Monday, October 29, 2012

Bilco Releases Architectural Products Catalog


The Bilco Co. has released its 2012 Architectural Products Catalog, detailing the company’s line of roof hatches, automatic fire vents, floor, vault and sidewalk doors and safety products for the commercial markets. 
The Architectural Products Catalog features information on Bilco’s new fall protection grating system, which provides a permanent means of fall protection for the company’s line of floor access doors. The system meets OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910.23 requirements and is available as a factory installed option or in retrofit kits for field installation.
Bilco’s new fall protection system is constructed of light-weight aluminum grating with type 316 stainless steel hardware for corrosion resistance. The grating panel is supplied with a safety yellow powder coat finish, making it more durable, attractive, and extremely scratch-resistant. The system also features an automatic hold-open device that secures each panel in the full 90-degree position, maximizing the door’s usable access area.
The catalog is available free by calling 800-366-6530 or emailing commercial@bilco.com




Friday, October 26, 2012

Ash Grove Cement Announces Promotions



The Ash Grove Cement Co. announced promotions in its sales leadership teams. The promotions are effective Jan. 1, 2013.

Ernie Peterson is promoted to vice president of sales - Midwest and will report to Charlie Sunderland. Peterson has been with Ash Grove 15 years, including the last five years as regional sales manager in Ash Grove’s Omaha, Neb., sales office where he led a team of four salesmen, a technical service manager and two administrative professionals. His career in the cement manufacturing industry spans two decades. His direct reports include three sales offices covering six states in the Midwest. 

Mike Wood is promoted to vice president of sales – west and also will report to Sunderland. Wood has been with Ash Grove 10 years serving as regional sales manager in Ash Grove’s Boise, Idaho, sales office where he led a three-state team of salesmen. His career in the cement manufacturing industry dates back to his youth. His parents owned a ready mix operation, and he was exposed to all aspects of the industry. His direct reports include four sales offices in nine states in the West as well British Columbia and Alberta, Canada. Wood also has an extensive financial background having worked in management capacities for commercial lenders for more than a decade. 

Retiring Ash Grove sales executives include:

Dewey Fore has led Ash Grove’s Midwestern sales region for five years and is an officer of Ash Grove Cement Company, CONCO, Ash Grove Resources, Lyman Richey and Permanent Paving. He will have completed 26 years at Ash Grove when he retires in December 2012. Fore is a member of the Kansas Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors, was a board member of the Aggregate division of the National Ready Mix Concrete Association, has led the Oklahoma Ready Mix Association, was a founding member of the Oklahoma/Arkansas American Concrete & Paving Association and served on its board, president of the Arkansas Ready Mix Concrete Association, was active in the Iowa Ready Mix Association and served as an Iowa Concrete Paving Association board member; was chairman of the Nebraska Concrete Council and served on boards of both the South Central and North Central Cement Promotion Associations.

Dave Baker has led Ash Grove’s West sales region for 16 years and is an officer of Ash Grove Cement Company. He will have completed 23 years at Ash Grove when he retires in December 2012. Baker’s career in the cement industry spans four decades. He led the Northwest Cement Shippers three times as its chairman, he served as chairman of the Northwest American Concrete & Paving Association, including service on its board since 1989 and he served on numerous Portland Cement Association committees during his career.


Thursday, October 25, 2012

USGBC Announces Leadership Awards



The U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) has announced the recipients of its 2012 Leadership Awards, recognizing outstanding individuals who embody the vision, leadership and commitment to the evolution of green buildings and communities as a vehicle to enhance our quality of life. The awards will be presented at the Leadership Luncheon on Nov. 15 during USGBC's Greenbuild International Conference and Expo held in San Francisco.

Tom Darden, Executive Director of Make It Right, a non-profit organization that builds sustainable homes and buildings for communities in need, received the Leadership in the NGO Sector Award. Make It Right has led the charge in redeveloping the Lower Ninth Ward with resource-efficient, durable homes after the devastation of Hurricane Katrina.

Healthy Building Network's Tom Lent, Policy Director and Bill Walsh, Founder, each received the Leadership in Advocacy Award. Lent has advocated for the banning of arsenic-treated wood and educates on the environmental and health hazards of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), among many initiatives. Under the leadership of Walsh, Healthy Building Network has introduced new, healthier building materials into commercial markets and shifted more than $4 billion in materials purchases from toxic materials to healthier alternatives.

Steve Saunders, CEO, Texas Energy Solutions, received the Leadership in the Residential Sector Award. Texas Energy Solutions is a LEED for Homes Provider, and Saunders has done extensive work to expand and advance the LEED for Homes program. 

