homepage home
subscribe to Texas Construction magazine subscribe
newsletters free e-newsletter
advertise
industry jobs industry jobs
Mcgraw-Hill Construction Logo
Texas Construction Logo
Order Your RISK FREE Subscription
comment

Lance Armstrong Foundation, Austin

Award of Excellence - Green Building (TIE)

Text size: A A

The transformation of the 29,000-sq-ft former Gulf Coast Paper Co. warehouse to the new headquarters for the Lance Armstrong Foundation incorporated a number of sustainable design and construction approaches. A LEED gold certification is pending.

----- Advertising -----

A unique design and construction technique included the addition of a north-facing steel and glass sawtooth skylight system installed within an existing 60-year-old wood-frame warehouse roof. The sawtooth skylight created a significant daylighting effect while minimizing glare and heat gain. Increased daylighting helped reduce the overall fixture count, and the use of photo cells reduced energy consumption by adjusting for increased daylight into the building.

Approximately 30,000 ft of original roof decking was removed, planed and cut to size for construction of interior conference rooms. A portion of the original concrete tilt wall was removed and cut into 4- by 8-ft sheets and 2- by 2-ft sheets for use in perimeter landscape features, dumpster screen and wheel stops with pieces buried to delineate parking stripes.

Key Players

Submitted by: SpawMaxwell
Owner: Lance Armstrong Foundation, Austin
Project manager: SpawMaxwell Co., Austin
Architect: Lake | Flato Architects, San Antonio
Furniture design: The Bommarito Group, Austin
MEP engineer: ACR Engineering Inc., Austin
Structural engineer: Architectural Engineers Collaborative, Austin
Civil engineer: Transportation Design Consultants, Paige

 

----- Advertising -----
Blogs: Texas & La. Staff
Our blog delivers the latest news, insights, and opinions about Texas & Louisiana construction.
Reader Photos
Photos from ENR Texas & Louisiana Photo Showcase
----- Advertising -----
 Reader Comments:

Sign in to Comment

To write a comment about this story, please sign in. If this is your first time commenting on this site, you will be required to fill out a brief registration form. Your public username will be the beginning of the email address that you enter into the form (everything before the @ symbol). Other than that, none of the information that you enter will be publically displayed.

We welcome comments from all points of view. Off-topic or abusive comments, however, will be removed at the editors’ discretion.