AIA Innovation Award winners highlight design/construction collaboration

by Brianna Crandall — October 26, 2016 — The American Institute of Architects (AIA) TAP/CCA Innovation Award honors new practices and technologies that will further enable project delivery and enhance data-centric methodologies in the management of buildings for their entire lifecycle, from design to construction and through operations.  The AIA’s Technology in Architectural Practice (TAP) Knowledge Community, in collaboration with the Construction Contract Administration (CCA) Knowledge Community, selected the recipients for the 2016 awards.

The categories and the winners of the TAP/CCA Innovation Awards appear below, along with brief descriptions of the projects being recognized.

Category A | Stellar Design

Award Citation: Astana Expo City 2017, Astana, Kazakhstan; Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture

Currently under construction, Astana Expo City 2017 will embrace the exposition’s theme, “Future Energy,” with the aim of reducing the overall energy demand of the site by using both passive and active strategies. All opportunities for power generation were investigated and several were incorporated into the building-design guidelines, including high-performance glazing; energy piles that will reduce energy demand and provide temperature modulation during winter; energy storage capacity that can meet two days of emergency demand; 100% of rainfall from a 100-year storm event managed on site; and 90% of waste generated on site will be diverted from a landfill.

Honorable Mention: Epic Deep Space Auditorium, Verona, WI; Cuningham Group Architecture, Inc.

Situated on an 811-acre site, Deep Space is Epic Systems Corporation’s largest auditorium, seating up to 11,400 guests, and was completed in less than 24 months. To create the rolling roof forms and building façade, a combination of hand-sculpted and laser-cut models were developed concurrently in programs suited for generation of complex shapes. The final physical model was a large-scale clay model that was 3D-scanned in order to produce a digital point cloud that was integrated with BIM software and became the engine that drove the other technical delivery tools of the project. The auditorium’s eight-acre green roof provides visual and physical connections to the surrounding Wisconsin landscape.

Category B | Project Delivery and Construction Administration Excellence

Award Citation: Froedtert and the Medical College of Wisconsin Center for Advanced Care, Wauwatosa, WI; Mortenson Construction and CannonDesign

Utilizing the latest Virtual Design and Construction (VDC) building tools and technology, the design team developed and pioneered new ways to add value and communicate with each other. By implementing a one-model approach, the team was able to coordinate in advance of construction, which reduced duplication of modeling efforts, and greatly accelerated the development of fabrication models.  Compared to a previous project with the same construction management / architect team, the one-model collaboration approach resulted in a 50% reduction in Request for Information (RFI) and an 18% reduction in Architect Supplemental Instruction (ASI), as well as the addition of five floors per the owner’s request with no change to the original completion date of the project.

Category D | Practice-based or Academic Research, Curriculum or Applied Technology Development

Honorable Mention: Glazing and Winter Comfort Tool, Boston, MA; Payette

The Glazing and Winter Comfort Tool is based on existing scientific research that aims to improve the design community’s understanding of the triggers of thermal discomfort in the wintertime. It was developed to be simple and intuitive so that architects and engineers can design glazed façades that provide the desired levels of transparency, comfort and energy performance at an ideal cost. The development of the tool involved contributions from building scientists, designers and Web developers. Previously, the only way to understand which façade properties negatively or positively impact occupant comfort involved a costly and time-intensive computational fluid dynamics simulation. The Glazing and Winter Thermal Comfort Tool was conceived to facilitate this decision-making process quickly and inexpensively early in the design.

Category E | Exemplary Use in a Small Firm

Award Citation: Youth and Opportunity United, Evanston, IL; Studio Talo Architecture

Youth and Opportunity United (Y.O.U.), a 45-year-old nonprofit youth development agency requested renderings of their new headquarters for a community outreach and fundraising campaign. The architects understood that the youth, not the building, needed to be the campaign’s focus, so they created multiple 360-degree virtual reality video renderings of spaces in the building, populated with video avatars of young people served by the organization acting as tour guides, explaining how Y.O.U. and the new building would impact their lives. Through the dynamic video rendering, community members and donors experienced Y.O.U’s mission, rather than just their plans.

Photos and more details about the projects are available on the TAP/CCA Innovation Awards 2016 Web page. The public can now vote on their favorite AIA TAP/CCA Innovation Award project. Voting will be open from October 17 to November 18.