Wednesday, November 19, 2008

We're coming into the Homestretch

Hooray! We’re in the “homestretch” with our building project.
Parish Hall is essentially complete. The new stage curtain is in place. The new door hardware is working great. The Library is back in business. The new Reception Office is open and welcoming visitors. The bathrooms are marvelous. The finishes are very classy. And, the new A/V system will “knock your socks off”. Only very minor details remain unfinished.
In the Sanctuary, the chancel pews have been removed and the chancel tile floor will soon be refurbished. The new exterior doorway to the Terrace should be installed by the time you read this.
We can now walk onto the new Terrace and look over the work being done in the Jefferson Courtyard. After considerable excavation and infrastructure work, the pieces are falling together quickly. All concrete sidewalks, stairs & retaining walls have been poured and will soon be plastered. The central court around the new magnolia tree has been covered with bricks. And an extensive array of exterior lighting is near completion.
The new storage area below the Terrace is almost ready to be put into use. All we need is installation of ceiling lights and locks on the door. The elevator/lift, which can take you from the Terrace and Sanctuary down to the Jefferson Courtyard, has not been installed yet. Once it is installed everyone will be able to easily traverse our campus.
We still have some major concrete work going on in the area below the Terrace and next to the Starr King playground. This is where the Amphitheater and Labyrinth are being built. It is the last stage of our construction project and will create a very exotic and useful new area for the whole congregation. More on this work in a couple of weeks.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Wrapping Up Parish Hall

The “church year” is now in full swing and I hear the clamor of eager room-users at my door. Danceaway would love to move back into its real home…..Parish Hall. Starr King needs to hold its Annual Kick-Off Potluck….in Parish Hall. Our congregation plans to hold the first in a series of Dinner Potlucks….in Parish Hall. Our very patient Library Committee is “chomping at the bit” wanting to get back into the book & movie lending business. Congregational Meetings, Family Fun Nights, Adult RE, Toastmasters, Program Council, Board Meetings. All of these are scheduled for Parish Hall later this month, culminating with the USSB Services Auction November 8th. It looks like we better wrap this project up soon.

And that’s exactly what we plan to do.

The walls are painted. The floor is refinished. The bathrooms are almost complete. Stone thresholds will be installed in all the exterior doorways to the portico later this week. The Library cabinets should be arriving at the end of this week and could be complete as soon as Oct 19. The new music library is complete and ready to be stocked with choir sheet music. New door hardware & locksets are being installed everyday. The wonderful, Spanish Style hanging light fixtures for Parish Hall will arrive on Oct 8 and should be in place in time for our Congregational Potluck. The new stage curtain could be in place by that time as well. The fabulous new audio-visual system will be operational by Oct 24, in time for Danceaway’s return. I’ll talk more about this A/V system in my next blog. All I’ll say now is that you don’t want to miss Chuck Wolfe’s first movie night. It will definitely “knock your socks off”.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

It's not all roses

I’ve been re-reading my past blogs and realize that I’ve painted a pretty “rosy” picture of how our Building Project is progressing. Indeed things have been moving ahead quite well, but it hasn’t been all roses. I suppose I should provide a glimpse at some of the inevitable difficulties that we’ve had to grapple with.
Everyone involved feels that we were quite lucky during the excavation of the Jefferson Lawn area. Large hidden rocks were plentiful but nothing we couldn’t handle, except for two. These two rocks are monsters and they rest 6” under finished grade near Classrooms A & B of the Blake Building. So what’s the problem? Our symmetrical landscape plan calls for a tree above each of these rocks. Hmmmm….
I’m learning that pouring concrete can be a tricky business. A large portion of the new flatwork adjacent to the Jefferson Building and the Blake Building was poured weeks ago and nobody was happy with it. Both the color and the finish were wrong. Not horribly wrong but enough so that we did not want this continued throughout the project. So after much hand wringing and gnashing of teeth we rejected the work and demanded that it be removed and re-poured. This won’t cost us anything extra but it will dramatically inconvenience Starr King and The Orca School. It will also cut-off access to the Blake bathrooms for a week. And finally it will delay our project by at least a week. Groan…
No sooner did we resolve the flatwork snafu than another concrete mishap occurred. We had what is known as a “blow-out” while pouring the retaining wall adjacent to the sanctuary. Wet concrete is extremely heavy and sometimes, if the forms are not adequately braced, this weight will cause the forms to bulge outward (aka “blow-out”). So you end up with a giant bulge in the finished concrete wall. There’s nothing to do about this except let it dry then cut out the bulging section and re-pour. Unfortunately our “blow-out” occurred right where we had carefully placed a 3’ tall embossed UU logo. So all of that artwork had to re-fabricated as well. So guess what? Another delay. Rats!
Parish Hall has not been immune to some set-backs. The most serious was the discovery, during a pressure test, that our gas lines were riddled with leaks. It would have been virtually impossible to track-down and repair all of these leaks without creating a slew of new leaks in the process. So the old lines were abandoned and entirely new lines were installed. Of course this once again caused some delay but, worse still, it added $14,000 to the cost of our project. We have a contingency fund to cover these types of surprises but…. Egads!
.Small problems are daily events here and we solve them. Thank goodness the big problems are far less frequent. (We solve those problems too.) To be honest, it’s the problems that make my job and this project so fascinating. It’s not a rose garden. It’s a construction project and I like it that way.

