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  #261  
Old Posted Dec 27, 2009, 2:02 PM
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You guys are lucky as hell. That tower is beautiful and it's going to put your city on another level. Too bad it wasn't there in 2002 when I was there Good luck with the tower's progress.
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  #262  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2010, 9:10 PM
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Originally Posted by photolitherland View Post
Well, I went back home to Houston for Christmas and thought Id go 5 hours out of my way to see OKC since Ive never been there and to see this towers construction and damn, I am very impressed with OKC. Compared with other cities in the region, Tulsa, Dallas, Little Rock, Memphis, and Ft Worth, Id take OKC any day of the week. It was very clean and not a lot of hobos, in fact I didnt see any and Bricktown was amazing. Anyways, these are photos from last night while passing through.
Fantastic shots! Glad you enjoyed OKC.
     
     
  #263  
Old Posted Jan 8, 2010, 7:32 PM
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photos by Del Camino, OKCtalk.com



     
     
  #264  
Old Posted Jan 10, 2010, 8:22 PM
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Here's a cool video update of construction from newsok.com... Project is "Ahead of schedule and under budget"

http://www.newsok.com/multimedia/video/58781413001
     
     
  #265  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2010, 12:12 AM
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Will the parking garage be expanded outward toward Hudson? I thought for some reason it would come to the sidewalk along Hudson but it it doesn't appear that is happening, anyone know?
     
     
  #266  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2010, 12:18 AM
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nice addition to the skyline!
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  #267  
Old Posted Jan 11, 2010, 12:25 AM
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Will the parking garage be expanded outward toward Hudson? I thought for some reason it would come to the sidewalk along Hudson but it it doesn't appear that is happening, anyone know?
Yeah, they are finishing the upward expansion first so that they can open the parking back up for downtown office workers, and then they will expand it west to front Hudson Avenue I think with retail space
     
     
  #268  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2010, 6:58 AM
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Quick question, was the parking ramp, the one undergoing the vertical expansion, built with the intent that it was to someday undergo a vertical expansion, or was it just sheer luck that the original 5-story parking structure that was initially built, built to withstand an additional 5 floors totaling 10 floors? Sorry if it seems like a dumb question, but just wondering...
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  #269  
Old Posted Jan 15, 2010, 6:59 AM
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nvm
     
     
  #270  
Old Posted Jan 18, 2010, 3:55 AM
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Originally Posted by Texan101 View Post
Its my most anticipated project in the states.
Might possibly be mine as well, now that the Austonian is complete.
     
     
  #271  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2010, 1:57 AM
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Holes getting deeper at both the tower and podium foundations... 1/21/10 by Lauri101 at okctalk.com/flickr



     
     
  #272  
Old Posted Jan 25, 2010, 3:17 AM
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There sure are a lot of raising implements on site. That must be exciting for you guys. Congrats!
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  #273  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2010, 1:56 PM
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http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/27/re...l/27devon.html

A Decaying Downtown Becomes Full of Life Again


Devon Energy is constructing a 50-story tower in Oklahoma City that is expected to be completed in 2012.


AT&T Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City opened in 1998. It is the home of the Oklahoma City RedHawks, the AAA affiliate of the Texas Rangers.



By KRISTINA SHEVORY
January 26, 2010
Most companies have shelved expansion plans until the economy recovers — but not the Devon Energy Corporation, one of the country’s biggest independent energy companies.

Flush with cash from the energy boom, Devon broke ground in October for a 50-story tower in Oklahoma City that is among the tallest buildings under construction nationwide. The company’s new headquarters building will be the state’s tallest when it opens in 2012.

Despite the building’s $750 million price, Devon is betting the new tower will save money and make the company more efficient. All of its 1,500 employees in Oklahoma City, who are now scattered in five buildings around downtown, will be in a single location.


