Saturday, December 09, 2006
HEIDI TOTH - Daily Herald
If the ancient Egyptians used a crane and steel and had drivers rubbernecking as they drove past, their pyramid-building might have looked very similar to the scene at the Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center on Friday.
The scene at noon was the topping-off ceremony, as the pyramid-shaped, 23,000-pound tower cap was raised over the highest part of the building in front of dozens of administrators, alumni, construction workers and visitors. Applause swept through the onlookers first when the structure got off the ground and again as it was slowly lowered onto its permanent home.
"We are doing our best to get out of the way," King Husein of Span Construction and Engineering, one of the two contractors, said during a celebratory and aromatic barbecue.
The groundbreaking on June 23, Hinckley's 96th birthday, started the fast-tracked building process; the 80,000-square-foot building should be done in the spring or early summer, although that time frame isn't set.
"I think they're just trying to get it done as quickly as possible," said Grant Madsen, a spokesman for the university.
Husein and BYU President Cecil O. Samuelson, along with Randy Okland of Okland Construction, the other contractor, commended the construction crew on their work and asked them to stand; half the guests filling the large white tent did. Then they recognized others.
"I just want to thank the person I assigned to take care of the weather," Husein said, noting the sun shining outside and the relative lack of precipitation since construction began. Even the winter weather hasn't slowed them down much.
During his turn, Samuelson, who was assigned the weather, added an apology and a disclaimer to Husein's comments; his attention deficit disorder kicked in during a couple of days at the end of November with temperatures in the single digits, snow and sleet. He couldn't promise sunny skies until the construction was done, either.
"I'm old enough to know that that recurs," he joked.
The roof went on, again, with no major problems. The first time was during a practice run on Wednesday with no fanfare; the second time was full of showmanship.
Dozens of visitors and BYU officials signed the base of the roof, some so large they could be clearly read from across the street.
Then the massive crane sputtered on, followed by cheers from the crowd, and slowly lifted the roof and its accoutrements -- an American flag, a BYU flag and Christmas tree -- up several hundred feet.
As of Friday, more than 64,000 BYU students, faculty, staff, alumni and friends had contributed to the building.
Related Story:
Steel pyramid crowns the Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center as it nears completion
By Todd Hollingshead
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated:12/09/2006 01:24:42 AM MST
PROVO - Hundreds of spectators looked toward the sky Friday as workers topped off the latest building at Brigham Young University.
Crews hoisted a 23,000-pound steel pyramid more than 100 feet in the air and gently secured it atop the rapidly rising Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center during a noon ceremony to celebrate the completion of steel work on the new structure.
"This is a terrific milestone," BYU President Cecil Samuelson said, "in less than six months, to see what has already occurred."
Workers broke ground on the 80,000-square-foot building June 23, Hinckley's 96th birthday.
King Husein, president of California-based Span Construction, said crews are working at a "breakneck speed" to finish the three-story building on the northwest end of the Provo campus.
Initial estimates called for a fall 2007 completion.
"We're going to get it done even faster," Husein said. "The prophet is not getting any younger."
Hinckley, who will turn 97 in June, was not present for Friday's ceremony.
The LDS Church president expressed thanks to construction workers through Husein, who met with Hinckley earlier Friday.
The alumni building is being fully funded through donations from faculty, alumni, students, and friends of the university. Though school officials won't reveal how much has been raised or the project cost, they said more than 65,000 donors have contributed.
"We're not quite there yet," BYU spokesman Grant Madsen said. "There has been a great deal of generosity to date, and we hope that will continue."
The steel portion of the building consists of 14,000 pieces of steel, weighing roughly 800 tons together. The crowning pyramid piece took about 10 minutes to be raised the 122 feet and fastened to the top of the clock tower.
toddh@sltrib.com