PRotecting our borders
Transcription
PRotecting our borders
PRotecting our borders 01 01 FLETC Port-of-Entry & Border Patrol Station, Glynco, GA 02 Rio Grande Border Patrol Sector Headquarters, Edinburg, TX 02 In 1941, HDR received an unexpected contract from the Quartermaster General of the Army to design a 35,000man training facility in Montana. In the decades since, our portfolio of work with Federal government agencies has grown to include millions of square feet, most of which has been procured under Indefinite Delivery/Indefinite Quantity contracts. HDR understands »» »» »» »» »» »» »» National Institute of Standards + Technology General Services Administration Department of Defense The Pentagon U.S. Navy, Naval Research Laboratory U.S. Air Force Academy U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (various districts) the complex nature of planning and designing government buildings and More than 65% of our annual business their need to be delivered on time and is from repeat clients, many of whom within budget. have worked with HDR continuously over the last 30 years. We are also Our satisfied clients include: »» »» »» Department of Homeland Security Department of Justice Department of Energy consistently ranked as one of the leading design firms in most design and construction surveys. P r ov i d i n g t h e f u l l r a n g e o f architecture & engineering services HDR is a full service ArchitectEngineer firm providing a full array of capabilities. »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» 03 Architecture Asset Management Bridging Documents Capital Investment Planning Commissioning Construction Management Design–Build Engineering Environmental Planning Facility Condition Surveys »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» »» Financing Options Interior Design Master Planning Need Assessments Procurement Consulting Program Management Programming Project Management Public Private Partnerships Security Consulting Strategic Asset Management Sustainable Design/Consulting 04 05 03 Texas Service Center, Space Programming and Process Analysis, Dallas, TX 04 Eagle Pass Border Patrol Station, Eagle Pass, TX 05 FLETC Port-of-Entry & Border Patrol Station, Glynco, GA P e r f o r m a n c e Ac k n o w l e d g e d by rankings and awards Building Design Magazine, 2013 #2 North American Firms #4 Engineering #2 Project Management #2 Product Design #6 Interior Design Building Design + Construction Magazine, 2013 #1 Military Architecture #3 A/E Firms #3 BIM Design Firms #3 Data Center Design Firms #3 Government Design Firms Modern Healthcare Magazine, 2013 #1 Architectural Firm in Healthcare Design Architectural Record, 2013 #6 Top Architectural Firm Engineering News Record, 2013 #11 Design Firms #1 Green Government Office #7 Government Offices #5 General Building #2 Environment #4 Environmental Science #13 Education Facilities #22 Commercial Offices Almanac of Architecture & Design, 2013 # 6 “Design Intelligence 333 Top Architectural Firms” 06 06 Tucson Sector Border Patrol Station, Tucson, AZ HDR/DHS Projects HDR Offices ALASKA HAWAII R i g h t t e a m , R i g h t P l ac e t o provide Capacity HDR is the 11th largest architecture/ engineering firm in the nation with more than 8,500 employees in 185 offices nationwide. HDR earned in excess of $1.8 billion in architecture/ engineering fees during the past calendar year. HDR has accomplished over 500 task orders in support of DHS. HDR can put the “right team” in the “right place” at the “right time.” commit ted to proven quality ACA S S P RO J ECT AWARDS HDR has an excellent performance Alexandria Public Safety Headquarters, Alexandria, VA record with Fort Worth on DHS tasks. Excellence in Design Awards, HDR has received more than 85 ACASS Government Category, Environmental evaluations on DHS tasks with more Design + Construction Magazine than half “Exceptional” and 95% “Exceptional” and “Very Good.” Fort Belvoir Community Hospital, Fort Belvoir, VA AWARD S » » Silver Team Award, Building Design Annually, HDR receives numerous » » National Award of Merit for awards from recognized institutes for our architecture and engineering projects. HDR has received over 250 design awards for both Architecture and Engineering in the last three years. These are a sampling of architecture awards received this year: FIR M AWARDS HDR Illinois, Indiana, East Missouri and Wisconsin Offices + Construction Magazine Lighting, Illumination Awards, Illumination Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) » » Commendable Achievement in Lighting Design, Illumination Engineering Society of North America (IESNA) District of Columbia Section » » First Place, New Construction over $50 Million, Excellence in Design Firm of the Year, Engineering Structural Engineering Award, News-Record Midwest Magazine Structural Engineers Association of Metropolitan Washington (SEA-MW) HDR Texas & Louisiana Offices » » Best Use of BIM Project Award, Design Firm of the Year, New Construction over $150 Engineering News-Record Texas & million, Associated General Louisiana Magazine Contractors (AGC) of Metropolitan Washington DC HDR, Inc. » » Honor Award for