Nancy Cantor, Chancellor and President, Syracuse University; Joanie Mahoney, Onondaga County Executive; and Stephanie A. Miner, Mayor of Syracuse each received the 2012 Global Community Leadership Award for their collective and collaborative efforts to foster substantive change across the Syracuse and Central New York landscape. Among their many projects: Cantor has elevated the mission of green building on Syracuse University's campus through numerous LEED building projects and a school-wide goal to achieve carbon neutrality by 2040. County Executive Mahoney led the charge on the Save the Rain program for stormwater management and advocates for green roofs, among many sustainability initiatives. Mayor Miner has advocated for local green buildings and worked to create a vibrant, revitalized connective corridor in the city of Syracuse.

M. Arthur Gensler Jr., Founder, Gensler; and Donald Simon, Attorney, Wendel, Rosen, Black & Dean, LLP received the President's Award. Founder of global architecture, design, planning and consulting firm, Gensler, M. Arthur Gensler has helped pioneer green building as a business visionary and legend of the design industry.

2012 Leadership Awards Recipients
  • Leadership in the NGO Sector: Tom Darden, executive director, Make It Right Foundation
  • Leadership in Advocacy: Tom Lent, policy director, Healthy Building Network; Bill Walsh, founder, Healthy Building Network
  • Leadership in the Residential Sector: Steve Saunders, CEO, Texas Energy Solutions
  • Global Community Leadership Award: Nancy Cantor, chancellor and president, Syracuse University; Joanie Mahoney, Onondaga County executive; Stephanie A. Miner, mayor of Syracuse
  • President's Award: M. Arthur Gensler Jr., founder, Gensler; Donald Simon, attorney, Wendel, Rosen, Black & Dean, LLP.


Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Georgia Wins Eleven Regional Design Awards

The South Atlantic Region (SAR) Design Awards were announced at the Woodruff Arts Center recently in Atlanta. Eleven entries from Georgia were recognized among the 21 awards granted that night. The award submissions were juried on Aug. 10 in Seattle. AIA South Atlantic Region Executive Director, David Crawford, Jewel Warlick with the Brick Industry Southeast and SAR Design Awards Chair, Dennis Stallings, AIA, were hosted in the office of the jury Chair David Miller, FAIA at the Miller Hull Partnership. The jury considered 165 SAR Entries along with 12 Brick submissions. David Miller, FAIA was joined on the jury by Scott Wolf, FAIA, Kirsten Murray, AIA, Susan Jones, FAIA, and Rick Zieve, FAIA.

Winners from Georgia Include:
 
spsu2012Brick Honor Award - Southern Polytechnic State University, Architectural School Addition - Cooper Carry, Inc.  Brick Manufacturer:  Endicott Clay Products.  The new 14,600-square-foot 'Design II' Architecture Studio addition at Southern Poly houses the Department of Architecture's second year design studios. The building's exterior materials are primarily brick and composite metal panels and also incorporated glazed walls that encourage natural day lighting. The south façade includes four brick walls that face the primary pedestrian circulation route. The façade orients east-west, so that the movement of the sun casts dramatic shadows and changes the visual effect of the patterning.

Honor Award - 1315 Peachtree Street - Perkins+Will. This renovation of a 1986 office building addresses the challenges of creating a living laboratory and educational tool that reflects the firm's environmental commitment to its staff, clients and community, and its on-going pursuit of design excellence and its value to society. The building had to reflect these values by meeting the highest levels of sustainability, by allowing their employees to work in an interdisciplinary, integrated manner by fostering creative, inspiring design, and by serving as a "living lab." The project's goal is to achieve the highest LEED Platinum Certification and meet the 2030 Challenge. The jury noted that the rational and unadorned architecture will stand the test of time.

Honor Award - Benjamin E. Mays High School - Perkins+Will. This project represents a total transformation of a 1980's comprehensive high school into a newly renovated 350,000 square foot facility designed as part of Atlanta Public Schools transformation program to build career-based academies. The north and south perimeter areas of the school were completely gutted and replaced with classrooms to house the desired four career academies. With the gym and auditorium remaining in place, the central core of the school was totally demolished and replaced by new construction that houses the school's shared facilities: a new two-story media center, two-story cafeteria, and new science rooms.  The jury noted powerful spatial interplay, with almost all spaces washed with balanced natural light to minimize the need for artificial lighting.
  
