flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

2019 Reconstruction Awards: The 1060 Project at Wrigley Field

Reconstruction Awards

2019 Reconstruction Awards: The 1060 Project at Wrigley Field

Venerable Wrigley Field is raised up in a top-to-bottom restoration that took five years to complete.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 8, 2019
Wrigley field looking to the northeast

Wrigley Field, looking northeast toward Lake Michigan. Two new digital scoreboards flank the traditional scoreboard whose numbers are manipulated by hand. All photos: Mark Ballogg/Ballogg Photography.

Wrigley Field, the second-oldest baseball stadium in the country, opened in 1914. Soon after the Ricketts family purchased the ballpark and its main tenant, the Chicago Cubs, in 2009, plans were set in motion to significantly upgrade the deteriorating structure, expand the facility, and enhance its amenities.

The project was ambitious, and the list of improvements extensive: improving the building’s foundation, restoring and reinforcing the core structure, rebuilding the bleachers, restoring the historic marquee, reconstructing the façade, upgrading player facilities, adding premier clubs and fan amenities, improving concession and restroom availability, installing new digital outfield signage and video boards, adding modern media facilities, and converting the parking lot into a plaza and six-story office building with a new underground clubhouse.

All of this was accomplished over a five-year period during the 20 to 26 weeks per year of off season, many of those weeks in frigid weather conditions. In 2018, the project team reorganized the remaining work and expedited the schedule by one year, which meant that nearly half of the overall project volume had to be completed in the last two years.

 

The 1914 Club at Wrigley FieldThe ceiling of the 1914 Club under home plate has a ribbed metal underlayment that will drain any condensation to the edges to prevent water damage to the room. 

 

Planning under such constraints was critical. This project required eight years of preconstruction that didn’t end until the final phase of construction began last year. When considering the basement and new Cubs clubhouse under the former parking lot, the team explored more than 50 different sizes, layouts, and configurations, as well as associated structural materials. Throughout the design and construction, the project team relied heavily on laser scanning and 3D modeling.

The most critical part of the project was strengthening the building’s foundation to accommodate the planned expansion. Wrigley Field was essentially lifted onto stilts while the foundations and column supports were restored, vastly augmenting the ballpark’s foundational load capacity. Pepper Construction, the project’s GC, sunk four micropiles at each of the “F” line major columns to a depth of 100 feet under each column before welding on a new zero-tolerance column base. Each micropile could withstand 500,000 pounds of force; one micropile is strong enough to hold the 225-ton Statue of Liberty.

 

See Also: 2019 Reconstruction Awards: Betting on a city's future

 

Among the key elements of the stadium’s restoration, which required considerable re-engineering, was the Concourse, which loops around Wrigley Field beginning in the main grandstand and through the bleachers. A detailed sequence was developed to restore and expand the 40,000-sf mezzanine across the ballpark and two serpentine walkways while simultaneously repairing the underbelly of the ballpark’s concrete structure. A massive, 400-foot-long by eight-foot-tall grade beam, sitting on more than 90 micropiles along the western edge of the ballpark, was installed to redistribute the expanded load of the upper level concourse and stabilize soil conditions between the ballpark and the plaza.

 

The restored concourse at Wrigley FieldThe restored concourse (below) would not have been possible without the project team’s colossal efforts to improve Wrigley Field’s antiquated structural system.

 

Each year during construction periods, the concourse walkway had to be ripped out to work on below-grade areas that house mechanicals, plumbing, AV equipment, and underground utilities. Once the underground work was completed, the overhead piping could also be reconstructed.

The entire exterior ballpark façade was restored to the glory days of the 1930s. The original brick features, sunburst-patterned steel grille work, and the restored historic marquee were reintroduced. The stucco and clay tile and terra cotta roofing covered the entire ballpark façade, including the expanded left- and right-field terraces.

Added to Wrigley was Gallagher Way plaza, a new six-story, two-basement facility adjacent to the ballpark. The first two floors provide retail space, the third floor is for conference rooms, and floors 4-6 serve as the Cubs’ offices. A new 30,000-sf clubhouse, located outside the ballpark under the plaza, provides the players with the best-in-class off-the-field facilities needed to train, rehabilitate from their injuries, and prepare for games.

 

Platinum Award Winner

BUILDING TEAM Pepper Construction (submitting firm, GC) The Ricketts Family (owner) CAA ICON (owner’s representative) Populous, Stantec (architects) Thornton Tomasetti (SE) ME Engineers (ME) Terra Engineering (CE) Details 970,000 sf Total cost Confidential at owner’s request Construction time October 2014 to April 2019 Delivery method CM at risk

Related Stories

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 11, 2016

Exclusive Chicago club re-emerges as a boutique hotel

Built in 1893 for the World’s Columbian Exposition, the CAA was an exclusive social club founded by leading figures in American sports and commerce.

Reconstruction Awards | Dec 1, 2015

Massive Chicago parking garage gets overdue waterproofing

Millennium Lakeside Garage, the largest underground parking facility in the U.S., hadn’t been waterproofed since the 1970s. The massive project took nearly 2½ years and 33,554 man-hours.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 30, 2015

Washington Monument restored after 2011 East Coast earthquake

This restoration and repair project, which was completed under budget and eight days early (despite several setbacks), involved re-pointing 2.5 miles of mortar joints, repairing 1,200 linear feet of cracks, and installing 150 sf of Dutchman repairs. Construction took place from November 2011 to May 2014.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 30, 2015

Denver's 107-year-old seminary campus modernized

The scope of the project included the seminary dorms, library, and chapel, all of which posed their own set of obstacles.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 24, 2015

Center of I.M. Pei-designed plaza part of Washington redevelopment

The L’Enfant Plaza, a three-story below-grade mall, was renovated to include a new glass atrium pavilion and a 40-foot-long, interactive LED.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 24, 2015

Manhattan's first freestanding emergency department a result of adaptive reuse

The Lenox Hill Healthplex, a restoration of the Curran O’Toole Building, has glass-block walls and a carefully preserved exterior.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 19, 2015

Nave restored at Yale’s Sterling Memorial Library

Turner Construction and Helpern Architects revived the 150-foot-long nave, which was embellished with stained glass windows by G. Owen Bonawit, stone carvings by René P. Chambellan, and decorative ironwork by Samuel Yellin.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 19, 2015

Infinite Chicago redevelopment bridges past to present

The renovation of three historic downtown buildings—the Gibbons and Steger Buildings and Pickwick Stables—includes a multi-level concrete walkway connection.

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 18, 2015

Sun Theater serves the youth of St. Louis

Lawrence Group and property owner TLG Beaux Arts raised $11 million to restore the 26,000-sf theater into a modern performance venue.  

Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2015

Smithsonian Institution’s Arts and Industries Building again an exposition and museum space

After removing decades’ worth of unfortunate additions to expose 17 historic interior spaces for the National Historic Landmark, the Building Team zoned in on the client’s key concern.  

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


Giants 400

BD+C Awards Programs

Entry information and past winners for Building Design+Construction's two major awards programs: 40 Under 40 and Giants 400



halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021