The building, designed by Pickard Chilton, will have 80,000 square feet of ground floor space with retail and food, open to the public. “It’s a great time to build a building. We can get it done faster and cheaper than during the boom,” said Larry Nichols, Devon’s chief executive. “We’re ahead of schedule and under budget.”

Devon’s building, however, is not the only construction project in Oklahoma City. In December, residents approved a $777 million tax package for a 70-acre central park, convention center, streetcar system, aquatic centers, boating facilities and trails that will be built over the next nine years.

A $140 million makeover of downtown, including new sidewalks, bicycle lanes and two-way streets, also starts in May courtesy of Devon.

“We’re assured of a 10-year economic stimulus plan,” said Roy H. Williams, chief executive of the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber.

While Devon’s tower is the only office building under construction, Oklahoma City’s commercial real estate market has been less affected than some markets by the downturn unfolding across the country. Rents and vacancy rates have not shown the wild swings that characterize other markets, although the vacancy rate was up to 20 percent at the end of the year, from 16.5 percent at the end of 2008, according to CB Richard Ellis, a commercial brokerage firm.

“We are still strongly dominated by the oil and natural gas industry. As long as it performs, we’re O.K.,” said Jim Austin, a vice president at CB Richard Ellis in Oklahoma City. “When everyone was tanking, we were doing well.”

Natural gas prices have skyrocketed over the last few years, bolstered by high energy demand and technological advances that opened up previously tapped fields, and climbed to more than $14 a thousand cubic feet in July 2008. Although the recession has depressed prices, they have started to recover as energy companies close wells and reduce drilling.

While Devon is making a contribution, much of the revival of downtown is being financed by taxpayers, who have a history of approving taxes to improve the city. In 1993, city voters approved a temporary one-cent increase in the sales tax to redevelop the riverfront, renovate the fairgrounds and build a ballpark, sports arena, library, trolley system, and a mile-long canal. For the next 15 years, residents have voted to continue paying for renovations on all the city’s public schools and the river.

“It’s pay as you go,” said Ronald J. Norick, who was Oklahoma City’s mayor from 1987 to 1998. “People can see where their money goes and what their money bought.”

After the collapse of the energy boom in the early 1980s, Oklahoma City struggled for well over a decade. Unemployment was around 10 percent, the only hotel downtown was on the verge of closing and the convention center’s roof leaked.

“Our city was dying. You could shoot a cannon at 5 p.m. and you wouldn’t hit anybody,” Mr. Norick said.

When Oklahoma City lost bids, in quick succession, for the maintenance hubs for United and American Airlines more than a decade ago, it decided to do something about it. When Mr. Norick visited Indianapolis, he saw a lively downtown full of hotels, restaurants, cafes and people on the streets and realized that companies were going elsewhere because Oklahoma City had “a dead downtown.”

Over the next year, Mr. Norick worked with a small group of people to come up with what would eventually become the city’s first taxpayer-financed project, or MAPS for Metropolitan Area Projects.

All the projects were placed downtown to attract new hotels, restaurants and other businesses.

“Initially, we took a city that was a nice place to live and raise a family, but was not a great place to visit,” said the current Oklahoma City mayor, Mick Cornett. “We’ve now created a city that we want to show off and we’re proud of.”

The projects have infused the city with a sense of enthusiasm and attracted more businesses downtown.

After a nationwide search, the American Automobile Association picked Oklahoma City for the site of its new customer service center because of its low business costs and vibrant economy, said Paula Downey, president of AAA Northern California, Nevada and Utah.

“What was most impressive about Oklahoma City was how well its various city departments worked together and followed through with us,” she said. “They’re a role model for other cities.”

Oklahoma City University is moving its law school downtown to be closer to the courthouse, legal agencies and law firms. When its $30 million renovation of a former Ford Motor factory is completed in two to three years, it will have doubled its space.

