Hawthorne, N.J. (June 19, 2020): The winner of the 2020 DFI Outstanding Project Award (OPA) is the team of Langan Engineering and Environmental Services (geotechnical and environmental services), Malcolm Drilling Company (foundation contractor), and Condon-Johnson & Associates (shoring contractor) for the innovative foundation design of the Chase Center in San Francisco. The award is being presented during the DFI 45th Annual Conference on Deep Foundations, October 13-16, 2020.
Chase Center, the new home of the Golden State Warriors, covers four city blocks and will provide seating for 18,000 fans, as well as 58,000 sq ft (5,388 sq m) of office/lab, event space, retail, restaurants and underground parking.
The Chase Center is being developed in the Mission Bay area, which has poor ground conditions. A tidal cove thousands of years ago, the area was built up in the early 1900s from thousands of cubic yards of sand, rocks, dirt and debris that came from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Besides the engineering and construction challenges that process entailed, the team had to excavate as deep as 30 ft (9.1 m) to fit all the programming on site.
The unprecedented depth and size of the excavation presented challenges with dewatering, maintaining a stable subgrade and supporting the excavation. In addition, the foundation conditions varied significantly across the site, with bedrock as shallow as 30 ft (9.1 m) and as deep as 130 ft (39.6 m).
According to Lori Simpson, P.E., P.G., vice president of Langan, the company that provided geotechnical, environmental, dewatering and civil excavation consulting services on the project, “Our team provided innovative solutions for foundations, cutoff wall design, soil treatment and dewatering system design.”
This year, DFI is also awarding two Special Recognition Awards. The recipients are: Schnabel Engineering, which submitted a project at West Virginia’s Yeager Airport, where a team stabilized and restored the safety area for Runway 5; and Mueser Rutledge Consulting Engineers for rehabilitating New York City’s Canarsie Tunnel for the L Line subway due to Superstorm Sandy damage, including tunnel feature upgrades.
The OPA was established in 1997 to recognize the superior work of DFI members. A committee selects the projects based on size, scope and challenges of the project; degree of innovation and ingenuity exercised; and uniqueness of the solution to the difficulties of the job.
About the Deep Foundations Institute (DFI)
DFI (www.dfi.org) is an international association of contractors, engineers, manufacturers, suppliers, academics and owners in the deep foundations industry. Our multidisciplinary membership creates a consensus voice and a common vision for continual improvement in the planning, design and construction of deep foundations and excavations. We bring together members for networking, education, communication and collaboration. With our members, we promote the advancement of the deep foundations industry through technical committees, educational programs and conferences, publications, research, government relations and outreach. DFI has more than 3,500 members worldwide.