Design 2012 Champion of Change, Excellence, Fairfax County Practice Greenhealth Exceptional Design Awards 07 » » Project Achievement Award, Architex Remede Fabric Category: Constructed Value Silver IDEA Award, Product Design, more than $100M Category, International Interior Design Construction Management Association (IIDA), Great Plains Chapter Association of America (CMAA), National Capital Chapter Georgia Institute of Technology, Carbon-Neutral Energy Solutions Laboratory, Atlanta, GA » » High Honors, Lab of the Year Award, R+D Magazine. » » Merit Award, General Design Hays County Municipal Government Complex, San Marcos, TX » » Golden Trowel Award, Associated Masonry Contractors of Houston » » Selected for publication, Justice Facilities Review, American Institute of Architects (AIA), Academy of Architecture for Justice Category–American Society of Landscape Architects, Georgia Chapter 07 Fort Belvoir Community Hospital, Fort Belvoir, VA I n t e l l i g e n c e a n d Op e r a t i o n s C o o r d i n a t i o n C e n t e r , T u c s o n B o r d e r Pat r o l S e c t o r Headquarters Tucson, Az This, first-of-its-kind, Intelligence and and certification of a secure database, Operations Coordination Center for secure communications integration, the U.S. Border Patrol represents the and full stand up and implementation front line defense for the Office of of the Intelligence, Law Enforcement Intelligence for border security. Both Tactical Center, and Intelligence national and international intelligence Communications Departments as well is analyzed, coordinated between as the Situation Awareness Center. branches, and disseminated to the field for immediate implementation. Project Details The Situation Awareness Center is Cost: $16 Million the most advanced communications center within Customs and Border Protection. The teams that are housed here represent our best opportunity to stay ahead of the criminals attempting to exploit America’s Southern Border. Due to operational requirements Square Footage: 25,000 SF Responsibility: Design and construction management, including architecture, engineering, security design, environmental impact studies and assessment Contractor: Sacramento District for Customs and Border Protection, Washington, DC months prior to the original delivery Building Components: Academic/training rooms, office spaces, detention holding, computer room, parking spaces, an outdoor simulation area, landscaping date. This date reflected installation Completion Date: July 2011 the schedule was accelerated and beneficial occupancy was granted 3 Aj o B o r d e r P a t r o l S t a t i o n W h y, A Z This facility was designed for 350 agents unique sustainability features: a water and will replace the original building, harvesting/storage system to capture designed for 25 agents. DHS acquired rain water from the roofs which will an unimproved 32-acre parcel of land be used to irrigate the natural desert from the Bureau of Land Management landscaping, large overhangs to shade (BLM) to build their new facility. It is the exterior walls, and R-40 roof and a “site-adapt” of a 350-man station R-23 wall insulation to help reduce previously built in Yuma, Arizona and mechanical equipment sizes to reduce designed by HDR. HDR is providing full first-hand costs. architectural and engineering services for this project. The new complex Project Details consists of a 54,500 SF administration, Cost: $35 Million detention, training areas, offices and SBInet building. The Border Patrol Station has a sally port, alien processing areas and hold rooms. In addition to the new station, there is an 8,400 SF industrial building with general shops and electronic repair bays, a set of fuel islands, car wash and parking for 753 Square Footage: 62,900 SF Responsibility: Design and construction management including; architecture, engineering, master planning, security design, environmental impact studies and assessment Contractor: Fort Worth District for Customs and Border Protection, Washington, DC already been registered with the US Building Components: Academic/ training rooms, office spaces, detention holding, computer room, parking spaces, maintenance facility, landscaping Green Building Council. The design has Completion Date: July 2013 vehicles. This building was designed to meet LEED Silver Certification and has T u c s o n B o r d e r Pat r o l s e c t o r H e a d q u a r t e r s Tucson, Az This sector facility is located on 30 plus vehicle parking and bus parking acres of land and replaced an older, on the site. The innovative solution cramped facility that had been in called for making the retention basins use since the mid-sixties. The Tucson deeper than normal and keeping them Sector is the second largest sector on the perimeter of the site, which also in the county and oversees eight provided additional barriers against Border Patrol Stations along the terrorist acts. Arizona/Mexico border. The new complex consists of: an administration Project Details building (64,000 SF) that includes a Cost: $35 Million communications center, Borstar and Special Response Team operations; a detention facility (17,000 