Category Archives: Design

A New Year

Happy New Year

We wish you a Prosperous, Healthy and Joyous 2013

We are starting a new year at the project site, but essentially picking up where we left off. We meet at the site for a project progress meeting every other week. The last meeting was December 20, 2012 and the next meeting will be January 10, 2013 with a little interruption due to the holidays. The Contractor maps out a 3 week look ahead to share the anticipated construction activities that will occur in the coming weeks. Construction schedules are always a work in progress as any number of things can crop us that either accelerate or delay the schedule. The 3 week look ahead shared on December 20 is shown below.  Recent snow and ice have pushed some activities off by about a week. Continue reading

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In The Spirit of Past Present Future

Happy Holidays to All and Wishes of a Peaceful New Year

Past-Present-Future slide 1

The holiday season tends to bring about joyful reflection on the year, spiritual celebrations and with the coming of the New Year, thoughts about what lays ahead. The Visitor Center Blog has been tracking what we believe is a special project in the making. We have been sharing with you each week a look into the challenges, successes and progress of the project. We have been sharing the process of achieving LEED Gold certification. We have progressed from a Vision with the Chickasaw Nation to being under construction and you have met a number of players along the way. This is the trail we have traveled. Continue reading

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Project Goes Vertical – structure is mushrooming

Construction Panorama

The construction is moving at a calculated, methodical pace. The cast-in-place concrete is steadily rising from the footings upward. The panorama above is from the south part of the site looking north with the construction activity spread from west to east (left to right). The interview last week pointed out the progression of the project as it moves from a design on paper to placing and integrating the materials. The following series of diagrams shows that progression. Continue reading

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The First Pour – a notable milestone

The primary activity over the past couple of weeks at the job site has been bringing in select earth fill by the truckload followed by compacting it with large earth work equipment. The one piece of equipment that does the major job is the sheep’s foot roller that shows up in the overall site photos. In the photos above you can see familiar neighbors including the Donut Palace and Artesian Hotel

The modified French drain as been effective in intercepting the water that continues to seep into the site from the north and east edges of the property. The following series of photos shows the construction of the French drain. The drain is created in the following steps:

The trench is dug and lined with filter fabric which allows water in but keeps out silt and mud that can clog up the drain assembly.

Drain pipe which is a special pipe that is perforated on the sides and solid on the bottom allows water to seep in and flow. The pipe must have some slope from the high point to the low point of discharge to have water collect and flow properly.

Gravel is the next ingredient. The drain pipe sits on a shallow bed of gravel which then surrounds the sides and top of the pipe to a greater depth.

The Contractor has been preparing for the “First Pour.” This is always a noted milestone in the construction timeline and depending on the scale of the project can be a large operation. However, it is regardless a significant tick mark for any project.

The activity I’m referring to is the first time that mixing trucks show up at the job site and concrete is poured into forms. The First Pour for the Visitor Center was the concrete slab located in the elevator pit. It is located in the bottom of the elevator shaft and represents the lowest slab in the project.

The concrete side walls of the elevator shaft are being formed and it won’t be long before there will be a 2nd , 3rd and 4th pour on the site.

On another note, today is election day. So, exercise your right to vote.

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Local Beta – a kindred spirit

One of the inspirations for the architectural character for the Chickasaw Visitor Center is the historic architecture located in the national park land now known as the Chickasaw National Recreational Center in Sulphur, Oklahoma. These historic structures were built by the Civilian Conversation Corps (CCC) between 1933 and 1940. Amazingly in 1914, Platt’s visitation exceeded both Yellowstone and Yosemite and was second only to the Hot Springs Reservation in Arkansas.  The objective of the CCC Company #808 at then Platt National Park was to protect and conserve the park’s resources which was receiving an enormous amount of wear for a park its size.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal” program reduced unemployment during the great depression by providing work for the more than 3 million young men who enrolled in the program. The CCC initially focused on reforestation, but that soon grew to include soil conservation and the creation of recreational park facilities which included aiding the establishment of some 800 state parks across the country. The overall effort was a collaboration of other “New Deal” programs that included the Works Progress Administration (WPA) and the National Park Service. One of those new parks was located in southern Oklahoma in Chickasaw Country and is one of the many area attractions that visitors can learn about at the Chickasaw Visitor Center. Continue reading

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Sitework – solutions thru teamwork

Work in Progress…

Here you see a photo from a few months earlier along with the current condition of the site. The contractor has been attacking the ground with vigor and the result has been a somewhat unanticipated seepage of water coming out of the embankment of earth seen in the background of the photo on the right. The water seems to have been pent up on one of the layers of earth about 6 feet below the level of Muskogee Avenue on the north edge of the site. The water in this case is referred to in engineering and construction terms as “perched water” and has turned the site in to a muddy mess. Continue reading

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Excavation-what will we find

While excavation is commonly thought of as an archeological term and often brings to mind visions of Indiana Jones, within the design/construction industry it has a different yet similar meaning. Excavating is the removal of unneeded soil to change the contours of the site. The similarity to the archeological dig is that you don’t always know what you’re going to uncover or discover in the process. Continue reading

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Getting to Know the Players – Take Three

Interview by Fred Schmidt

Here’s an introduction to another one of the players on the FSB team; Naby Gharajeh (garra-jay). He’s a Senior Electrical Engineer, fairly quiet, doesn’t make waves but he has a great laugh. He’s down to earth and takes his engineering very seriously.

So, tell the followers what your role is, your input to the project.

Naby: I was basically the project electrical engineer. It was my role to design the building’s electrical system, lighting, communication and data systems, power to the mechanical equipment and anything architectural; the basic electrical system that any building requires. There was some work involved as far as the site was concerned; and lighting protection.

What made you decide to become an electrical engineer, what was your path towards being that?

Naby: Wow… ha!

Did you always know, like when you were a kid? Continue reading

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Connections

When I think of connections, I am reminded of the song with the line that includes “the hip bone is connected to the thigh bone” and all the connections from head to toe that are part of the lyrics. The actual song title is Dem Dry Bones. There have been a lot of spin offs from the original song that have turned into a whole series of kids learning lessons and an interesting game called “Hip Bone Games” for all ages that is a game about connections.

The Visitor Center is all about connections. And not just all those that are about linking people, places and ideas of which there is an abundance. Those connections are important to the FSB design team but when it comes to the executed design of the building and it’s systems it’s all about the physical connections that hold all the pieces and parts of the building together. For the building, it starts with the structure or the skeleton of the building which brings me back to the thought of the hip bone being connected to the thigh bone. The skeleton of the building holds everything up and everything in turn is then connected to and integrated with it like the skin, circulatory systems, respiratory systems and the body control center. Continue reading

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The Newest Team Member – selecting a contractor

There is a point in the life of a project as it moves towards the fruition of being an addition to the built environment that it is ready for construction. This means that another member needs to be added to the overall team whose services include constructing the project. The new team member we are talking about is the contractor. Up to this time it has primarily been the owner and architect working together to define and design the project. Continue reading

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