Friday, September 12, 2008

It's becoming real

By the time you read this most of the construction projects that I’m going to describe will be finished and other aspects or our Building Project will have begun. Nonetheless, I simply have to tell you about what’s going on right now. It’s amazing! We are actually realizing what were only dreams and plans. I know this may sound ridiculous but, I can’t go to the bathroom here without grinning from ear to ear as I look at the wonderful tiles and stainless steel and fancy porcelain. Construction is a very satisfying endeavor. You dream up a beautiful new reality and in a short time, BINGO, there it is. I only wish World Peace, Health Care for All and Fair Labor Practices were as easily realized. But, that’s another discussion.

Parish Hall is getting its new coat of paint today. The crew of Pacific Painting Company ascended the scaffolding this morning and began applying Damariscotta Blue (a pale sky blue) to the acoustical ceiling coffers and Lincolnshire Olive (a medium toned olive-brown) to the boxed beams. I’ve been pretty nervous about how this would look over a large area. I shouldn’t have been. It looks fabulous! The walls are two-toned; Linen Sand (a light yellow-tan) above and Bronzed Beige (a deeper bronze-tan) below. With the application of these new colors the large stained-glass window at the end of the hall has suddenly come to life. I can’t wait to see the new library cabinets and the re-finished hardwood in this space.

While all of this designer work is being done inside, a huge concrete pour is under way outside. I’ve never seen such a big concrete pumping device. It sits in the middle of the Jefferson courtyard area with four giant outriggers to keep it steady. This device pumps concrete from a truck on Santa Barbara St almost all the way to the Starr King Playground area where the new terrace walls are being poured. This requires a boom that reaches as high as the top of our tower. It also requires about a dozen strong men directing the concrete into the forms and tamping it tight. It’s all quite impressive. On Monday the forms will be removed and we will get our first glimpse of what our new courtyard will really look like.

So after two years of planning and several months of extensive and invisible infrastructure improvements, our dream is actually becoming real. We can begin to see the finished product, and it’s spectacular!

Friday, August 22, 2008

It's a Jigsaw Puzzle

A few weeks ago my wife, Anita, and I enjoyed a visit by the grandkids, Serena & Noah, and their mother Ricky. They stayed with us for a week. Most mornings I would walk into the living room and find Serena, age 8, on the floor huddled over a jigsaw puzzle of a “Fantasy World” filled with castles & towers & dolphins and boats.
I hate jigsaw puzzles but since this was Serena, and I love her so, I would flop-down and laboriously dig through the pile of indiscernible puzzle pieces. We made great progress during that week but the puzzle remained unfinished when it came time for Serena and her family to leave. We’ll finish the puzzle during a future visit.

This building project is a lot like that jigsaw puzzle. Our fifty-page roll of plans is like a jumbled box of pieces that must be carefully assembled. I’m happy to report that the pieces of our puzzle are coming together quite nicely. We’re not quite as far along as Serena and I got with the “Fantasy World” but I would say that we are well past halfway.

Here’s where we are with Parish Hall. The rough-in wiring is complete. The sheet metal ducting is complete. Rough-in plumbing is complete. All framing is complete. All walls & ceilings have been insulated. (The floors will be soon.) Almost all walls have been patched and plastered. The offices & workroom have been painted. The wood floors in the offices, hallways & workroom have been repaired and sanded and staining will begin on Monday. Interior colors for Parish Hall have been determined and painting will begin next week. Tile work in the bathrooms should begin in about one week. The A/V infrastructure is in place. I would say that the Parish hall is sort of like that easy part of a jigsaw puzzle with all of the distinctive features that are quickly recognizable.

