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Bright Lights Big City
Phoenix Enlivens Downtown Core with Sheraton Hotel
By Scott Blair
The city of Phoenix continues its quest for an active 24/7 urban
core with the construction of the new Sheraton Hotel. The 31-story tower will provide
1,000 rooms and ample convention space to work in tandem with the city's new Convention
Center nearby.
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The 1,000-room Sheraton will be located in downtown Phoenix
near the city's rebuilt Convention Center.
"The Convention Center is tripling in size, and when you do
that you triple the number of potential delegates that come
for a convention, who need a place to stay," says Jerry Harper,
project manager with the city's downtown development office.
After years of trying to attract a privately financed hotel,
Phoenix officials decided to purchase the land and publicly
fund the project's $200 million construction cost.
"To protect the general fund and the city's liability
that's associated with the construction of a full-service
hotel, we formed the Downtown Phoenix Hotel Corporation,"
Harper says.

With a 31-story cast-in-place concrete tower, the hotel will
be the tallest in Arizona, Harper says. Surrounding the tower
is a structural steel-framed, four-story podium, while a two-story
underground parking structure is tucked underneath.The project
broke ground in March 2006 and has already received reservations
for its October 2008 opening.
"The pre-opening sales effort has been extremely promising
to date, with our sales team realizing a booking performance
that is over 185% of the goal we established for success,"
says Steven Spivak, director of sales and marketing for the
hotel. "There is a pent up demand for this type of destination
in the convention and meetings market."
The Miami office of Arquitectonica and RSP Architects of Tempe
designed the project. Phoenix-based Perini Building Company
was brought in early in the design process as construction
manager under a guaranteed maximum price.
"When projects of this magnitude are built, we really
encourage clients to engage a contractor for pre-development
services very early on because it gives us feedback as we
are designing the project," says Bernardo Fort-Brescia,
FAIA, founding principal of Arquitectonica. "We explored
three alternate design schemes in the beginning
and
Perini's input on cost was important in the selection of the
scheme that is being built."
A major challenge on the job was the four-acre, L-shaped site.
"We are constructing property line to property line,"
says Steve Field, senior project manager with Perini. The
building's 80-ft-tall podium wraps around the neighboring
Arizona Republic building on two sides.
"We are very good neighbors but very close neighbors,"
Field says. "On their north side our building's podium
is less than 25-ft away."
With such a tight site, preparing it for construction was
a challenge. Phoenix-based subcontractor Buesing Corp. demolished
the existing site's on-grade parking lot and excavated 90,000
cu yds of earth to a depth of between 26-ft and 38-ft.
Buesing also performed design-assist services and installed
the shoring, which was unique because the city had a requirement
that soil nails not protrude into the upper 8 ft of the street.
"On the first 8-ft we cantilevered the wall, providing
a thicker section up top and then starting soil nails below
that," says Bryon Matesi, director of preconstruction
at Buesing. "That kept all the soil nails below the utilities
so it wouldn't affect the city down the road."
The podium flanks the tower on the north and south sides.
"The big advantage of this is there are two good levels
of meeting spaces," says John R. Williams, AIA, project
manager with RSP Architects. "You could have four independent
events going on in the hotel."
The north podium, which contains the larger 30,000-sq-ft ballroom,
occupies the longer side of the 'L' shape and will be visually
connected with the tower.
"It actually bends and becomes part of the podium as
if it is one piece," Fort-Brescia says.
The podium will be suspended over a large porte cochere on
the ground floor, which is set back deep into the building's
footprint to provide continuity to the sidewalk, he adds.
"We didn't want it to interfere with the sidewalk procession."
Other ground floor attributes aim to draw in pedestrians with
retail shops, outdoor cafes and dining.
"A lot of the push for new development downtown revolves
around creating a 24/7 activity area, and to do that we needed
the retail space on the ground floor," Harper says. "We
also wanted the hotel to reflect Arizona in some way, in both
the interior and exterior design."
The tower's curtain wall and EIFS exterior is designed with
this in mind. "The windows of the rooms are connected
horizontally by a series of colored panels that create a pattern
of orange, yellow and reddish colors that creates a Southwestern
pattern, almost like a textile, out of the façade,"
Fort-Brescia says.
On the tower's roof, the building's parapet lines will curve
up on an angle and create a roofline intended to reflect the
nearby landmark Camelback Mountain.
The tower is located so that the 300-ft long width faces north/south
to reduce solar gain. "On the south elevation the windows
have screens at the top of the window line to shade from the
sun angle when it's the time of year when you need it most,"
Williams says. Also, many of the meeting spaces have windows
to provide natural daylighting while most meetings are occurring.
Perini is currently pouring one floor a week on the tower.
"The tower's post-tensioned slab is broken into three
separate pours, which we do on Monday, Wednesday and Friday,"
Field says. "In between we are pouring columns and walls."
Once crews reach the 14th floor this month, the exterior will
be sealed and drywall and other finishes will be installed
on the floors below. "Before we top off the tower, we'll
have rooms finished almost halfway up," Field says.
Key Players
Owner:
City of Phoenix
Architects:
Arquitectonica; RSP Architects
General Contractor:
Perini Building Company
Subcontractors:
Rosendin Electric; University Mechanical; Schuff Steel;
Buesing Corp.; MKB Construction; Aero Automatic Corp.
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