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Bank One Corporate Center, Chicago
The 1.8 million-sq.-ft. Bank One Corporate
Center in Chicago has a foot in the past and another in the
future.
The 37-story skyscraper incorporates advanced technology and
is built on the site of the Fair Store, which was completed
in 1892 and demolished about 15 years ago. The new building
reuses the Fair's original basement walls and is supported
on the existing caissons.
Reuse of the existing foundation infrastructure was a critical
decision that impacted the design, construction, budget and
schedule. Time and cost savings were realized by coordinating
reuse of the existing structure and foundation wall to stabilize
the basement excavation temporarily and support the new construction
permanently.
This was achieved by performing selective demolition, limited
supplemental stabilization and renovation and new construction.
The perimeter foundations walls were left and approximately
125 caissons in a 37-ft.-deep hole. Laid atop the caissons
was a 48- to 54-in.-thick reinforced concrete mat slab.
The reason for the mat slab is the column spacing of the new
building does not coordinate with the caisson structure of
the previous structure. The mat slab transfers the loads from
the new building above to the existing caissons below.
Because subways on the east and west flank the building, grade
settlement points were established and vertical inclinometers
were installed during foundation work to monitor movement
of existing structures and surrounding streets.
A tight schedule was accommodated in other ways. A fast-track
regimen was developed that allowed for the early release of
structural steel, concrete, vertical transportation and curtain
wall packages for pre-construction bidding, all while continuing
project coordination and document production.
Two-In-One Structure
The building's location in the Loop's Central Business District
brings about a dual persona.
The tower is an office building that bows to the financial
district along Dearborn Street.
In addition, an 11-story element that contains retail and
office space on State Street reinforces the thoroughfare's
role as a shopping mecca.
Each component has its own entry and associated lobby that
reflects the separate functions and building populations.
About 1.5 million sq. ft. of office space is in the development
and approximately 100,000 sq. ft. of retail area is on three
levels.
Parking for more than 200 cars is on two sub-basement levels.
Central mechanical services are housed on levels one, 11 and
in a penthouse. Ten loading docks are available.
Amenities include building setbacks from State Street and
at the tower corners, a landscaped roof garden, ground-level
public arcade along Dearborn and streetscape/landscape improvements
along the public right-of-way.
Has Client, Technology Focus
The building was designed to accommodate dynamic clients,
such as anchor Bank One Corp., with a demand for rapidly growing,
highly flexible information technology systems.
The typical floor design features high ceilings and open-floor
spaces to maximize the amount of natural light.
The floors are reportedly easily adapted to multi-tenant configurations,
with floor sizes ranging from about 33,500 sq. ft. to 62,800
sq. ft.
Has Air-Plenum System
The structure is a technology-ready building and designed
to serve the communication technology needs of today and anticipate
future technology needs.
For instance, the building is equipped with a raised-floor
pressurized plenum air supply. The system reportedly provides
improved air quality, reduced energy consumption, increased
temperature control and tenant flexibility.
Unlike traditional office buildings incorporating ductwork
in the ceiling, the air in Bank One Corporate Center will
be distributed via air columns through the floors, enabling
occupants to adjust heat and air conditioning at every workstation
through the use of floor diffusers.
The system is fully accessible and allows for use of modular
wiring for distribution of power, telecommunications and data.
With studies that show occupants frequently change office
space yearly, the environment at Bank One Center is reportedly
more flexible than conventional structures. That should in
turn lower tenants' space reorganization, or "churn,"
costs that result from the inevitable changes businesses make
to work environments as staffs transition and corporate needs
change.
Multiple technology risers with expansion capability for redundancy,
growth and flexibility further support the building's mission
to serve technology-based businesses.
Looking Up
The building is in a high-visibility location, facing the
Federal Building Plaza and surrounded by examples of classic
Chicago architecture.
The Bank One Corporate Center's concept was to keep the curtain
wall simple yet provide a degree of refined detail befitting
a building to be perceived primarily at close range.
The building's aluminum and glass curtain-wall design is to
express the technological sophistication of its architectural,
mechanical, data and telecommunications systems with a high-tech
exterior image.
The jury said, "From the air-plenum system to the reuse
of the existing foundations, this project was a challenge.
To keep up with the fast-tracked schedule, the team really
had to have their ducks in a row. It's a nice addition to
the skyline."
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