Eventscape was contracted to engineer, fabricate and install an amazing custom aluminum and steel interior metal “curtain” wall for the renovation of the Cleveland Cavaliers Arena which covers a surface area of 65,000 square feet. This extremely complex, 80-foot tall feature wall was made up of approximately 4000 brake-formed panel sections, each one unique. Each of the panels were secured by edge fins which tie back to outriggers on a ring beam. The ring beam ties back to the building structure and provides the overall faceted and reticulated form of the curtain geometry. This stunning project was completed ahead of time, on budget with the attention to detail, high level of craftsmanship and precision that Eventscape applies to all its projects.
Main Points – COMPLEX, LARGE SCALE, ADAPTIVE AND ACCURATE
LARGE SCALE:
65,000 square-foot curtain wall feature that curves around three sides of the arena just inside the building’s glass façade.
80 feet tall
840 feet long
Eventscape created a full-size mockup for review prior to full fabrication. While significant in scale at 17-feet tall and 20-feet wide, it nonetheless represented less than 1% of the total wall.
COMPLEX:
Custom system made up of 12,000 unique custom fabricated parts including brake-formed metal panels, edge fins, splices, outriggers and end panels
Engineered design solution facilitated coordination with HVAC, electrical and digital wall installations, allowing for easy integration with fixed elements that were not yet installed.
2 weekly material and assembly shipments – all organized, labeled and tracked for just-intime installation sequencing
ADAPTIVE:
A solution-driven project that employed extensive value engineering to achieve the design within a palatable budget
Complex geometry of the design architect’s original model was rationalized by converting the twisting and curved ribs (edge fins) into controlled arches, with rotational facets.
Fabrication needed to begin prior to the removal of the original building’s existing concrete cladding to meet critical time schedule
Fabrication began only two months after being awarded the project
The ring beam sub-structure was finalized early to establish geometry and positioning with adaptability incorporated into each layer. This anchored back to the base building attaching to a combination of new and old steel on site.
It was critical to install the heavy steel sub-structure before the glass façade was installed since the curtain would have been too close to the oversized glass panels to risk welding. Eventscape worked closely with local Cleveland union Iron Workers to complete the on-site welding required.
The Eventscape design team studied the form and integrated 3D modelling data from 3 different sources (design architects, structural steel fabricators and survey data model) into their production model to ensure the curtain feature was clear of all obstructions.
A computational workflow was developed in Grasshopper, Python, and SolidWorks to help automate the design of each part, responding to rules for compatibility, orientation, and material optimization. This gave necessary agility to efficiently adapt parts in reaction to updated site conditions being fed into the model via iterative digital surveys.
ACCURATE:
The project management team received just-in-time field generated data to facilitate precise fabrication on an accelerated production schedule.
Each part was individually laser etched with a part number and digitally stored in our database for precise tracking
The project was completed in sixteen months from concept to opening
Eventscape was able to adapt to design and installation schedule changes but still stayed on schedule.
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