Posts Tagged ‘Restoration’

Celebrating 100 Years: Getting Your Kicks on Route 66

Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Today is the day we’ve been building up to for the past 100 days — the day we celebrate Berglund’s 100th anniversary. Thanks for reading over the past few months as we’ve shared Berglund’s history. And while our anniversary blogging is coming to an end , you can still find all the latest Berglund news on “Brick by Brick.”

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Tailor Lofts Clock Tower

For Route 66 travelers, the former International Tailoring Co. building hadn’t been a notable sight on the journey for years. That’s all changed since Berglund restored the building’s stunning clock tower to its former glory.

The Mundie and Jensen-designed building sits on Jackson Boulevard – also known as eastbound Route 66 — in Chicago’s West Loop. Built in 1916, it housed garment industry operations for decades, but had fallen into disrepair in recent years. The clock tower was sheathed in unattractive corrugated metal in 1971 because the terra cotta was crumbling, and the building was nearly vacant when a developer bought it a few years ago to convert into condos.

The developer tapped Berglund to restore the clock tower and uncover its original beauty. Berglund restored the terra cotta façade, removed and replaced the building’s roof, repaired the non-functioning clock and lighting, and restored some of the tower’s windows while replacing those beyond repair. The tower now triumphantly crowns Tailor Lofts, a residential building with off-campus apartments for University of Illinois-Chicago students. As an added bonus, the restoration paved the way for Tailor Lofts’ inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places in 2008.

Celebrating 100 Years: In Their Own Words

Saturday, August 6th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

In Their Own Words: City of Chicago

“The (Wacker Drive rehabilitation) project incorporated the complete dismantling and reconstruction of the existing historic limestone and granite façade of the landmark Wacker Drive structure, and was successful in restoring Daniel Burnham’s original vision of Wacker Drive. … Berglund has demonstrated the technical expertise, workmanship and dedication required to complete the extremely difficult task of fitting the existing stone to a reconfigured structure that differed dimensionally from the original.”

–Thomas Powers, deputy commissioner and chief engineer of Chicago’s Department of Transportation. Berglund spent two years rehabilitating the stone pedestrian walkway along Wacker Drive, the largest stone restoration and installation project ever undertaken in Chicago.

Celebrating 100 Years: A Love of the Law

Monday, August 1st, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

University of Chicago D’Angelo Law Library

When famed architect Eero Saarinen designed The University of Chicago’s D’Angelo Law Library in the 1950s, cramming for law exams involved poring over thick textbooks and journals and taking notes by hand. Fast-forward 50 years, and laptops and digital files have replaced those textbooks and legal pads. The library needed a facelift to meet students’ studying needs, as well as to protect and preserve the historical structure.

Berglund took on an extensive restoration and reconfiguration of the 113,000-square-foot, six-floor library, which features an aluminum glazed curtain wall exterior and an exposed concrete interior (a Saarinen hallmark). The updates included adding more desks for students to use laptops, reducing shelving to create more open space, making the restrooms Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant, upgrading the mechanical systems and removing asbestos.

Berglund worked closely with university officials to create detailed schedules and floor relocation plans to minimize disruptions during the project. We finished restroom renovations before the school year began, and coordinated book relocation plans carefully to ensure constant access to critical materials. Berglund also rehabbed the Saarinen-designed fountain outside the library, which stood empty in the winter and looked unattractive. We replaced it with a zero-depth pool that would mimic the original fountain in the summer and serve as a dry, reflective granite slab in the winter. The completed library was a hit with the university and the preservation community: We won the 2008 Richard Driehaus Preservation Award from the Landmarks Council of Illinois for the project.

Celebrating 100 Years: A Rare Place of Worship

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Queen of All Saints Basilica

It’s no small feat to become a basilica, a designation granted by the pope to large, significant Catholic churches. With its modern Gothic architecture and culturally diverse congregation, Queen of All Saints Basilica in Chicago’s far north Sauganash neighborhood earned the honor shortly after its current sanctuary opened in 1960. It’s one of just a handful of basilicas in Chicago, and Berglund took special care with the structure during its façade restoration, one of several projects we’ve completed for Queen of All Saints.

Berglund spent four years completing the $10 million restoration, which was spread out over multiple years for funding purposes. We ground and tuck-pointed the entire exterior of the church and its school, self-performing 85 percent of the work to ensure the highest quality. Since the church and school remained open during construction, we carefully coordinated with the parish to keep all visitors safe. With a newly revamped exterior that stands strong against the elements, this holy site will be there for its faithful for years to come.

Celebrating 100 Years: This Building’s Seen It All

Saturday, July 23rd, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Palmolive Building

From soap to scandalous pictures, the Palmolive Building’s seen a lot since it was built in 1929.

The Chicago landmark originally was home to the Palmolive Soap Co., and Playboy later moved in, hanging a huge lighted Playboy sign on the front of the building for all of Michigan Avenue to see. When a developer later converted the building into high-end condos, it tapped Berglund to restore the Art Deco building’s terra cotta and limestone exterior.

Berglund tuck-pointed and cleaned Palmolive’s façade, patching and replacing the stones as needed and applying sealant to the windows. Our restoration work won the 2006 Award of Merit for Renovation/Restoration from the Midwest Construction Review. Now restored to top form, the Palmolive’s ready for whatever comes its way next.

