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Naperville Millennium Carillon Naperville,
Ill.
Development Team
DESIGN: Charles Vincent George Design Group Inc., Naperville,
Ill.
CONSTRUCTION MANAGER: Schramm
Construction, Geneva, Ill.
MEP ENGINEER: W-T Engineering,
Schaumburg, Ill.
CIVIL ENGINEER: Roake &
Associates, Naperville, Ill.
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: McCluskey
Engineering Corp., Naperville, Ill.
The residents of Naperville, Ill., wanted to
present the city with a gift that would reflect the past while
evoking the future, so a carillon was selected.
The design team faced the challenge of supporting
72 brass bells, an instrument-playing cabin and an observation
deck 162 ft. above ground.
Frame Has Three Structural Elements
The structural frame is made up of three elements.
An onlooker notices that there is no true skeleton to which
the skin of the building is attached. The structural steel
frame, the eight compression rings and the post-tensioned
precast panels are tied to each other in alternating connection
sequences.
As a result, a "tri-union" of structural elements
supports the building.
The bells are mounted in a fixed, stationary position to
a steel beam in the belfry because the clappers strike them.
The beams are joined together to create a frame that supports
the bells, playing cabin, belfry stairs and observation deck
above the bells.
The facility sits on two large girders below the tower midpoint,
which transfers loads to the perimeter walls. The precast
walls then carry the weight of the tower into concrete foundations,
which rest on bedrock.
The precast concrete walls, the structural steel frame, the
steel compression rings and the bell structure were integrated
so that portions of the tower would be fully accessible to
all persons. In addition, the belfry and observation decks
were designed to be accessible by stairs.
Another challenge was funding the project. Millions of dollars
were raised through presentations and the creation of detailed
CAD models.
The jury commented, "As a commercial building, this
is a very interesting, very nicely done building. Three structural
systems are coming together in a very impressive way."
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