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

Structural engineer speeds skyscraper construction with novel building core design

AEC Innovators

Structural engineer speeds skyscraper construction with novel building core design

With its Speed Core composite core wall system, Magnusson Klemencic Associates thinks it’s found a faster way to complete high-rise buildings.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | August 6, 2019
Skyscraper design, Rainer Square, 58-story tower, Seattle, speed core, Magnusson Klemencic Associates, Ron Klemencic, AEC Innovators

Rainer Square, a 58-story tower in Seattle, is being built around a steel-and-concrete composite core wall system that Magnusson Klemencic Associates developed over a three-year period with Purdue University, with funding from The Pankow Foundation. Ron Klemencic, PE, SE, Hon. AIA, MKA's Chairman and CEO, says this system will save the developer eight months in construction time. Rendering: Magnusson Klemencic Associates

   

Over the past 50 years, high-rise construction had gone through several approaches. In the 1960s, tall buildings were braced around their perimeters, but developers and tenants objected to obstructed views, which led to a shift toward steel cores. That method, however, proved uneconomical, and was replaced, in the 1980s, by structural systems with braces of large composite columns filled with concrete.

The diameters of those columns got in the way of elevators, bathrooms, and corridors, so in the 1990s cores were built with reinforced concrete, which are how most skyscrapers are constructed today.

But construction is still dictated by how fast the core gets built. Enter Speed Core, a steel-and-concrete composite core wall system that uses two steel plates connected by steel spacing ties with a cavity between the plates filled with high-strength concrete. 

Magnusson Klemencic Associates (MKA), which spearheaded the development of this concept, is using Speed Core for Rainer Square, a 1.4 million-sf, 850-foot-tall, 58-story apartment and hotel building in Seattle.

 

Source: Magnusson Klemencic Associates

 

Through June, 40 stories were finished, and MKA expects construction to take 22 months, saving eight months from what it would have taken to build with a reinforced concrete core.

Ron Klemencic, PE, SE, Hon. AIA, Chairman and CEO, says his firm got the idea for Speed Core after it came across a technique developed in the United Kingdom that was used primarily for blast protection by the defense and nuclear industries.

 

MKA's R&D journey: A better way to build skyscrapers

In 2007, MKA engaged Purdue University, Klemencic’s alma mater, to research a new steel core system for high-rise buildings. The Charles Pankow Foundation funded the research.

It took three years to come up with a proof of concept for a composite sandwich panel, and another decade to find a client willing to try it on an actual construction project. Developer Wright Runstad & Company, a longtime MKA customer, allowed the firm to pursue this for Rainer Square. The team, which included architect NBBJ, spent six months on the design, which a panel assembled by the city of Seattle reviewed.

There are 240,000 rods used to connect the steel plates that are part of the panels. Purdue and the University of Buffalo are working on the next generation of core design, which Klemencic says might include smaller welds, thinner plates, and one-third fewer rods.

Klemencic says Speed Core aligns with MKA’s ambition to improve with every project. “With Speed Core, we’re living the dream,” he says.

MKA’s two-year-old foundation is funding research into performance-based wind engineering, reducing the carbon footprint in construction materials, and water resource management in buildings.

 

Related Stories

AEC Innovators | Aug 27, 2019

7 AEC industry disruptors and their groundbreaking achievements

From building prefab factories in the sky to incubating the next generation of AEC tech startups, our 2019 class of AEC Innovators demonstrates that the industry is poised for a shakeup. Meet BD+C’s 2019 AEC Innovators.

AEC Innovators | Aug 27, 2019

How engineering giant BuroHappold democratizes tech innovation

The firm's Computational Collective initiative presents employees with “a different way of thinking and working.” 

AEC Innovators | Aug 26, 2019

Clayco seeks the cutting edge as a competitive advantage

Innovation has been in Clayco’s DNA since this general contractor was founded in 1984.

AEC Innovators | Aug 15, 2019

Oracle’s replica of a construction jobsite creates an immersive environment for AEC professionals

The Oracle Construction and Engineering Innovation Lab allows visitors to walk through five different stages of construction work, to test new AEC technologies and training techniques.

AEC Innovators | Aug 13, 2019

Stacking the deck: Marriott International embraces modular construction

The hotel giant has more than 50 projects in the works that incorporate prefab guestrooms or bathrooms.

AEC Innovators | Aug 9, 2019

Improving architectural designs through iteration

Computational design lets ZGF Architects see patterns that renderings and even models can’t show.

AEC Innovators | Aug 5, 2019

Mace Group builds working on top of under-construction skyscrapers

The six-story factories eliminated the need for tower cranes, and increased productivity to the point where crews could complete 18 floors in 18 weeks.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category


AEC Innovators

3 ways the most innovative companies work differently

Gensler’s pre-pandemic workplace research reinforced that great workplace design drives creativity and innovation. Using six performance indicators, we're able to view workers’ perceptions of the quality of innovation, creativity, and leadership in an employee’s organization.



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