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Project Detail

Mason Service Center Addition


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Project Location:

The new addition to Mason Support Services will be located on the west side of the current Mason Support Service Center, north of Douglas Road.  The new vehicle storage building will be located directly north of Mason Support Service Center, on St. Michael's Drive.  The renovation work within the Maintenance Center is located within the central receiving area.


Project Description:

The project will consist of four phases of work which will include an addition to Mason Support Service Center, minor renovations within the existing Mason Support Service Center, a new vehicle storage building, and minor renovations within the Maintenance Center. The new Mason Support Services Center addition will be a single-story pre-engineered building with an overall footprint size of +/-15,000 gross square feet. The existing Mason Support Service Center minor renovation will include a new recycling check-out area, a new warehouse check-in area, two new offices, and replacing the existing lighting in the warehouse. The minor renovation for the Maintenance Center will occur in the former central receiving area where General Services will then be relocated to.  Work includes increasing the size of the existing break room, adding one office, and reworking and adding new fencing and gate sections around the existing carpet inventory. The new vehicle storage garage will be a sixteen (16) bay, pre-engineered metal building.

Project Status:

The maintenance center renovation, addition, and vehicle storage building are now complete.

 



 

News from University Architect
Stinson-Remick Hall receives LEED Gold Certification!

After years of planning and two years of construction, Stinson-Remick Hall received LEED Gold Certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.  The building was completed at the end of 2009 and opened for classes in January 2010.  The formal dedication and blessing of the building took place on September 3, 2010.  Several of the items that allowed the building to achieve LEED Gold Certification are as follows:

  1. Water saving plumbing fixtures will save 130,850 gallons of water per year
  2.  Reused a previous building site so green space was preserved; the original building was completely recycled
  3.  Energy recovery system installed on the lab exhaust system will save about $65,724 per year and will provide a payback in 7.5 years
  4.  Specified low VOC (volatile organic compound) materials for most interior materials, carpet, glues, sealants, paints, etc. 
  5.  Installed white roof membrane to reduce heating load on the building in the summer months
  6. Native landscape & drip irrigation system saves 51% of normal water usage (165,519 gallons in July)
  7.  The building has showers to promote bicycle commuting
  8.  There are over 76 electrical metering points tracking the building's electrical usage

 

    •  Overall building energy reduction features:
    •                 -reclaiming the heat from the exhaust air and   using it to heat incoming outside air
    •                 -using the cold lab make-up incoming air in winter to    provide cooling to the clean rooms
    •                 -using occupancy control to turn off lights and reduce air flow when the space is unoccupied
    •                 -lighting design reduction of 14%
    •  95.76 % of the materials by weight (7,100 tons) that left the jobsite as construction waste recycled
    •  Many of the building materials used were manufactured within 500 miles of the job site (e.g. clay pavers, rebar for the concrete structure, brick, all the structural steel, all the concrete (approximately 8,000 cubic yards) 
    •  Large extent of materials originated from recycled content (e.g. reinforcing steel for the masonry walls consists of 85 % post consumer and 15 % pre-consumer content)
    • The building was flushed with filtered outside air after construction prior to occupancy to ensure that all off-gassing of materials had been cleaned from the building prior to occupancy (approximately 2.0 billion cubic feet of air were flushed through the building)


    To view further details and pictures, please click Stinson-Remick.

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Last Modified:
February 26, 2003