Celebrating 100 Years: A Rich History

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Center on Halsted

Situated in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood, the Center on Halsted is a community center that embraces the area’s lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender history. The center also features another piece of local history – the original 1920s terra cotta façade from the previous building on the site, which Berglund painstakingly salvaged and reapplied to the new building.

The old building was originally an auto dealership and showroom, and the city later used it as a garage. Though Center on Halsted chose to construct a new building on the site instead of using the old one, it recognized the historic value of the original building’s façade. Berglund dismantled, documented, stored and reconstructed the terra cotta on the new center, which features a rooftop garden, community technology center and meeting rooms, and performing arts space. Reusing the historic façade helped the center earn Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Silver certification while also giving a nod to the area’s roots.

Celebrating 100 Years: The Keys to Preservation

Friday, July 15th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

U.S. Custom House

The main lesson to learn from our restoration of Chicago’s U.S. Custom House? Investigation, perseverance and technology are the keys to preservation.

When Berglund was tapped to handle the restoration of U.S. Custom House, the General Services Administration (GSA)-owned building needed significant work. Built in 1932 and clad in limestone, aluminum, granite and glass, more than 300 of the building’s limestone panels were cracked or flaking. While the original scope of work called for replacing all the broken panels, we thought that approach was neither environmentally nor historically sound. We proposed an alternative that would save as much of the stone as possible, and got the Illinois State Historic Preservation Office’s OK on the new plan.

Careful handling and identification helped us to preserve many of the limestone panels originally destined for removal. We tested the salvaged panels to determine the components of the original grout and mortar and the quarry where the limestone had been sourced, then used identical matches in our repairs. Unsalvageable limestone was ground up for use in road construction and landscaping.

Our creative approach to U.S. Custom House’s restoration didn’t go unnoticed. The project won the GSA’s 2006 National Conservation Award and 2004 Construction Waste Management Award, as well as a certificate of construction excellence from the government agency.

Celebrating 100 Years: Science Meets Beauty

Tuesday, July 12th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Wilson Hall, Fermilab

Fermilab’s founding director, Robert Wilson, believed that beauty and science went hand in hand. A renowned physicist as well as an artist and sculptor, Wilson wanted visitors to the national laboratory’s Batavia, Ill., campus to marvel at its design, along with the scientific breakthroughs happening there.

Fermilab’s administrative building, built in 1972 and named after Wilson, honored its namesake’s vision. The building features distinctive symmetrical towers that curve and sweep gracefully into the air. By the late 1990s, though, the beautiful structure needed some work. Temperature shifts over the years had caused the buildings, which are tied together by post-tensioned concrete beams at the seventh through 16th floors, to move more than the original design had anticipated. As a result, the structure’s beams were deteriorating, the exterior was chipping, the entrance plaza was cracking and the waterproofing system was failing.

The laboratory hired Berglund to restore Wilson Hall, and Berglund spent 15 months returning the building to its former glory. We repaired the crossover beams and the exterior, installed a waterproofing membrane on the balconies, and sealed the façade. Berglund performed all work at night to minimize disruptions to Fermilab, and the lab used a webcam to broadcast the renovation’s progress on its website. After completing work in 2001, we took home the 2002 Award of Excellence from the International Concrete Repair Institute. The restoration also was one of the featured government projects in Midwest Construction Review’s 2003 Illinois Showcase.

Celebrating 100 Years: Expanding Our Reach

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse

By the end of this project, Berglund not only had another restoration under its belt, but also a new office. Our foray into Cincinnati to restore the Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse led to the opening of our fourth location, in Columbus, Ohio, expanding our Midwest presence significantly.

The project that started it all was the $28 million restoration and interior renovation of this federal courthouse, which was built in 1938 in the Art Moderne style. Berglund modernized and upgraded the 500,000-square-foot facility while it was fully occupied, taking care to work around the court’s operations. Work included mechanical and electrical system upgrades, elevator renovations, life-safety improvements and a new judge’s chambers on second floor. Berglund also helped the courthouse go green – the building received Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification in 2006.

Celebrating 100 Years: Making Room for Skinny Guys

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

What does it take to reach 100? As part of our 100th anniversary celebration, we’re posting a piece of Berglund’s history on our blog each day for 100 days. Check in each day to learn new tidbits about our company, win prizes based on your Berglund knowledge, and, most of all, to help us celebrate.

Spotlight on Berglund’s Work: Restoration

Mather Tower

Chicago may be the city of big shoulders, but there’s room for skinny guys, too.

Once the tallest building in Chicago, Mather Tower at 75 E. Wacker Drive is also known as the city’s slenderest skyscraper. Its base is just 65 by 100 feet, and the tower’s upper floors narrow even more.  Built in 1928, the building was originally home to the Mather Stock Car Co., which manufactured rail cars designed to transport livestock. After the company vacated the building, though, Mather Tower’s tight dimensions made it unattractive for many tenants, and the building fell into disrepair by the 1990s. When terra cotta began falling from the façade, it was clearly time for the building’s restoration.

Berglund stabilized and repaired Mather Tower’s façade and cleaned the ornate terra cotta cladding that covered the building. Crews removed the structure’s four-story crown, and installed a replacement by helicopter because the property was too small to accommodate a crane. A hotel now occupies the building’s upper levels, while the lower levels house offices. Berglund won a 2006 Preservation Honor Award for the project from the National Trust for Historic Preservation.