 Honor Award - SCAD Museum of Art - Sottile & Sottile and Lord, Aeck & Sargent in association with Dawson Architects.   The SCAD Museum of Art is a new 82,000-square-foot contemporary art and design museum, which reinvigorates the ruins of a 19th century railroad freight warehouse. The dazzling architectural program features exhibition galleries, a theater and classrooms, as well as urban streetscape improvements and a vibrant courtyard. This landmark project is guided by an architectural philosophy of contrast on all scales-preserving the beauty of the site's industrial grandeur with a design language rooted in simplicity and clarity. The jury felt this sensitive renewal represented a fine civic project noting the ancient shell forms a container for dynamic, contemporary spaces.   
  
Merit Award - Mark Jefferson Science Project - Lord, Aeck & Sargent.  This addition to the Mark Jefferson Science Complex at Eastern Michigan University artfully knits together three functionally and visually disparate, aging science buildings. It creates a science terminus to a major pedestrian mall and a new image for the university and science programs from multiple prominent campus entry points - each containing all new infrastructure and allowing renovation of the existing buildings to be phased without disruption to teaching. The complex integrates and displays science, teaching and research to the university community and incorporates multiple strategies to enhance visibility of sustainability (sunshades, green roofs, rain gardens, and energy monitoring).  The jury noted that the labs are highly transparent creating the idea of science on display.  
 
Merit Award - Rehabilitation of the Hinman Research Building - Lord, Aeck & Sargent. Originally designed by P.M. Heffernan, the Hinman Research Building is the first freestanding research facility on Georgia Tech's campus. Characterized by its mid-century design and materials and a 50-foot high-bay laboratory, the building was rehabilitated and transformed into a flexible new annex for Georgia Tech's College of Architecture. The building is now home to graduate level architecture studios, computer, interdisciplinary research and high fidelity simulation labs, administrative offices, galleries and event space. It was designed to house the Georgia Tech Engineering Experiment Station, the first and flagship facility of a system of engineering experiment stations that paralleled its agricultural counterpart.  The jury noted that this was not just a preservation project. The design elevates the brut reality of the former industrial shed into a powerful volume that invites invention and creativity and a living laboratory for students of architecture.
 
Merit Award - D.M. Therrell High School - Perkins+WillThis project renovates and replaces an existing 1,200 student high school while re-organizing it into three Academic Academies for Atlanta Public Schools. The solution opens and clarifies the organizational diagram by carefully placing new program elements between existing, framing a new courtyard that transforms the life of the school both functionally and experientially. The jury noted all spaces receive abundant amounts of natural daylight, with the architectural expression supporting a more transparent and sustainable solution. What once was an internalized and inefficient building is now an academic campus designed for student success.

Merit Award - Herman Miller Los Angeles Showroom - tvsdesignThe client, an international furniture manufacturer based in west Michigan, renewed its presence in Los Angles with a new 18,000-square-foot showroom that reflects the company's commitment to forward thinking, problem solving design and environmental stewardship. A former warehouse built in 1956, the facility's  bowstring trusses and significant potential were intriguing both to the client and the architectural/interior design team. The result of the collaboration includes a space that offers dynamic spatial flow for the company's solution portfolio with room for multiple product configurations, knowledge display and hospitality for groups ranging from intimate gatherings to large audience events.  The jury noted the wonderful play of new against old where interventions are held under and away from the structure.

Merit Award - Nancy Creek Guesthouse - Philip Babb ArchitectThe Nancy Creek Guesthouse & Swimming Pool provide guest quarters and outdoor entertainment space to a mid-century modern home in Atlanta.  The new additions were placed on a 60- X 120-foot site that was occupied by an unused tennis court.  Each element of the design was carefully positioned to enhance its relationship to the existing house and the movement of the sun. The jury noted the simple open volume and clerestory that opens the structure to the tree canopy and outdoors.

Merit Award - Hotel Indigo - Surber Barber Choate & Hertlein Architects.  Hotel Indigo is a 130 room green boutique hotel situated on the edge of Athens' downtown historic district. The eco-chic design sensitively integrates the building and the associated guest arrival/parking experience into the sloping site and creatively adapts local vernacular style and materials into a decidedly modern aesthetic. The jury noted the European feel and straightforward contemporary architecture.

Merit Award - Davis Hall, Syracuse University - Mack Scogin Merrill Elam ArchitectsErnie Davis Hall is the first residential project at Syracuse University in over thirty years. As such, the new hall of 250 beds enhances the quality of life of the students, participates in the general sustainability of the campus and improves a previously underutilized site. It completes the block, invigorates the life of the sidewalk and street and addresses the scale of buildings to the west. It improves connectivity and a distinct but compatible architecture complements a campus of great architectural diversity.  The  jury noted the raw and edgy spaces that are well suited to the programmatic uses.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Denver's McNichols Building Undergoes Restoration


The soon-to-reopen McNichols Building will be both the guest of honor and hosting facility at a LIGHT Party, held on Wed. Oct. 24 and hosted by the Civic Center Conservancy and Arts & Venues Denver.


