- Structural demolition is underway on the roof of the former Volpe tower building. Material will be removed from the building with a crane and through interior elevator shafts.
- The formwork/scaffolding climbing system is in operation on the tower building and is being moved up to the rooftop level. The week of August 11, the contractor will commence demolition on the brick façade using handheld jackhammers.
It's Moriarty for the 75 Broadway portion (new Biogen HQ, bottom left of Random's image).Does anybody know the CM for this?
The portion of your photo where the sheet piling is being installed is actually the footprint of the tall residential tower. The Biogen building's footprint appears to be the slurrywall portion....They’re using a little from column A, B, and C for the Biogen site work.
Ok because apparently I am a glutton for the punishment of dumpster-diving through random city special permit files...we have our answer:The portion of your photo where the sheet piling is being installed is actually the footprint of the tall residential tower. The Biogen building's footprint appears to be the slurrywall portion.
This raises many interesting questions, such as whether they're already doing foundation work for the residential tower...and, I'd surmise, that has a shallower basement than the Biogen building, hence the different technqiues
From (pg. 5):Parking for Building C3 will be accommodated in the below-grade garage. Vehicles will access the underground garage via the ramp on Potter Street, located in the footprint of the future R3 residential building. Consistent with the approved PUD, loading facilities will be at grade and accessible from Kendall Way...
MIT is literally running this demolition and MIT does not like ground vibrations near labs.Given the tower in the park layout, it seems like implosion might have been doable. I would love to know the discussion that led to the decision to slowly jackhammer the building.
Plus, given the literal dozens of asbestos permits issued in the last few years, absolutely chock full of the stuff - probably impossible to mitigate without the staged demolitionMIT is literally running this demolition and MIT does not like ground vibrations near labs.