<span id="tt1hd"><dl id="tt1hd"></dl></span>
<strike id="tt1hd"></strike>
<strike id="tt1hd"></strike>
<strike id="tt1hd"><video id="tt1hd"></video></strike>
<strike id="tt1hd"><dl id="tt1hd"><ruby id="tt1hd"></ruby></dl></strike>
<span id="tt1hd"><dl id="tt1hd"><strike id="tt1hd"></strike></dl></span><del id="tt1hd"><dl id="tt1hd"><del id="tt1hd"></del></dl></del>
<span id="tt1hd"></span>
<span id="tt1hd"><dl id="tt1hd"><ruby id="tt1hd"></ruby></dl></span>
<span id="tt1hd"></span>
<strike id="tt1hd"></strike>
<span id="tt1hd"></span>

Navigation

  • Skip to Content
This website uses cookies, our own and those of third parties, to provide the best possible experience. By continuing to use our website you consent to the use of these cookies. For more information, please Click Here
Putzmeister
SANY Logo
  • MERCHANDISING SHOP
MY Putzmeister

Join the conversation

PGSRegions-web Portlet

  • INTERNATIONAL
  • EUROPE
  • AMERICAS
  • ASIA PACIFIC
  • AFRICA & MIDDLE EAST
  • RUSSIA & CIS
  • INDIAN SUBCONTINENT
  • English

Navigation

Toggle navigation
  • Updates
    image
    Updates

    Your window to the latest happenings at Putzmeister

    • Putzmeister in the News
      image
      Putzmeister in the News

      The latest news from Putzmeister

      • Asset Publisher

        On February 17th, 2020 Mr. Pius Neo joined Putzmeister as Regional Parts and Service Manager Asia Pacif...READ MORE

    • Press Releases
      image
      Press Release

      Heads up on what’s happening on Putzmeister

      • Asset Publisher

        On February 17th, 2020 Mr. Pius Neo joined Putzmeister as Regional Parts and Service Manager Asia Pacif...READ MORE

    • PM Post
      image
      PM Post

      Keeping you in the know

      • Asset Publisher

        Best Support Underground seeks to provide readers with useful, inspiring content about the wonderful wo...READ MORE

    • Events
      image
      Events

      Bringing Putzmeister to you

      • Asset Publisher

    • Archives
      image
      Archives

      The Putzmeister Encyclopedia

  • Success Stories
  • Products
    image
    Products

    Our extensive range of equipment

    • Concrete
      Concrete

      Solutions to all your concrete needs

      • CONCRETE PUMPS
        • TRUCK MOUNTED CONCRETE PUMPS
        • STATIONARY CONCRETE PUMPS
        • CRAWLER CONCRETE PUMPS
        • PRE-CAST EQUIPMENT
        • BORE PILE FILLING
      • PLACING SYSTEMS
      • BUFFER STORAGE
      • TECHNOLOGY
      • USED MACHINES
    • Shotcrete
      Shotcrete

      Power & accuracy to deliver results

      • MECHANISED
      • MANUAL
      • WET-MIX
      • TECHNOLOGY
      • USED MACHINES
    • Telebelt?
      Telebelt?

      Versatile equipment for quick results

      • PRODUCT RANGE
      • TECHNOLOGY
      • USED MACHINES
    • Mortar
      Mortar

      Reliable. Productive. User-friendly

      • COMPRESSED-AIR SCREED CONVEYORS
      • PUMPS FOR SELF-LEVELLING COMPOUND
      • SELF LEVELLING SCREED PUMPS
      • PLASTERING MACHINES
      • PUMPS FOR CONCRETE REPAIR
      • PUMPS FOR GEOTHERMAL DRILLING
      • PUMPS FOR FIRE PROTECTION
      • PUMPS FOR GLASS FIBRE REINFORCED CONCRETE
      • PUMPS FOR INJECTION/GROUTING/FILLING
      • PUMPS FOR MASONRY MORTAR
      • ETICS COMPOSITE BINDER
      • SAND,GRAVEL AND AGGREGATE
      • TECHNOLOGY
      • USED MACHINES
    • Tunnelling
      Tunnelling

      Safety. Quality. High Performance

    • Mining
      Mining

      Master the underground

    • Energy
      Energy

      Prioritising energy conservation

    • Environment
      Environment

      Reliable, eco-friendly systems

  • Support
    image
    Support

    Helping your operations run smoothly

    • Service
      image
      Service

      Helping your operations run smoothly

      • Warranty
      • Register Equipment
    • Training
      image
      Training

      Make the best use of your machines

  • Parts
  • About Us
    image
    About Us

    Get to know us better

    • Putzmeister at a glance
      image
      Putzmeister at a glance

      What Putzmeister’s all about!

    • Technology
      image
      Technology

      Putzmeister offers high-end Technology

    • Global Leadership & Our Team
      image
      GLOBAL LEADERSHIP & OUR TEAM

      Meet our skilled team

    • Our History
      image
      Our History

      Putzmeister : how it began to now

  • Contact Us
  • Careers
  • Webshop
  • Search
  • Search

    Search

    search

Success Story Details - ASIA PACIFIC

Asset Publisher

  • STADIUM, GWINNETT COUNTY, GEORGIA, USA

    PURE TEAM SPIRIT READIED THIS STADIUM WITHIN THE STIPULATED ONE YEAR

WHEN YOU BUILD A NEW BASEBALL STADIUM IN 10 MONTHS FLAT, THAT’S A HOME RUN

| America | Story
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn

January 2008 saw an agreement between the Atlanta Braves, the Gwinnet Convention and the Visitors Bureau. The agreement finalized the plans to bring the Gwinnet Braves home.

