockwood 515 N State Street Spec Suites BlackEdge Capital HQ Blue Origin Engine Manufacturing Facility 175 W Jackson, 24 E Washington - Macy’s Flagship Confidential Project Harris Stowe Baseball and Softball Renovations Carpenters Union Training Center Multiple Projects Central Baptist Church - St. Louis Back of the Yards RFQ Development Chicago Police Canine and Equine Memorial Children’s Academic Center Wildhorse Village, Upshore Chapter, The Cubes Riverfront Fort Wayne - Promenade Park Olivette Parklet Asharq News HQ CDG Eugene Confidential Project Oak Brook Reserve Cortex One Multi-Tenant Lab Delmar Divine DePauw University Residential Hall Distribution Center Tower 2 Study Enea 4.2 Various Projects Willis Tower Express Scripts Laboratory Motor Row Apartments Waveland Capital Project Oak Brook Reserve Residential Study Emergency Department Expansion and Staff Garage 430 N Michigan Amenities Grand Center Arts Academy Plaza Brickline Greenway, St. Vincent Greenway, Trojan Park Confidential Project Airport Hanger Manufacturing Facility Confidential Commercial Building Horizon Therapeutics U.S. HQ, Dublin HQ Confidential Project Coworking Projects Full Facility Relocation Van Nuys, Dallas, & Teterboro Facilities Distribution Expansion 4545 Laclede Ave Apartments 980 N Michigan - Levy Office Triangle Square Confidential Project Lumeris Innovation Center Lundbeck North American HQ 191 N Wacker Future Virtual Care Clinic


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McEagle Properties McGuire Woods Mercy Midwest Property Group Missouri Delta Medical Center Morrison & Morrison Much Shelist LLP Navistar North American Development Group Oakley CCLC Ozarks Technical Community College Pace Properties Palos Health Parkside Realty PDI Penn State Health Penn State University Pepsi Pfizer Pitt Development Presbyterian Homes R2 and Blue Star Properties RJ O’Brien Rockwool, Inc. Saint Louis University Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) SEIU Local Seneca Development Senior Lifestyle Corporation Southeast HEALTH St. Louis Blues St. Louis County Library Sterling Bay Sulo Development Sunnen with the Cozad Group The Instant Group The John Buck Company The X Company Thompson Coburn Tower Grove Park University of Health Sciences and Pharmacy in St. Louis University of Illinois University of Missouri St. Louis Volkswagon Volvo William Harris Investors

Confidential Project Gateway Plaza Inpatient Tower, Springfield Heart Hospital, Mercy Hospital South 448 N LaSalle Medical Office Building Morrison & Morrison Office Much Shelist Office COVID Response Study Palm Tower CCLC building 2 OTC Republic Center Link in the Loop Cardio Consolidation, Mokena MOB Fulton East Sanitary/Hygienic Wipes Facility Westview Garage East Halls, Lasch Hall, West Campus Garage & Roadway Expansion

Northpark BTS Pfizer R&D Facility Multiple Mercy Freestanding Clinics Lake Forest Place, Townhome Upgrade Morton Salt District RJ O’Brien Office Manufacturing Plant SLUCare ACC Medical Planning Study FORTY, Victory, & Spring Street Interiors Facility Expansion EDGE @ BRDG, EDGE @ West Sheridan at Oak Brook 1708, Cardio Relocation Enterprise Center Improvements Administrative Library Building 600 W Chicago Embry West Loop - Luxury Condominiums Sunnen Multi-Family 30 S Wacker The John Buck Company HQ High-rise Co-living Apartments - Various Locations Thompson Coburn HQ Tower Grove East Stream Restoration Recreation and Student (RAS) Center Confidential Project Mark Twain Building Roof Replacement Battery Plant and Body Shop Expansion Volvo HQ William Harris Investors Facility

Thank you to our clients. for the opportunity to transform lives through the spaces we create.


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358

Lamar Johnson Collaborative Team Members


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Aaron Gallagher Abigail Haakenstad Adam Bachtel Adam Seemann Alan Barker Alfred Fiesel Alice Trn Amy Luchun Andrea Tosone Andrew Kilmer Andrew Mertzlufft Andrew Sebacher Anezka Gocova Aron Johannsson Ashley Turnbull Audrey Delapp Austin Powers-Hickey Benjamin Buehrle Ben Revelle Bret Litton Brett Horin Brian Pansing Brian Dolan Brian Tomlinson Bruna Aoki Cale Doornbos Carl Blessing Caroline Finck Chip Crawford Charles Meagher Chelsey Morris Chengcheng Peng Christopher Sanders Christopher Ching Christopher Kupcho Clifford Collins Cristina Martin Dane Zillioux Daniel Lyons Daniel Wojciechowski David Eslahi David Junge David Lewis David Londagin Denise Rocha Doh Young Kim Drew Ranieri Ellen Eckert Eranthis Quigley Eric Robinson Eric Wolf Erik Andersen David Hirschbuehler Evelyn Krussel Fatima Pacheco Frank Hu Fred Foan George Halik Jerry Vitale

Griffen Herne Halima Shehu Hannah Beasley Hannah March Ike Williams Jackie Otto Jameson Skaife Javier Torres Gomez Jazmin Desvars Royg Jennifer Tucker Jennifer Hohol Jennifer Nevil Jennifer Abi Saad Jennifer Voss Jeremy Margis Jerod Thornton Jessica Statz John Talavera Jonathan Manestar Jonathan Meader Jonny Noble Jonathon Olson Joseph Caro Joseph Schnieders Joshua Oliver Jung Sue Kim Kapil Khanna Kekeli Dawes Kelly Pimmel Kelsey Upchurch Kent Lehman Kody Zedolek Lamar Johnson Lance McOlgan Lance Yeary Laura Maggison Laura Meyer Laura Stock Lauren Fishbune Larry Nordin Lina Chiu Lindsay Webb LingYi Tseng Lucy Goldman Lydia Borchers Macit Baris Saner Madeline Smith Magdalena Aravena Mark Beyatte Mark Farmer Mark Bender Mark Cannon Mark Matteson Mary Reinhart Matthew Grahek Matthew Maranzana Matthew Rife Matthew Richardson Megan Schultz

Megan Wilker Michael Siciliano Michael Smith Michael Staats Max Komnenich Michael Hanley Michelle Malecha Mitchel Heiar Mulugeta Woldgeorgis Neil Eisenberger Nicholas Moen Nicholas Casaletto Nicholas Cox Nicolas Smith Nicole Schupmann Olivia Freese Olivia Warsek Patrick Nolan Paul Bryant Pranav Shauche Priyasha Shrestha Rachel Walter Rachel Wolf Richard Hands Robert Neely Robert Konzelmann Ronald Jones Rory Thibault Rui Zou Ryan Lima Ryan Stumpf Ryan Taube Sarah Doriani Sarah Jacobson Sarah Hitchcock Scott Lumsden Scott Stolarz Scott Voss Shannon Riddle Shelby Kroeger Shuying Wu Spencer Woods Stephen Kirk West Steven Moeller Taokai Ma Terry McCoy Theresa Signorino Thomas Wilmes Timothy Sandweg Tina Mazzola Todd Emeott Tyler Lewis Tyler Meyr Valerie Michalek Vance Stutz Woo Young Kim


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2020 has been a year ďŹ lled with new challenges but we continue to adapt, discover solutions, and design incredible projects. Thank you to our team, clients, partners, and communities for making this a successful year.





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