BEYOND ALL LIMITATIONS
All eyes are on Boston, where this bold new approach to responsible, resourceful and renewable office space for the 21st century is being born. The largest Passive House office building in the world, Winthrop Center is pushing the outer limits of how a commercial building can not only serve its inhabitants, but also a higher purpose and a greater good. The new century demanded it, so we built it.
Sustainability Reimagined
Winthrop Center will be the largest Passive House office project in the world, surpassing LEED Platinum to set the most rigorous global standards for energy and efficiency. Through Passive House’s leading-edge envelope construction, Winthrop Center will reduce energy consumption by 65% of the Boston average. Winthrop will also reduce water use by 40%, saving 1.8 million gallons of water per year.
Wellness Redefined
Winthrop Center’s Passive House ventilation will provide unmatched thermal comfort and superior levels of fresh air– proven to enhance cognition, creativity and productivity. Winthrop’s Well Gold certification will ensure rigorous air and water monitoring in a workplace designed to infuse optimal health, wellness, fitness and nutrition benefits holistically into occupants’ daily lives. Outdoor terraces, healthy food options, circadian lighting options… the list goes on.
Connectivity Unbounded
Wired Platinum certification means Winthrop Center will meet the highest standards for digital infrastructure connectivity, redundancy and resiliency. Around the corner, Boston’s carrier hotel, Markley Group, will provide direct access to more than 85 carries. Smart System technology and Winthrop’s proprietary connexIQ employee ecosystem will ensure that every aspect of the built environment serves employees at the highest level.
Something hopeful i take from these images. You can't see it in the top render. But in the lower image, the office section appears to accomplish a coupe of things.......
Jeff -- I think that they still are delivering something more than a Building Lobby -- at least if the PR video is realistic in any way^ "The Connector" that moment when the developer acknowledges that they are creating a multi-story building lobby, nothing more.
Globe said:Soon, a huge concrete floor slab will be poured over a giant metal cage built from the supports trucked in from Canada. After that, workers will excavate underneath the slab to construct the basement, even as they build the first few floors above. It’s a time-saving method called up-down construction.
So when do we get our observation deck back?
That said, I actually don't mind the facade changes. Its fine, w/e at this point. Is any of the reduced square footage coming from the residential section? I would think any reduction there would directly reduce the revenue being shared with the city for their sale.
Beeline -- great pix of the "Big Hole" -- now we can start to concentrate on the the "Big Rise" -- this is going to be a very interesting next couple of years of Big construction -- here and at One Congress and even possibly at South StationLooks like the last of the slurry rigs is being removed this weekend.
IMG_4766 by Bos Beeline, on Flickr
IMG_4767 by Bos Beeline, on Flickr
IMG_4771 by Bos Beeline, on Flickr
IMG_4783 by Bos Beeline, on Flickr
IMG_4786 by Bos Beeline, on Flickr
It all depends on how cold you're talking. There are methods for continuing to work in cold conditions, special mixes for concrete, blankets, and containment with space heating, but it is more time consuming and costly. Extreme cold, winds, and precipitation will result in lost time, generally no more than a few days per event. The schedule will be king here though and I am sure they will work straight through the winter with only the worst weather slowing them down.How much does cold weather affect the ability to carryout the work? Are crews able to do concrete pours when the temps drop below freezing? Does it cause any issues with welding and other equipment?
It all depends on how cold you're talking. There are methods for continuing to work in cold conditions, special mixes for concrete, blankets, and containment with space heating, but it is more time consuming and costly. Extreme cold, winds, and precipitation will result in lost time, generally no more than a few days per event. The schedule will be king here though and I am sure they will work straight through the winter with only the worst weather slowing them down.