SF); a facilities maintenance building (33,500 SF); and a Vehicle Maintenance Buildings Square Footage: 149,500 SF Responsibility: Full AE services Contractor: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX challenging requirements calling for Building Components: Lobby, waiting area, academic/training rooms, office space, communications center, vehicle maintenance building, secured sallyport/detention area onsite storm water retention while Completion Date: July 2006 (40,500 SF) with 24 vehicle repair bays. The project team was able to satisfy fitting the programmed square footage E ag l e Pa s s B o r d e r Pat r o l S tat i o n E agl e Pa ss , T X The new facility is one of the largest facility was achieved by designing the immigration processing facilities in the complex with zoned areas of public/ United States, and was master planned secured entry and circulation. to accommodate potential growth up to 350 agents and 380 detainees, with Project Details buildings and site improvements to be Cost: $13.4 Million built in phases. Phase one included the main administration building, detainee intake, processing and detention space, visitor areas and public lobby. Kennels and a vehicle maintenance facility also were completed. The central building’s Square Footage: 50,391 SF Responsibility: Master planning, full AE services Contractor: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX limit heat gain while expansive glazing Building Components: Lobby, waiting area, academic/training rooms, office space, communications center, secured sallyport/ detention area, detainee intake, lobby, visiting area, gymnasium, armory, drug evidence room, drug testing facilities, kennel, vehicle fueling station maximizes views to the outdoors. Completion Date: May 2007 modern architectural character projects the desired image of strength, presence and control. Stucco and light-color local limestone cladding Enhanced security and operation R i o G r a n d e Va l l e y B o r d e r Pat r o l Sector Headquarters Edinburg, TX As the first phase of a master planned integrated, maximizing penetration of development on a 28.65 acre campus, natural light, and promoting efficient it will eventually be expanded to interaction between departments. 196,000 SF and 2,000 agents. Designed to create a strong sense of community Project Details and pedestrian scale, the various Cost: $17.4 Million departments were arranged in three buildings organized around a central courtyard. Extensive use of glass, metal wall/roof panels, and pre-cast concrete enhance the exterior architecture. Extended roof overhangs at the Square Footage: 71,575 SF Responsibility: Master planning, concept design, and security consulting Contractor: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX over glazing reflect light into interior Building Components: Lobby/reception area, management/administration offices, support services spaces, training rooms, communications area, secured sallyport/ detention area, special operation spaces, gymnasium/locker room, kennel, supply warehouse, weapons storage office areas and minimize heat gain. Completion Date: January 2006 perimeter provide more interest and comfortable circulation for pedestrians. Views out of the building are maximized. Stationary horizontal sunscreens Open and private office areas are fully Y u m a B o r d e r Pat r o l S tat i o n Yuma, AZ This facility has two zoned areas based on the level of intended access ranging from semi-public to secure/ private in order to enhance its security Project Details Cost: $12.9 Million Square Footage: 45,000 SF and operational efficiency. The semi- Responsibility: Full AE services public areas— offices, entry, training Contractor: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX rooms, administrative support and private areas were kept far from the Building Components: Lobby/reception area, administration/offices, training rooms, communications center, secured sallyport/ detention area public street. A secured sallyport Completion Date: November 2007 the squad room—are closest to the street frontage and the entry. Secure/ buffers the two areas. The sallyport includes detention/processing and administrative areas. The facility was designed using the U.S. Border Patrol Facilities Design Guidelines that HDR Architecture prepared and continues to update. Ports of Entry Nat i o n w i d e HDR responded to a “Verbal Notice Fort Worth Districts of the Corps of to Proceed” to assemble a project Engineers in overseeing the solicitation management team in the Fort Worth process for these projects. These District to manage the RFP solicitation projects were all to be solicited under preparation and issue, response existing MATOC Construction Contracts evaluation, subsequent design owned by various Corps of Engineer review, construction scheduling Districts. Work during the two project and budget review of ten new phases included. construction projects. These projects were part of a special program for the Project Details Department of Homeland Security Cost: $180 Million (U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Field Operations Facilities). HDR