Thursday, December 23, 2010

August 2010

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Room 107 – painting stripping and ceiling work in progress.

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Marble floor installation in progress at the lower level.

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Room 107 – all the wood is stripped of numerous coats of paint.

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Stair no. 2

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A marble stair tread awaiting installation.

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Faculty Lounge – secret floor leveling code.

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Fretting over the carpet border layout.

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Mechanical room.

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Installing waterproofing system on the plaza and stairs.

Underlayment at the new, larger stage in Room 107.

Stone for the exterior stairs and plaza.

July 2010

Work stopped during a 20 strike.

Meeting to discuss keying.  From left, Dan Weese, Paula Blaskovitz, Phil Sanders, Tony Hicks.

Door delivery.  Curious forklift moves without turning.  i.e. it will move sideways without turning at all!

June 2010

 

Weekly meeting.

 

Harris 107, above.

The schedule . . . before the strike.

Superintendent Ron McAllister.

Selecting marble flooring for the lower level.

Dan Weese and I test the seating mock-up in Harris 108.

Elevator rails await installation.

The new elevator shaft.

Assembling the elevator cab.

Assembling the elevator

Unloading a window delivery.

Faculty Lounge in construction.

Beginning to install forms for the new stairs serving the lower level.

 

A few spools of the many miles of wiring in Harris Hall.

Painstaking work . . . stripping years of paint away in Harris 107.

Forming stairs continues.

Freshly poured concrete stairs.

Troweling fresh concrete.

Installing windows.

Installing drywall at the 3rd floor.

Wood trim at offices.

May 2010

The new stair connecting the 2nd and 3rd floor.

 

Top of the new stair (Stair 2).

Scaffolding encircles Harris Hall to facilitate facade restoration.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Facade Restoration

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Harris Hall, reminiscent of a Christo installation, is wrapped with scaffolding.   The scaffolding, erected by Jimmy Z Masonry, serves as a platform for workers to restore the building’s  facade.  Although Harris looks fairly good to the casual eye, close inspection reveals numerous problems.  Although the facade has seen periodic and routine maintenance over the years, it has not had comprehensive attention for nearly 100 years.  A description of some of what is being done follows.

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The arrows in the photo above point to “spalling” of the limestone near the top of the building.  Over time, as masonry joints have failed (an inevitable event), moisture entered the wall cavity and caused the mild steel supports to rust.  As metal rusts, it expands and, when the steel is close to the face of the stone (~2” or closer), the resulting pressure causes the stone to “spall” or fracture.  The next photo reveals a small piece of steel that caused the  spall at the upper arrow in the photo above. 

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In such cases, either a portion or an entire stone will be replaced.  This raises the obvious question, “won’t this simply happen again?”  Eventually, it may, but meanwhile, we are addressing the source of the moisture,  Water has been finding it’s way behind the stone facade principally because the grout between the stones has deteriorated over time.  This has caused significant damage at the parapets (top of the wall).  Repeated cycles of freezing and thawing destroyed the brick walls behind the stone.  Eventually, the stone at the parapets would have failed dramatically.  i.e. pieces of stone would literally fall of the building.  Presently, the parapet is being dismantled, reflashed and re-built.  See next two photos:

Above, large sections of stone lie on the roof, awaiting to be reinstalled.

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Above:  Worker cleans out stone joints in preparation for new grout.

Work in progress.