“We just want to be part of the downtown renaissance,” said Tom J. McDaniel, Oklahoma City University’s president.
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  #274  
Old Posted Jan 27, 2010, 11:35 PM
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^^ The New York Times has been having a love affair with Oklahoma City in the last year or so... I can think of a couple other major features about the urban revival of OKC in the NYT lately.
     
     
  #275  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2010, 12:20 AM
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That was a great read
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  #276  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2010, 6:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CHAPINM1 View Post
Quick question, was the parking ramp, the one undergoing the vertical expansion, built with the intent that it was to someday undergo a vertical expansion, or was it just sheer luck that the original 5-story parking structure that was initially built, built to withstand an additional 5 floors totaling 10 floors? Sorry if it seems like a dumb question, but just wondering...
Not entirely sure. I would assume that both 5 garages were built with expansion in mind. They were the newest garages downtown and we hadn't seen a new one built in years and years. There had been a relatively recent project for the county courthouse, but it wasn't a general public garage like this one.

This garage is an expansion on the garage that was removed to make way for the tower. The original "Galleria" garage was a multi-level underground structure built with the purpose of providing parking for a Galleria Mall. That mall was never built because the oil bust in the 80's killed off OKC's economy...so many project died overnight...many towers/hotels.

These newer Galleria additions were built to provide relief to the stressed parking market downtown that was very very full. It was a surprise to many of us because the parking authority had been so reluctant for so long and then all of a sudden changed gears. I would only assume that the structures were built with a possible expansion in mind for some future need.

Now that Devon will be consolidating, they will be claiming this 10 floor garage as their own. At the same time, they will be vacating those spaces in garage all over downtown. So while it's really cramped right now, once the addition is complete, there will be more breathing room in the garages downtown.
     
     
  #277  
Old Posted Feb 8, 2010, 3:44 AM
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So, any updates from anyone? Its been a while.
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  #278  
Old Posted Feb 8, 2010, 5:29 PM
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The poster RWB at OKCTalk.com seems to be someone with technical knowledge of the project, he posted this update:

2-7-10

Devon Update:

The drilled piers for the tower were completed last Friday. Fifty nine piers were installed, the longest being drilled 135 feet below the dirt bench that the drill rigs sit on. Pier diameters were 60" and the shafts were filled with concrete with a maximum compressive strength of 12,000 pounds per square inch. The big blue drill rig is a Bauer BG-40 drill. Excavation to expose the pier tops will begin this week. The excavation depth is about 17' from the bench elevation and about 32' from street elevation.

There are approximately 580 additional drilled piers to install that will support portions of the Devon structure. While this work is being done, a 12' thick reinforced concrete pier cap will be poured on top of the 59 tower piers. After that, it's straight up with the tower.

The concrete walls around the perimeter of the site consist of overlapping drilled and concreted shafts (called "secant" shafts) with steel beams in some of them. Once excavation of the dirt started, the inside face of the secants was sprayed with a form of concrete called "shotcrete". The shotcrete is used as a subsurface for waterproofing material prior to forming the perimeter walls and pouring the wall concrete. In areas where the excavation is over
16' +/- deep, the secant walls are laterally supported with earth anchors called "tiebacks" which keep the walls from falling into the excavation. The tiebacks are drilled outside the perimeter walls and consist of 6" diameter shafts that are filled with multi-strand steel cables and filled ith grout (cement and water). Once the grout hardens, the strands are tensioned to a specific load and locked off against the inside face of the secant wall.
     
     
  #279  
Old Posted Feb 9, 2010, 8:07 PM
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There was an accident at the construction site yesterday. Two concrete columns on the parking garage collapsed and fell three stories into a public alleyway as a crane put a piece of wall into place, narrowly missing two construction workers. No one was injured but it came extremely close to two construction workers. And it was caught on tape:

http://www.news9.com/Global/category...partnerclipid=
     
     
  #280  
Old Posted Feb 10, 2010, 12:48 AM
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Damn, that was intense. I hope nothing like that happens again.
     
     
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