During the last three years, mason contractor Building Restoration Specialties Inc. (BRS) restored the stone structures at Civic Center Park, its Greek Amphitheater and Voorheis Memorial, as well as the City and County Building. As part of the ongoing renovation of Civic Center, BRS has finished restoring the historic masonry façade of the Carnegie Library, now called the McNichols Building, at the northwest corner of Civic Center Park.  

During the summer, BRS restored window openings back to their original intent and hand-carved the stone window surrounds that were removed in a previous remodel. After patching some areas and installing new stone where the existing stone could not be salvaged, BRS washed the entire building to return it to its original elegance. One of the challenges while working on the building was extracting large pieces of stone, some as large as 5,000 pounds, in order to build a new entrance into the structure.

“It’s been very gratifying to work on the McNichols Building,” says BRS President Rhonda Maas. “It is surrounded by other newly restored structures and the entire area is just beautiful now. We’re glad to see the revitalization of Civic Center Park and are proud to be on the team that strives to keep it beautiful.”

The LIGHT party aims to raise awareness of the McNichols Building as a unique venue for special events and serve as a fundraiser for the nonprofit Civic Center Conservancy’s efforts to revitalize Civic Center Park – elevating and sustaining it as an active and iconic cultural and community hub. More information about the LIGHT party can be found at http://www.civiccenterconservancy.org/event.

Monday, October 22, 2012

Robert Bosch Tool, Simpson Strong-Tie Form Strategic Alliance

Robert Bosch Tool Corp., a manufacturer of professional power tools and accessories, and Simpson Strong-Tie Company Inc., a provider of concrete, masonry and anchor repair solutions, has signed an agreement to form a strategic alliance that will allow the companies to jointly pursue sales, marketing and product development opportunities in the concrete construction market.

The sales combination gives the companies’ distribution partners and customers’ access to the broadest commercial and residential product portfolio in the concrete construction industry. The strategic alliance will give distributors the opportunity to compete effectively and take market share from direct sellers.

“Both the Bosch and Simpson Strong-Tie brands are synonymous with trust, integrity and quality in the concrete and masonry markets,” says Terry Horan, president and CEO, Robert Bosch Tool Corp., North America. “This strategic alliance will leverage both companies’ engineering strengths, manufacturing practices and sales expertise to deliver anchoring and fastening solutions that meet building code requirements and improve productivity for installers.”

The alliance seeks to bring to market a complete Bosch/Simpson Strong-Tie installation system, including adhesive and mechanical anchors, as well as demolition and rotary hammers and accessories, and to improve efficiency and productivity for customers. The new venture also will provide joint jobsite training to installers and will offer distribution partners a variety of sales and marketing benefits.

“The alliance between our two companies will give our distribution partners a better way to compete against direct sellers,” says Terry Kingsfather, president, Simpson Strong-Tie. “By combining Bosch’s expertise in power tools and accessory systems with the Simpson Strong-Tie focus on providing specified, value-engineered anchoring solutions, we can drive quality business to our partners and provide customers with even better solutions.”

Friday, October 19, 2012

Holcim US Plants Earn EPA Energy Star



Holcim (US) Inc. says five of its plants have earned the U.S. EnvironmentalProtection Agency's (EPA) ENERGY STAR.

"It is with great pride that once again Holcim is recognized by the EPA for our continued commitment to environmentally sound practices with the ENERGY STAR® Awards," says Filiberto Ruiz, deputy CEO of Holcim (US). "Protecting the environment is a priority at Holcim, and these awards reflect the determination of every Holcim employee to maintain that commitment." 

The following five Holcim plants were named: Theodore in Theodore, Ala.; Ste. Genevieve in Bloomsdale, Mo.; Holly Hill in Holly Hill, S.C.; Portland in Florence, Colo.; and Devil's Slide in Morgan, Utah. This year's award is the second for the Portland plant, the third for both the Holly Hill and Ste. Genevieve plants and the fifth consecutive year for the Devil's Slide plant. 

The ENERGY STAR® is the national symbol for protecting the environment through superior energy performance. 

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Lafarge Products Contribute to Kone Centre Green Design

The recently completed KONE Centre – featuring 125,000 square feet of office, restaurant and retail space – is a showcase for sustainability along the Mississippi River in Moline, Ill. The eight-story structure’s sustainable design includes 1,365 solar panels, light-harvesting technology, locally sourced recycled and renewable construction materials, and a host of energy-efficient building components. In addition, the shape of the building follows the solar axis and takes advantage of natural daylight.

