Medicine
for the State
UA College Expands into Historic Phoenix
Buildings
by Scott Blair
The University of Arizona College of Medicine needed to make
a bold move in its effort to double the number of M.D. graduates
and provide medicine to the most rural communities in Arizona.
After looking at expansion possibilities on its existing
Tucson campus, the college chose to expand into Phoenix and
position itself as a statewide school.
"Phoenix is the largest city in the nation without a
medical school that graduates M.D.s, and Arizona is way behind
the national average for doctors-per-capita," said Susan
Guthrie, associate director of public affairs for the College
of Medicine. "There are also benefits from the diversity
of the population in Phoenix, since a big role of the College
of Medicine is research. You need a diverse pool of people
who can participate in clinical trials."
In spring 2004, the city of Phoenix approached the college
to expand into three historic buildings on Van Buren Street
west of Seventh Street. The neo-classically designed masonry
buildings were constructed in 1911 and were originally part
of a 15-acre campus of 23 educational buildings for Phoenix
Union High School. Of those, only the three buildings survive.
"While some people who toured the buildings at their
absolute worst said they couldn't believe that this project
would work, it was really our dean [Keith Alan Joiner, M.D.]
who had the vision that the buildings could be incredible,"
Guthrie said.
The Phoenix-based design team - project architect SmithGroup,
structural engineer Paragon Structural Services and historic
preservation consultant Metropolis Design Group - found that
the structural integrity of each building varied dramatically.
Westernmost Building One still had much of its original wood
structure inside. "It was difficult to figure out if
it was possible to save that interior structure," said
Robert Graham, AIA, principal architect for Metropolis Design
Group. Part of the problem stemmed from multiple modifications
that were made over the years. "Columns had been removed
and added to a point where on the first level there were over
26 columns in a floor plate of only 7,000 sq. ft.," said
Brad Woodman, principal in charge with the Phoenix office
of SmithGroup. "They weren't on any kind of structural
grid, so it would have been a very difficult process to fit
a modern program into that structure."
The decision was made to insert a new steel structure into
the building.
Fortunately, Building Three on the east side had already
been rehabilitated in 1963 with a new steel structure that
was acceptable for the building's new use, Graham said.
DPR Construction, Inc. was selected as general contractor
on the $19.3 million project, with demolition and abatement
beginning in March 2005 and lasting over four months.
Construction will be complete by July, but the first full,
four-year class of 24 students won't start until a year later
to allow time for staffing up and curriculum development.
The challenge with Building Two, which had served Phoenix
as its primary auditorium through the 1920s, was how to best
match the 1,000-seat room with the needs of a medical college
that didn't require that large of a space.
Though the goal was to preserve as much of the historic flavor
of the structures as possible, it wasn't to completely restore
the buildings to their exact original state, Woodman said.
"These are more rehabilitations than restorations,"
he added.
"The compromise was, we were able to save the better
part of the original auditorium inside by taking the area
that had a balcony in it and making two stories of classrooms,"
Graham said. "In doing so, we were able to retain something
of the original character."
Essentially the new classrooms are housed within a new steel-frame
building built inside half the auditorium. "It only touches
the historic building at a couple of drywall points,"
said Lew Laws, project manager with DPR Construction. "That
was done just in case years from now somebody decides to put
it back the way it was originally."
Woodman said the concept of the building within a building
is much "like when you add on to a historic structure,
you want it to be distinctive yet compatible. We separated
that inside structure from the ceiling, from the colonnade
and other existing elements."
Because the original floor of the auditorium was sloped,
it had to be removed for the classrooms. In addition, the
first floor of the new structure was partially underground
to maximize the new space.
"When we dug down we found there were some footings
that we had assumed to be much deeper than they really were,"
Laws said. "We used a product called Ramjack to provide
permanent shoring underneath that then got poured over with
concrete."
Normally the product is used on failing foundations rather
than as an extension of one, so this was a unique application,
Laws added.
Phoenix-based Arizona Ramjack was the subcontractor.
On the stage side of the auditorium, contractors were faced
with an ornate plaster ceiling in dire need of attention.
In the 1950s when modern air conditioning was being retrofitted
into older buildings all over Phoenix, installers cut through
the coffers and other ornate features in the auditorium to
run ductwork and then covered it with a drop ceiling.
"We tore the lower ceiling out not knowing what we would
find, and it was an absolute mess," Laws said. "Now
all the plaster has been restored through highly intensive
work."
Buildings One and Three both needed ADA access and updated
bathrooms and elevators, but to do that would have taken up
too much of the limited floor space. Instead, designers removed
these functions from the historic buildings and added on modern
core structures on the north sides.
These three-story masonry buildings were encased within an
outer glass structure with a void space between. "The
intent is to reflect light off the white masonry to make the
core building glow," Laws said.
Students at the new campus will be organized into 'pods'
of eight students and two faculty members, who will remain
together for two years. Most of the pod areas and medical
examination rooms will be highly mediated spaces with plasma
screen monitors, video cameras and microphones.
"It is being designed with new learning techniques in
mind," Guthrie said.
One area will house T-Health, a telemedicine system that
allows for the remote examination of rural patients as well
as transmission of lab results, mammograms and medical educational
material.
Future plans call for the expansion to 150 students per year,
which will require the construction of one or more new buildings
on the 15-acre site.
|
Key Players
|
| Owner: |
City of Phoenix |
| Architect: |
SmithGroup |
| Historic Preservation
Consultant: |
Metropolis Design Group |
| General Contractor:
|
DPR Construction Inc. |
| Structural Engineer:
|
Paragon Structural Design,
Inc. |
| Electrical: |
Delta Diversified Enterprises |
| Mechanical: |
Midstate Mechanical |
| Steel: |
Metal-Weld |
| Excavation: |
Walters & Wolf;
Sun Valley Masonry |
|