had a project management team on the ground working within one day and they produced their first work product, a Design-Build Request for Proposal template within five working days. HDR provided direct support to the St. Paul, New England, Omaha, and Square Footage: 320,000 SF Responsibility: Program management including all phases of project delivery; RFP development, solicitation assistance, bid reviews, design oversight Contractor: Fort Worth District for Customs and Border Protection, Washington, DC Building Components: Ports of entry, roads, real estate Completion Date: 2012 Ports of Entry Nat i o n w i d e HDR was initially contracted to provide and Border Protection. The projects project management support for nine involved the replacement of land ports major construction projects for ports of entry. The construction included of entry on the northern and southern planning, real estate, environmental, borders, which has since expanded civil and transportation engineering, to 14 projects. The support was architectural design, IT and required to supplement the Corps of communication design, and detailed Engineers local district offices for this coordination with the operational exigent requirement. HDR essentially elements to assure trans-border traffic worked as an extension of the Corps of and security was not disrupted. Engineers for this work. HDR provided a program manager and 3 project Project Details managers backed by a dedicated multi- Cost: $106 Million disciplinary team from a variety of HDR offices. The initial nine projects moved so smoothly and task was modified to assign HDR five additional projects. The projects were part of a large Design-Build Program generated by Square Footage: 240,000 SF Responsibility: Construction management including scheduling, inspection, conflict resolution Contractor: Fort Worth District for Customs and Border Protection, Washington, DC American Recovery and Reinvestment Building Components: Ports of entry, Act funding to the U.S. Customs roads, real estate Completion Date: Ongoing F e d e r a l B u i l d i n g , 101 W C o n g r e s s P k w y C h i c a g o , IL Adhering to the guidelines of the deportation sallyport; decentralized General Services Administration’s access control and intrusion detection; Design Excellence Program, the digital video surveillance and recording; renovation of the Chicago Federal as well as both passive and active Building consolidated several DHS counter-terrorism measures. The operations into one government-owned renovation is LEED CI Silver certified. building. A new recessed outdoor covered lobby and a vertical glass Project Details bay, a tradition in Chicago’s historic Cost: $67 Million buildings, separates old from new. By reconfiguring the space, the building Square Footage: 240,000 SF Renovation, 500,000 SF Total Building now accommodates thousands of Responsibility: Full AE services visitors and their families a day, while meeting the need for separation of public traffic from employee and investigative functions and providing security for the special tenant needs. Contractor: GSA Region 5, Chicago, IL Building Components: Administrative offices, multi-use auditorium, secure detention area, deportation sallyport, waiting rooms Design features include: a voluminous Completion Date: March 2007 sky-lit atrium waiting room; a multi- Sustainability: LEED® Commercial Interior use auditorium space for swearing in Certification ceremonies; a secure detention and Fe de r al L aw E nforceme nt Tr aining Ce nte r ( FLETC ) P o r t - o f - E n t r y/ B o r d e r P a t r o l S t a t i o n Tr ai n i n g Faci lit y G ly n c o , G A As the headquarters facility for the into the public space is moderated by FLETC, this campus features classrooms, sun control louvers cantilevered from dormitories, administrative, and the curtainwall frame. The high space logistical support structures, all of in the lobby houses an observation which provide realistic settings of mezzanine from which activities can be actual border patrol facilities. Using video taped for training purposes. the DHS Design Guides, which were authored by HDR, the Mock Port-of- Project Details Entry/Border Patrol Station training Cost: $4.4 Million facility provides for a high level of flexibility to ensure that it can be easily reconfigured to meet the needs of changing technology and training methodology. Separate computer rooms facilitate real-time training. The building’s “transparent” architectural expression delivers visual control between the primary inspection of vehicles at the booths and the secondary inspection at the public counter inside the building. Sunlight Square Footage: 25,000 SF Responsibility: Design architecture, engineering, security design, environmental impact studies and assessment Contractor: Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Washington, DC Building Components: Academic/training rooms, office spaces, detention holding, computer room, parking spaces, an outdoor simulation area, landscaping Completion Date: July 2001 P HASE I EN V IRON M ENTAL ASSESS M ENTS FOR TACTICAL INFRASTRUCTURE SOU T H W E S T BORD E R HDR was