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A Church Alive
Members of New Mexico's Church Alive have big dreams for
their 10-acre site in northwest Albuquerque.
Crews from Jaynes Corp. of Albuquerque recently finished up
a 12,000-sq.-ft. steel-framed building that becomes the permanent
home of Church Alive. The group previously rented their building,
and with the completion of this first phase, congregants are
turning to the future.
Designers employed a variety of techniques to maintain flexibility
for future expansion plans. Steel frame and steel stud provide
options for connections, with designers avoiding load-bearing
walls where a future building might mate up.
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"We put some big openings in there for future expansion,
and of course, we had to put some big window openings for
the nice views of the Sandia Mountaints," said structural
engineer Charles Stubbs, vice president of Chavez Grieves
in Albuquerque.
The master plan is also designed so the church can build in
phases. Plans call for a permanent sanctuary seating up to
1,200, a multipurpose center, senior and youth centers and
more classroom space.
"Tilt-up tends to be more restrictive, and steel stud
and frame tends to be more economical and flexible,"
said project architect Dave Cook of Albuquerque's SMPC Architects
Inc. "We tried to foresee what the future expansions
might be so we don't paint ourselves into a corner."
The new church includes a temporary sanctuary for approximately
300 people, a children's classroom for Sunday school, child-care
facilities, offices and a small "café" where
members can congregate before and after services.
The classrooms and child-care facilities all feature fire-rated
ceilings, with crews from Albuquerque's Four Suns Builders
installing the ceilings, steel studs and drywall. The project
is capped off with a spray-foam roof system applied by Ex-El
Company Inc. of Albuquerque.
Extensive site preparation was the key for future expansion,
so the civil work took a substantial portion of the project's
$1.2 million budget. Steep slopes, city requirements and sandy
soil challenged designers to deliver a workable site plan
within the church's budget.
"We pushed some limits of design rules in terms of the
slopes and what works for the entry ways and parking lots,"
Cook said. "We tried to deal with the site economically
without creating a lot of retaining walls and other structures."
Albuquerque's Groundhog Excavating performed the grading and
site work, which was designed by Bohannon Huston Inc., also
of Albuquerque. Because of the site's poor soils and its location
near an arroyo used for flood control, crews installed an
18-in. storm drain that runs underneath the building.
"The sand was a real drag," said Troy Otero, owner
of Groundhog Excavation. "It's really sandy stuff and
it's always blowing because there is nothing to keep it consolidated."
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