The courtyard is another matter. It’s kind of like the ocean areas in Serena’s “Fantasy World”… large areas of indistinguishable blue. To complicate matters more, we’ve discovered that some pieces are missing and others simply do not quite fit together as they should. We are still determinedly moving ahead but with a lot more “head scratching” and searching for answers. There’s been lots of formwork this week. Formwork is the process of building wooden walls, supported by stakes pounded into the ground, which hold poured concrete in a particular shape or “form”. Once the liquid concrete hardens the wooden forms are removed and you are left with a concrete structure or pad. The big news this week is that the forms are up for the walls of the basement area below the Terrace. The reason this is big news is that finally we are seeing a structure emerge from the ever-moving mounds of dirt. Of course, the difficulty with pouring concrete is that once it hardens there is no going back. If some conduit or pipe or drain was missed, then you’ve got a whole lot of trouble on your hands. Added to this is the intermingling of several building disciplines and overlapping sets of plans. Sometimes it’s just darned hard to find the right piece to complete a certain section of our puzzle.

Did I mention that I hate jigsaw puzzles? I also really love this place.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Let's Talk Concrete

When I drove up to the Unitarian Society on Monday morning, four cement trucks were parked along Santa Barbara Street, diesel engines idling, waiting their turn to feed the foundation footing forms of our new terrace and storage area. 28 yards of concrete was poured that morning and from the street I couldn't see where it went. It was like it simply disappeared into a hole. Which essentially is was happened. We will be tending to those holes filled with concrete (footings) in the coming weeks and our structures should rise up like flowers in a garden, with the addition of much more re-bar, concrete and sweat.

Over the past few weeks Schipper Construction and Anacapa Concrete Co. have been strategically digging holes & trenches and filling them with re-bar and concrete all over the back corner of our future Jefferson Courtyard and Terrace. It began with a pretty technical process called "slotted underpinning". This process was required in order to extend one corner of the foundation of the Sanctuary down to the level of the basement below our new terrace....without causing the Sanctuary to "droop" downward. Instead of digging-out the entire area below that corner, only a few carefully spaced 6' wide holes were dug at one time. These were then surrounded by forms, filled with a maze of re-bar and filled with concrete. A few days later, after the concrete was hard, adjacent holes were dug, formed and filled with concrete. This process was repeated until one continuous wall of interconnected concrete sections "underpinned" the sanctuary foundation. Our sanctuary foundation is actually stronger than ever as a result.

In the coming weeks we should see walkways, stairways and retaining walls materializing throughout the lower campus. We are definitely building for the ages, with the help of a lot of concrete.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Colors for Parish hall

In the midst of all of this messy construction, we are actively envisioning what the finished Parish hall will look like, or perhaps I should say "feel like". Creating a wonderful "feeling" inside the hall is largely dependant upon our choice of colors and finishes. It's one thing to choose color for your home's living room walls. Dealing with a space as large and complicated as Parish Hall is a far more daunting task. It requires a high level of skill, artistic sensibility and experience. I have never been a fan of the current Parish hall colors. I believe those colors were recommended by a budget-priced painting contractor. It shows.

I am thrilled with the design team we have working on the Parish hall interior finishes. It is being lead by Suzanne Fairley-Green, a highly accomplished interior designer, and Ellen Rockne, whose work in our parsonage and her new home are absolutely stunning. We also are getting advice from Alex Cole, an extraordinary architectural historian. Alex, Ellen & Suzanne are all members of USSB and are generously donating their services to our project. They are being assisted by April Palencia, our project architect, who, in addition to a thorough understanding of color, has a wealth of knowledge about other finishes, materials and fixtures.

Say goodbye to that grey-blue trim and peach accent. We're entering a whole new era.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Feeling "giddy"

Hi everyone. Sorry it's been two weeks since my last post on our building blog. I was on vacation for one week and my computer apparently got jealous and decided to take a vacation as well on the following week. Well, actually, our temporary communications connections have been flumoxing us all. Some of the staff have operating computers but no phone (everyone but me). While others have operating phones but no computer (me). We'll get this straightened out very soon.
Meanwhile, the construction project is moving full speed ahead! Over the past few weeks it's been all about infrastucture, infrastructure, infrastructure.

Let's begin with the Jefferson Courtyard area. I am particularly proud of what we've done here. We have installed a truly innovative water run-off leaching system. This is a system of underground drainage pipes, varying from 4" to 10" in diameter, which carry all rain run-off water from our roofs and hardscape surfaces to four underground leach tanks. These tanks are located under the future grassy areas in the new jefferson Courtyard. They slowly allow the run-off water to soak into our property rather than run down surface streets to the ocean. It's a brainchild of our "green conscious" architects & civil engineer and will not only help save the ocean but add signifigantly to our qualification as a "green campus". This was a golden opportunity to do this work at a fraction of the cost of retroffitting an existing site.