integral to the construction from the Rio Grande halfway through of the “border fence” on the southwest the project. This resulted in the need border. The fence was funded as a for a second site visit to reevaluate the special initiative to control transit of properties, re-inventory the existing the United States Border by illegal wastes, and characterize the new aliens and drug smugglers. HDR has wastes following the flooding. prepared 129 Phase I ESAs for CBP and USACE Fort Worth District. The Phase I Project Details ESAs covered approximately 350 miles COST: N/A of proposed fence corridors, 280 miles of proposed access roads, and 655 acres of proposed staging areas throughout four states (CA, AZ, NW, TX). The Phase I ESAs were completed on a compressed schedule with 25 or more being conducted simultaneously at any one time. The Phase I ESA for CBP in Del Rio, TX, project was unique because the site was flooded with 8 feet of water SCOPE: 350 Miles RESPONSIBILITY: Complete environmental studies and analysis CONTRACTOR: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX COMPONENTS: Sampling of soil, air, groundwater, waste, and/or building materials, reports, briefings. (IAW US EPA based on ASTM in Standard E1527-05) COMPLETION DATE: 2011 NATIONAL EN V IRON M ENTAL P LANNING ACT ( NE P A ) DOCU M ENTS FOR TACTICAL INFRASTRUCTURE SOU T H W E S T BORD E R HDR supported the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Secure Border Initiative (SBI) through the preparation of numerous NEPA documents addressing the construction, operation, and maintenance of tactical infrastructure on the U.S./ Mexico international border, including high fence lines and other deterrents. HDR’s support included preparation of two EISs; three EAs; and supporting services such as cultural resources surveys, biological surveys, biological assessments, Endangered Species Act (ESA) Section 7 consultation, scoping and public meetings, translation services, Phase I and Phase II Environmental Site Assessments (ESAs) on 70 proposed sections of tactical infrastructure, and California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) compliance—all under an extremely expedited schedule. We also coordinated with multiple federal, state, regional, and local agencies, including the USIBWC, USFWS, USEPA, SHPOs, NPS, BLM, Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), and the USACE. Because of the congressional mandate for the projects, HDR completed all the above-listed services on a very short timeline. Project Details COST: N/A SCOPE: 350 Miles RESPONSIBILITY: Complete environmental assessments and associated studies and compliance CONTRACTOR: Fort Worth District of U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth, TX COMPONENTS: Environmental impact analyses and environmental assessments to include, biological assessments, natural resources inventories, endangered/threatened species surveys NHPA Section 106, Archaeological Resources Protection Act (ARPA), Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), American Antiquities Act, EO 11593 (Protection and Enhancement of the Cultural Environment), and Executive Order (EO) 13007 (Indian Sacred Sites, Aerial Photogrammetric and GIS Mapping/Remote Sensing and Applied Technologies COMPLETION DATE: 2011 Tac t i c a l I n f r a s t r u c t u r e P r o j e c t M a n ag e m e n t S o u t h we s t B o r d e r Since 2001, HDR has worked on over (Integrated Project Team–IPT) efforts 25 individual tasks under contracts (engineering, environmental, material involving program management related procurement, project construction and to the development-implementation- real estate), facilitating team meetings execution of a comprehensive Tactical and teleconferences, coordination with Infrastructure (TI) Program along the local, state and federal agencies and U.S.-Mexico Border. HDR has partnered the general public (where applicable) with the Department of Homeland as well as updating the annual Sectors’ Security , specifically the U.S. Customs Program Management Plan (PMP), and Border Protection (USCBP), Annual Funding Request Packages, and including the National Logistic Center, Annual and Five-Year Spending Plans. in Indianapolis, the Logistics Centers in Dallas and Laguna Nigel, the Office Project Details of Border Patrol (OBP) Headquarters Cost: N/A and 14 of the 17 Sectors located along the United States borders. HDR also developed the long-range planning and programming studies outlining the TI Program requirements for most of the sectors located along the Square Footage: N/A Responsibility: Program management including all phases of project delivery Contractor: Fort Worth District for Customs and Border Protection, Washington, DC program management services include Building Components: Fences, roads, lights, real estate reviews and surveys, environmental impact analysis, and capital planning overall coordination of the teams Completion Date: Ongoing southwest and northern borders. HDR’s hdrarchitecture.com © 2013 HDR Architecture, Inc., all rights reserved. 0 0 5 4102 0 813 We practice increased use of sustainable materials and reduction of material use.