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Top of 2004

Completion 8: St. Luke's Medical Center Patient Tower and Heart Care Center
Cost: $187 million

St. Luke's Medical Center's Patient Tower and Heart Care Center in Milwaukee straddles a multi-level parking garage, and the first floor is seven stories up. The addition connects to the existing hospital.

The parking structure had to remain in place and functional throughout construction, and the new construction had to be tailored for future expansion.

The idea arose of building the eight-story, 427,000-sq.-ft. addition above and beside the garage while remaining structurally independent of it. A total of 33 caissons support the new structure, 14 of which pass through the garage without touching.

The parking structure remained three-quarters open during the caisson work.

Five shear towers above grade give the addition stability. Four 32-ft.-deep steel trusses span up to 133 ft. over the parking structure and transfer the load of the addition to the caissons. The trusses, which were imported from Europe, are massive: 1,500 to 2,000 lbs. per ft.

The truss connections are equally massive, some as big as 8 ft. by 10 ft., with the largest containing more than 300 1-in.-diameter, extra-high-strength bolts.

Reducing Vibrations

The caissons had to remain independent of the parking structure for a number of reasons.

Vibrations transmitted from the parking structure to a cardiac surgery unit above, for example, could be disastrous.

Besides vibrations from cars, there were possible vibration sources in the ground beneath the structure, from nearby roads and from the mechanical equipment in the new structure, which is located on the floor below the surgery unit.

The caissons reach down about 100 ft. to bedrock, eliminating most ground vibrations. But vibrations generated within the new structure could still pose a problem.

Because pipes and ducts could not be hung directly under the beams supporting the operating tables, another structure was designed that goes up within a few inches of the floor structure to hold the mechanical equipment.

The building's skin had to withstand moisture. A building mock-up was constructed to simulate all the material and procedures used in construction.

Out of these sessions came the comprehensive Enclosure Quality Management training and monitoring program and strict Internal Air Quality requirements.

Key Players

Owner:

Aurora Health Care/St. Luke's Medical Center, Milwaukee

General Contractor:

Oscar J. Boldt Construction Co., Appleton, Wis.

Architect of Record:

Kahler Slater Architects Inc., Milwaukee, in association with Brubaker Architects Inc., Chicago

Structural and Civil Engineer:

Graef Anhalt Schloemer and Associates Inc., Milwaukee

HVAC:

Grunau Co. Inc., Oak Creek, Wis.

Plumbing and Fire Protection:

Wenninger Co., Waukesha, Wis.

Steel Erection:

Area Erectors Inc., Rockford, Ill.

Concrete:

Meyer Material Co., McHenry, Ill.

 

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