We have been re-wiring all of Parish Hall. One of the new features is the replacement of all eight, constantly illuminated, 30 watt exit signs. Our new LED exit signs, w/ battery backups, will use only a very small fraction of the electricity used by our old ones. We also are completely wiring the building for the computer age with digital phone & computer outlets in every workspace. Finally, the hall is being wired for an entirely new audio/visual system which will include a rear projection movie screen, new stage lighting, new public address system and a new, "rocking" music system.

The plumbing work has been extensive due to the expansion & remodel of all three bathrooms in Parish Hall. A new main sewer line has been run all the way out to the street. A great new water softening system has been plumbed and will sit just outside the kitchen along the exterior wall. The extensive network of leaking gas lines underneath the hall are being replaced. The gas lines, water lines and phone/computer lines which run from Parish Hall to Blake & Jefferson are being replaced.

The floor in the Parish hall library area and in the minister's office has been lowered. A concrete slab has been poured in the minister's office. Concrete has also been poured for some of the underpinning to support the sanctuary foundation.

All of this work will soon be covered up and you might wonder, "What have they been doing all this time?" Well, it's a lot and it's important. It's just the kind of stuff that makes a facility manager feel "giddy".

Friday, July 11, 2008

I can depend on the breeze

Every morning when I arrive at my office under the tower the first thing I do is crank open the windows and experience a soft cool breeze. Without fail that breeze always flows through the office. I can depend on it. The same cannot be said of most everything else. When I flip the light switch the lights may or may not come on. When I send an e-mail there's a 50/50 chance that I'll be connected to the internet. Opening a water faucet in the kitchen is a crap shoot. And, even if I get running water, this may be followed by loud cursing from a large, angry plumber working on a disconnected sewer line below the kitchen floor. And the telephones....don't get me started!

Well, I guess that's life in a construction zone. The work is going well and things are progressing very quickly. The Jefferson Courtyard area has been completely excavated, leveled and compacted. Several large boulders were uncovered and removed. Two car-sized boulders were simply too large to move but luckily sit about 12" below our finished concrete and lawn level. The large boulder which served as our focal point at the ground breaking ceremony has been saved and moved to the children's area near Classroom C. The next step in the Jefferson Courtyard is trenching for our storm water dispersal tanks and all utilites and conduit. We'll cross our fingers about further boulder discoveries.

Most demolition work is complete in Parish Hall and the Blake bathrooms. The walls of the new Parish bathrooms have been framed-in. (The bathrooms look huge!) New plumbing vent & drain lines are being installed. The new workroom area is framed as well. Lowering the floor area at the library and former minister's office is proceeding more slowly. This is a very complicated building puzzle that requires lots of engineering & re-engineering, new foundation walls, concrete slabs and sophisticated anchoring hardware. It's gratifying to see how Schipper Construction re-uses and saves lots of the demoed structural timber when possible.

Electrical re-wiring of an entire building is quite an undertaking! Cook Electric has been here for two weeks cutting holes in the Parish Hall plaster walls, tearing out the old wires and running new flex conduit. They will continue with this throughout the month of July. (Note: my power has gone out twice while writing this blog. Thank god for battery powered outlet back-up.)

Next week we begin bulding forms for the concrete retaining walls and underpinning required to transition from the sanctuary to the new Jefferson Courtyard elevation. That should be very fun to watch. Meanwhile we deal with all the minor headaches that are inevitable with any sizeable construction project. Two days ago one of the large trees behind our Parsonage House split causing two large trunks to collaspe onto our construction trailer roof. We've also cut into shallow gas lines and hidden active water lines.

I never know what to expect each day when I arrive here, but at least I can depend on that breeze when I open the windows.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

THE ROCK IS EXPOSED


Bob's Backhoe Service fired-up a huge excavator this morning and began digging away at the Jefferson lawn area. It took about three heavy tugs to pull the rock free. It's roughly 4'-6" tall and 5' wide. Bob estimates its weight at one ton. We plan to incorporate this rock into the children's amphitheater near the upper playground area and Classroom B. It's the perfect size for this.
Excavation of the entire Jefferson lawn area and the area around and behind the Blake Building has caused considerable havoc. Of course, in no time we discovered the meandering old main water line which serves everything. All water has been shut off to the entire campus until the excavation is completed, probably early next week. We are going to try to run a high pressure hose down to the Starr King Nursery just for this Sunday. Phones and computers have suffered some interruptions but seem to have survived.
We've installed another porta-potty in the parking lot area next to the Jefferson Building. As far as porta-pottys go, this is a pretty darn nice one. It has flush action, a sink w/ anti-bactierial soap and a foot pump water faucet. You now have a choice between the porta-potty in the Parish Courtyard and (my favorite) the porta-potty in the Jefferson parking lot. Remember, the water is shut off. There will be no regular bathrooms available this Sunday.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

