Best of 2009 Awards - Award of Merit: Green Building - Garden Street Lofts-Hoboken, N.J.
December 9th, 2009, Hoboken, NJ - For Bijou Properties, the adaptive reuse of
dilapidated urban properties is perhaps the
ultimate form of recycling.
The firm's latest project, Garden Street
Lofts, converted a circa-1919 Hostess coconut-
processing warehouse in Hoboken, NJ,
into state-of-the-art green condominiums.
The $16.9 million project expects to be certified
as one of New Jersey's first LEED Silver
residential buildings.
"We thought a LEED building would
not only be great for the environment but
would also attract buyers," says Dave Gaber,
Bijou director.
The project, helmed by Union City, N.J.-
based Del-Sano Contracting, integrates the
five-story,42,888-sq-ft structural steel, concrete
and masonry warehouse with a seven story
addition rising on the east side of the
property. Two new floors atop the warehouse
bridge the old and new structures.
Housed within the structures are 30 condominiums
and 7,500-sq.-ft. of retail space
and the facility is topped by a 4,500-sq-ft
greenroof.
Highly efficient mechanical systems and
low-e insulating windows decrease energy
use by 19 percent. Greenhouse gas emissions
are further reduced by purchasing all
the building's electrical power from alternative
energy sources.
Separate HVAC systems for the residences
and public areas provide fresh filtered
air via rooftop air handling units. Interior
materials and finishes were selected
for their high level of recycled content, local
manufactured materials and low VOC
emissions.
New York-based SHoP Architects' design
for the 35,054-ft.structural steel and concrete
addition employs a contemporary zinc-paneled
facade with large glass windows and enclosed terraces, seamlessly marrying the
addition with the warehouse's 19th century
handcrafted masonry detailing.
The two new stories atop the warehouse
are built of structural steel and light gauge
framing to limit the weight load on the
building. To enable the existing building
to handle the load, twenty-eight circular
concrete columns on the floors below were
reinforced with tubular steel enclosures.
The tubular steel jackets were split in half
and bolted to the columns. Concrete slurry
was then pumped into the space between
the steel jackets and the columns.
During construction walls of the old
structure were secured with shoring jacks
and angles to maintain the structure's integrity.
Restoration of the original masonry facade
required cleaning, repointing of brick
joints, restoration of natural stone sills and
headers and integration of new flashings,
coping and building components.
"This was a gem of a project," says
Angelo Del Russo, CEO of Del-Sano Contracting.
"This team knew the mission and all
came together when there was a problem
to figure out how to fix it."
- Key Players
- Owner: Bijou Properties, LLC, Teaneck, N.J.
- Architect: SHoP Architects, New York
- General Contractor: Del-Sano Contracting Corporation, Union, N.J.
- Structural and MEP Engineer: Buro Happold, New York
- LEEOCommissioning Agent: Dome-Tech Group, Edison, N.J.
- Masonry. Restoration and Precast: Union Stone, Jersey City, N.J.
- Structural Steel: J. Maltese Iron Works, Inc., New Brunswick, N.J. and Blue Ridge Erectors, Bangor, N.J.
- Carpentry: Molba Construction, Little Ferry, N.J.