|
Biggie Size
World Market Center Does a Mammoth Expansion
by Tony Illia
Las Vegas does things big and bold, and its buildings are
no exception. The World Market Center, for example, currently
has a $550 million, 2.1 million-sq.-ft. expansion underway
at the northwest corner of Grand Central Parkway and Bonneville
Avenue in downtown Las Vegas. (That's roughly the same size
as the Empire State Building.) The 18-month-old furniture
and design showroom complex only stays open two weeks a year,
making such a sizeable addition seem like madness. Yet the
home furnishings business is a $120 billion a year industry.
|
"The third building marks the milestone in our race
to fulfill the vision of World Market Center as the predominant
international market for the industry," said Shawn Sampson,
the center's co-founder and managing partner.
World Market Center LLC of Las Vegas, and its co-developer
The Related Cos. LP of New York, have ambitious plans for
a $3-billion, 12 million-sq.-ft. home design and furnishings
campus on 57 acres in the heart of Las Vegas.
Phase one consisted of a $230-million, 10-story building with
230 showrooms and 1.6 million sq. ft. of permanent exhibit
space. It opened in July 2005.
Phase two is a $345 million, 16-story building with 300 showrooms
and 1.6 million sq. ft. of exhibit space. It's scheduled to
open this month. Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. of Baltimore
is the general contractor for both phases.
But phase three is the center's largest undertaking to date,
bringing its total size to 5 million-sq.-ft. Roughly 1,000
employees will occupy building three when it opens in June
2008.
PENTA Building Group of Las Vegas is the general contractor
for the 16-story steel framed building atop a 27,000-cu.-yd.
concrete mat and footings foundation. Designed by Jerde Partnership
of Venice, Calif., with Las Vegas-based JMA as architect-of-record,
the 280-ft.-tall structure has a 550,000-sq.-ft. facade consisting
of a combination of EIFS, glass and metal paneling with a
signature 80-ft.-wide faceted triangular glass wall entrance.
"Building three came across as a skyscraper laid on its
side," said Eduardo Lopez, Jerde's senior designer. "They
wanted something that big, so it has an elongated look. We
tried to keep it very simple, still adding a couple of architectural
moves to make it interesting."
The structure measures 250 ft. wide by 700 ft. long and covers
eight acres.
The building uses no shear walls but instead relies on pipe
cross-bracing and bolt plate girders for structural support.
DeSimone Consulting Engineers of Las Vegas is the structural
engineer. The method is expected to save time by eliminating
concrete form work.
The building, as a result, uses a whopping 17,500 tons worth
of steel. SME Steel Contractors, West Jordan, Ut., is the
steel erector and fabricator.
"Everything about this building is big," said Justin
Ritz, PENTA's project engineer. "Each floor, for instance,
is roughly 3.5 acres in size."
The structure features a concrete-over-metal-decking flooring
system with a 150 lb.-per-sq.-ft. live load rating. The building
will have 34 escalators and 16 elevators and require 1,200
heat pumps, four air handlers, eight cooling towers and a
central plant to keep things cool during the summer.
Las Vegas-based Quality Mechanical is doing the mechanical
work, and Dynaelectric Co. is handling the electrical portion.
Phase three also entails construction of a seven-level, 4,487-space
parking garage directly north of the new building. Bomel Construction
Co. of Anaheim, Calif. is the contractor for the cast-in-place
structure that's expandable up to 14 levels.
Concurrent construction of the garage and building around
two pre-existing buildings with a combined 2,000 employees
hasn't been easy.
"The toughest part of the job is logistics and coordinating
subcontractors and material deliveries," said Steve Stutzman,
PENTA's project superintendent.
The project will use three gantry tower cranes provided by
Jake's Crane and Rigging of Las Vegas to pick and place building
materials. An estimated 550 workers will be onsite during
the height of construction activity.
Building three will connect with its neighbor, building two,
using glass railing pedestrian breezeways at each level. It
will additionally tie into the campus with a landscaped plaza
of stamped and colored concrete.
It will represent $1.1 billion investment to date. World Market
Center, when fully developed, will have eight separate buildings
all connected by sky bridges.
Key
Players
Developer: World
Market Center LLC; The Related Cos. LP
Architect: JMA; Jerde Partnership
General Contractor: PENTA Building Group;
Bomel Construction (garage)
Structural Engineer: DeSimone Consulting
Engineers
Mechanical: Quality Mechanical
Electrical: Dynalectric Co.
Steel: SME Steel Contractors
Other: Nevada Ready Mix; Southern Nevada
Paving; TAB Contractors
Click here for Next Feature Story >>
|