The lull before the storm

I'm sitting in my office listening to the birds singing in the courtyard. Suddenly I realize that all is quiet in Parish hall. How can this be? Where is the ever-present scream of skil saws and rythmic drumbeat of hammers? I scamper into the hall and find no workers except a lone electrician, patiently disconnecting one outlet after another. My anxiety elevates. "What's gone wrong?" I wonder. Where's Glen, our construction superintendant? I reach for my cell phone. I'm about to hit speed-dial #4 when I notice it's 4:15pm. The workers are done for the day. I relax.

Serious construction activity is about to explode here. The stage is set. The porta-potty sits in the courtyard. Several empty pallets rest on the Jefferson lawn waiting to be stacked with the bricks we plan to re-use in our new courtyard. The stage is stacked with hardwood flooring waiting to be re-installed. The architects, contractors and engineers have been huddling over exposed floor joists, rough-in plumbing and hapazardly labeled electrical sub-panels. Plastic sheeting contains the dust of areas being stripped of their plaster. In one week's time everything is going to look very different here.

It's actually happening. So relax, Ken. Relax.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Work Has Begun! June 12, 2008

It's 1:45, Thursday, June 12. Work has officially begun on our project.
The hardwood flooring on the library dias in Parish Hall is being carefully removed and stored on the stage for reinstallation later. The construction trailer, dumpster, material storage area and porta-potty locations have been determined. The next few weeks will be full-ahead demolition.

Ken Ralph
Facilities Manager, Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara

Reflections of Joy

Groundbreaking Ceremony June 8, 2008

We finally got to put shovel to dirt! What a wonderful celebration of the start of the building project last Sunday, June 8th. It took place around the rock on the Jefferson lawn. Those who have worked so hard to get USSB to this point were honored, we sang and celebrated with bubbles, hard hats, shovels and cake, and a beginning trench was dug out around that mysterious rock that has long been an object of curiosity among USSB members and friends. Until now, all that could be seen of the rock was the top of its “head” poking through the grass on the slope of the Jefferson lawn. Now, we can see a few inches down around the sides of the rock, and it’s clear that it is indeed a big boulder! Just how big is it? We will soon find out, as the leveling of the lawn area begins in earnest, very soon.

I had found a quote from the poet T.S. Eliot in my files that I thought would be appropriate for the groundbreaking, and then I “googled” the lines and discovered that the excerpt I had is from T.S. Eliot’s poem “Choruses From the Rock!” Though Eliot’s “rock” is metaphorical (God, Christ, the church), the reading somehow seemed even more appropriate for our rock-centered groundbreaking, once I learned the title. Here is the excerpt I read:

What life have you if you have not life together?
There is no life that is not in community…

Much to cast down, much to build, much to restore;
Let the work not delay, time and the arm not waste;

Let the clay be dug from the pit, let the saw cut the stone,
Let the fire not be quenched in the forge.

Let the work now proceed apace!
Joy Atkinson, Interim Minister

Monday, June 9, 2008

What a Wonderful Gift!

6/9/08
As far as I'm concerned, Sunday's ground-breaking ceremony was a great success. By the end of the day I had made a new friend. His name is Ezra. He's about 3 and 1/2 years old. After spending a lot of time getting his hardhat to fit just right, he helped me pull up the wooden stakes, roll up the orange construction fencing and store the shovels & wheel barrows. We talked about "excavators" and "flat bed trucks" and Ezra promised to come back soon with his "forklift" and "dump truck". We made a great connection.
What a wonderful gift!
I'm confident that our plans to create a beautiful Jefferson Courtyard will lead to many more heartfelt connections with this congregation's kids and families. I've never been more certain that this building project is the right thing to do.
Ken Ralph
Facilities Manager, Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Our Project Is About To Begin!

Ground Breaking Ceremony
Sunday, June 8, 2008 at 12:30 pm on the Jefferson Lawn.

Welcome to the Unitarian Society of Santa Barbara Building Project website!
Our construction project is about to begin!

This project is a culmination of many years of planning and fundraising, and we are about to experience the joy, excitement and many changes related to our collective efforts.

Check back to this site often for updates and photo documentation of our project!