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Playtime:
Truckee Meadows Boys and Girls Club Expands
By Tony Illia
A $7.5 million upgrade at the Boys & Girls Club of Truckee
Meadows will soon mean more playtime for more children.
Founded in 1976, the club provides a positive environment
for more than 2,000 youths living in the Reno-Sparks area.
It offers sports leagues, leadership training and after-school
tutoring for children ages 6- to- 18. Membership at the club
has tripled in the last five years.
"As the population in northern Nevada escalates, so does
the need for a larger Boys & Girls Club," said Maureen
Woolsey, Boys & Girls Club's chief professional officer.
"Over the next decade, the youth population will exceed
the senior population, and - it is vital that we provide a
safe and positive environment for our youth."
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The Donald W. Reynolds Foundation lent a helping hand last
year and awarded the Truckee Meadows club a $6.1 million grant
for a major renovation/expansion. As a result, work began
on a two-story, 40,000-sq.-ft. addition to the club's main
building at 2680 E. Ninth Street in Reno. TNT Construction
of Reno is the general contractor.
The project calls for a new 18,720-sq.-ft. gymnasium housing
three basketball courts and , a 40- by- 12-ft. stage. The
roof structure is supported by wood beams and joists for a
112-ft. clear-span interior. The single-level concrete tilt-wall
structure uses 10-in.-thick insulated panels, which were cast
onsite.
TNT is self-performing the concrete work. The largest panel
measured 20- ft.- wide- by- 31- ft.- tall and weighed 72,000
lbs. In total, the project will require 1,600-cu. yards of
concrete and 174 tons of steel.
In addition, the job entails a two-level block and structural
steel addition housing a 4,575-sq.-ft. kitchen and 8,190-sq.-ft.
youth center on the first level. The upper level contains
a 6,360-sq.-ft. youth center with computer lab, seven offices,
conference room, a library, two classrooms and lavatory. There
is also a 2,500-sq.-ft. stand-alone block storage building
and 154-space surface parking lot.
"One of the biggest challenges has been was keeping the
facility operational while updating and renovating its electrical
and mechanical systems," said Lee Arnold, TNT's vice
president.
The tilt wall construction relies on concrete sandwhich panels
with a 2-in. foam core for insulation, giving the walls an
R facter of 19. Arnold said the tilt panels are similar to
those used by Washington State farmers to vacuum preserve
and refrigerate apples.
Having undergone several additions over the years, the most
recent in 1991, the Boys & Girls Club had a mix of operating
systems. The latest project required some thoughtful design
in order to marry the existing building with its new addition.
The Worth Group of Reno is the architect.
"We tried to bring some architectural design into it,"
said Fred Graham, Worth Group's project architect. "Due
to the programming and site layout, it required some added
engineering to tie the existing structure with the new construction."
For example, the old kitchen area at the entrance was moved
to the side in order to reconfigure the foyer.
The building has split-face block on the lower level with
painted metal and glass-storefront above. The architect opted
for tough, resilient materials such as block and concrete
that would wear well and stand- up to steady daily use.
"Kids can be rough on the materials," so we tired
to make it as 'bullet-proof' as possible," Graham said.
"We wanted to make the building as maintenance-free as
possible."
The 73,900-sq.-ft. upgraded building is scheduled to open
in June.
"[This] will allow us to serve more youth in our growing
community, which now has an overall population of more than
300,000," Woolsey said.
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