This Juvenile Camp facility
was a remodel of an abandoned pilot's dormitory located adjacent to
the Camarillo Airport. The two-story, 11,686 square foot building
had been built around the time of World War II. The scope of work
required major structural upgrades in order to comply with current
seismic codes including the addition of a new foundation system. Steel
columns and beams were fitted to supplement the framing system which
originally consisted of light timber.
Since the original structure
was erected over 50 years ago, it contained an antiquated electrical
system and had no mechanical system at all. The remodeling also called
for the installation of an elevator, security systems, kitchen and
laundry facilities, classrooms and offices, and an emergency power
system. The work also included a series of retrofits designed to make
the juvenile camp American Disabilities Act (ADA) compliant.
As part of its services
for Mackone Development, Inc, DACM
Project Management prepared a number of highly detailed baseline
schedule scenarios to test overall phasing options for the facility
to allow for the construction to be completed in an accelerated manner.
The initial schedule developed for the project showed the work requiring
just over 12 months to complete. This duration did not meet the County's
needs which called for speedy resolve of the overcrowding problem at
the other County juvenile facilities. The County determined that a fast-track
schedule should be developed even if a construction cost increase was
the result. As such, a series of exhaustive reviews of the Contract
Documents performed for the purpose of identifying the logistical and
constraining issues affecting the work. We researched various approaches
to the work to identify the most efficient manner in which to proceed.
The result of DACM Project Management's
diligent efforts was a construction duration that was reduced from 12
months to just over 6 utilizing highly accelerated and coordinated phasing.