This high-profile public-private redevelopment adapted the building’s 129,000-sf Flight Center, which hadn’t been used since 2001, into a massive lobby bookended by two wings with 512 hotel rooms, a subterranean 46,000-sf conference center with a 7,000-sf banquet hall and 43 meeting rooms, six restaurants, eight bars (including one that was built inside of the fuselage of a 1958 Lockheed Constellation jet), an observation deck, retail shops, and a rooftop pool. All of these are connected via an underground service system that links to JetBlue Terminal 5.
New mechanicals were added to support new amenity areas and the hotel’s operational spaces that surpass current hospitality and transportation industry performance standards. The hotel now has its own onsite, continuous-duty cogeneration plant that produces all of its electricity and heating independent of the airport’s utility grids. All of the lighting was converted to LEDs, and the sprinkler system was replaced.
HONORABLE MENTION
BUILDING TEAM Jaros, Baum & Bolles (submitting firm, MEP) MCR/MORSE Development (owner/developer) Beyer Blinder Belle (architect) Lubranco Ciavarra Architects (hotel designer) Stonehill Taylor (interior designer–hotel) INC Architecture & Design (interior designer–event spaces) Arup (SE) Turner Construction (CM) DETAILS 440,000 sf Total cost $265 million Construction time December 2016 to May 2019 Delivery method Design-bid-build
Related Stories
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
BD+C's 2016 Reconstruction Award Winners
St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Lovejoy Wharf, and the Bay Area Metro Center are just a few of the projects recognized as 2016 Reconstruction Award winners.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: The Renwick Gallery of The Smithsonian American Art Museum
The renovation restored two long-concealed vaulted ceilings in the second-floor galleries and recreated the original 19th-century window configuration.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: Massachusetts Maritime Academy
The two-story “overbuild” employed block and plank construction with drag strut detailing to connect it to the existing building.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: The Masonic Temple
The building team suspended a new eighth-floor mezzanine and added 18 9x15-foot windows to the north, south, and west façades.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: San Francisco War Memorial Veterans Building
The building team used a system of rocking concrete shear walls, which eliminated the need for deep foundations and reduced the shear force on each wall.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: Arc at Old Colony
The Arc at Old Colony's vintage floor plans, voluminous lobby, and myriad elevators were perfect for redevelopment as a historically charming residential building.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: Noble Chapel
In May 2013 the 124-year-old Noble Chapel, suffered a three-alarm fire that almost completely destroyed its 1937 crematorium.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2016
Reconstruction Awards: Bay Area Metro Center
The structure’s 60,000-sf floor plates made the interior dark and foreboding, and BAHA wanted to improve working conditions for its employees and tenants.