A spectacular addition to the city’s riverfront when it officially opened in August, the multi-use facility was constructed with high-performance concrete containing Lafarge North America products: True Lite Lightweight Aggregate and a blended cement that included Class C fly ash and NewCem slag cement. These products, which are considered post-industrial recycled materials, made essential contributions to meeting the sustainable construction goals of the KONE Centre, which is expected to earn a LEED Gold rating from the U.S. Green Building Council.

The use of supplementary cementitious materials, such as fly ash and slag cement, as a partial replacement for portland cement can help designers and builders recycle industrial by-products, achieve higher performance from concrete mixtures, and earn points toward LEED certification of their projects. These blended cements have many properties that contribute to sustainable design - they produce stronger, longer-lasting concrete, reduce the consumption of nonrenewable raw materials, consume less energy, and turn by-products from other industries into resources that would otherwise be disposed of in landfills. Fly ash is derived from burning coal in electric utility plants, and slag cement is produced from granulated blast furnace slag, a by-product of the iron-making process.

Lafarge True Lite Lightweight Aggregate is also a recycled by-product of the iron production process.  About 35 percent lighter than most natural aggregates, this expanded slag product conforms to the U.S. and Canadian governments’ environmentally preferable purchasing programs and qualifies for points under many LEED credit categories. It offers excellent fire resistance, thermal insulating, and sound absorption capabilities and can help reduce heating and air-conditioning costs due to the capillary nature of the aggregate.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

OSHA, Lamar Renew Alliance for Worker Safety


The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) today renewed its Alliance with Lamar Outdoor Advertising to promote safety and health among vulnerable workers, young workers and workers in the construction and transportation industries.



“OSHA and Lamar have collaborated in promoting nationwide awareness of heat illness prevention, struck-by hazards, work stand-downs and distracted driving,” says Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health David Michaels. “Our renewed Alliance will continue our commitment to provide training, educational and outreach tools that promote worker safety.”

During the two-year agreement, the Alliance will develop an outdoor advertising safety and health training presentation for OSHA compliance officers and will promote other OSHA activities, including National Emphasis Programs and the North American Occupational Safety and Health Week.

“Lamar is very excited to be part of the Alliance Program. We believe that the Alliance between Lamar and OSHA represents a real opportunity to advance safety education within our industry,” says Corporate Safety Director for Lamar Advertising Co. Chuck Wigger. “In addition, we look forward to promoting agency initiatives and training opportunities for agency staff.”

Through its Alliance Program, OSHA works with unions, consulates, trade and professional organizations, faith- and community-based organizations, businesses and educational institutions to prevent workplace fatalities, injuries and illnesses. The purpose of each alliance is to develop compliance assistance tools and resources and educate workers and employers about their rights and responsibilities. Alliance Program participants do not receive exemptions from OSHA inspections or any other enforcement benefits. For more information, visit http://www.osha.gov/dcsp/alliances/index.html.



Monday, October 15, 2012

Paladin Attachments Fights Breast Cancer



On Oct. 7, 2012, Paladin Attachments, an attachment and coupler manufacturer, contributed to the American Cancer Society by participating in its Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk in Akron, Ohio, that raised more than $81,500 for breast cancer research, support and service programs for those facing the disease. 

For the second year of what will continue to be an annual company tradition, Paladin Attachments assembled team Digging For The Cure, which was made up of 44 participants (Paladin employees, family and friends) that together raised over $4,400 through online donations, bake sales, ribbon sales and raffles, which placed them third out of 198 teams that participated in the Akron, Ohio, event. In the two years combined, the team has raised nearly $7,500. In its 20 years of existence, the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk has had a definitive and inspiring impact on millions of lives. With walks taking place in more than 270 communities across the United States., more than 8 million walkers have participated in raising more than $460 million to fight breast cancer.

“Nearly everyone, within the construction industry and out, has been affected by breast cancer either directly or by knowing someone that was diagnosed; this is team Digging For The Cure’s way of helping future breast cancer patients and the more than 2.5 million breast cancer survivors continue their fight,” says Jennifer Fitzgerald, marketing communications manager for Paladin Attachments and team leader for Digging For The Cure. “Through free education, access to mammograms and groundbreaking research that it’s helped support, breast cancer death rates have declined more than 32 percent since the program originated. We are proud of our donation and participant increase this year and look forward to taking it a step higher next year to continue this trend.”

For more information about Making Strides Against Breast Cancer, visit http://makingstrides.acsevents.org.