The decision was reached based on a feasibility study conducted by the Gwinnet Commission and the Visitors bureau, which shortlisted Gwinnet County as the strongest markets in the country to support a baseball team.

PUTZMEISTER EQUIPMENT

VIEW ALL PRODUCTS

The Challenge :

This time the race was against time. The construction team had not a day more than a year to complete the stadium.

Working into the night on the Gwinnet County baseball stadium to meet the tight deadline

Working into the night on the Gwinnet County baseball stadium to meet the tight deadline

 

The Solution :

Nestled on a 12-acre site in Lawrenceville, Georgia, the new home of the Gwinnett Braves was first realized by Gwinnett County Commissioner Bert Nasuti, when he expressed his dream of bringing a minor league baseball team to the County during a planning retreat in 2006.

A feasibility study, conducted by the Gwinnett Convention and Visitors Bureau in 2007, concluded “the demographic and socioeconomic makeup of Gwinnett County and the surrounding areas provide one of the strongest markets in the country to support a minor league baseball team.”

By late 2007, the Atlanta Braves suggested relocating their minor league team to Gwinnett County, and with that, an agreement was signed in January 2008, between the Atlanta Braves and the Gwinnett Convention and Visitors Bureau, to bring the Braves home.

Bringing on the ‘AAA’ Team
Forrest Brewer, the general superintendent for Barton Malow Company, the construction manager of the project, and his team, based in Alpharetta, Georgia, hired Precision Concrete Construction (Precision) as the concrete sub-contractor. Precision then hired Smyrna, Georgia-based Pioneer as the concrete pump sub-contractor, and LaFarge of North America as the concrete ready mix company.

With the 2009 baseball season slated for the unveiling of the new stadium and new team, a tight timeline was set into place, with work quickly beginning in April 2008 – exactly one year before the home opener of the new facility.

“Because of the strict schedule, we wanted to make sure we chose a concrete pump company that had all the necessary equipment to get the job done on time and on demand without question,” says Justin Garrett, project manager for Precision.”

“To pump the 10,785 cubic yards of concrete (8,246m3), our team brought on our entire fleet of concrete pumps, from our compact 20Z-Meter to our seven-axle 63Z-Meter,” says Chuck Maddox, sales representative for Pioneer.

As Garrett adds, “With their vast range of concrete pumps, we knew we could rely on them for having the right size pump and boom reach for whatever the project required from day-to-day, or even hour-to-hour.”

Beating the Clock
“The concrete pump company was a true team player, providing the ultimate flexibility and dependability of their pumps, given the multiple changes to the architectural drawings of the stadium and the necessity to maintain the original concrete placement schedule to a ‘T’,” comments Millard Farmer, superintendent for Precision.

The $58.1-million design-build stadium project includes three sections: Building A on the home field side, Building B on the visitors side, and Area C, the press box behind home plate and where Buildings A and B connect.

The concrete pump company pumped and placed concrete for all three sections and faced a strict concrete placement timeline:
? June through August 2008: 1,250 cubic yards (956m3) of concrete for all footings
? August 2008: 370 cubic yards (283m3) of concrete for Building A’s slab-on-grade
? September 2008: 607 cubic yards (464m3) of concrete for Building B’s slab-on-grade
? August and September 2008: 1,100 cubic yards (841m3) of concrete for the Tunnel walls, dugouts and field walls
? September through December 2008: 1,810 cubic yards (1,384m3) of concrete for the seating bowl
? September 2008: 550 cubic yards (421m3) of concrete for Building A’s concourse level elevated slab at top of seating bowl
? September 2008: 400 cubic yards (306m3) of concrete for Building B’s concourse level elevated slab at top of seating bowl
? October 2008: 690 cubic yards (528m3) of concrete for Building A’s suite level elevated slab
? October 2008: 565 cubic yards (432m3) of concrete for Building B’s suite level elevated slab
? October 2008: 289 cubic yards (221m3) of concrete for Area C suite level
? September through November 2008: 550 cubic yards (421m3) of concrete for Building A and Building B’s architectural walls and columns
? November and December 2008: 530 cubic yards (405m3) of concrete for topping slabs
? January through March 2009: 681 cubic yards (521m3) for hardscapes

“Our boom pumps were placing 500 cubic yards (382m3) of concrete on average per week, but on our best week, as much as 1,088 cubic yards (832m3) was pumped and placed,” explains Maddox. “We were steadily on site five to six days a week, and had as many as three pumps on site at one time.”

“All of Pioneer’s pumps showcased their extreme mobility,” adds Brian McCormick, general superintendent for Precision. “Some days, we’d pump and place in four or five locations with one pump. All of their pumps moved easily from location to location.”

“In addition, the flexibility of their boom pump fleet was a tremendous advantage to have on this job,” says Garrett. “When the 38Z-Meter pumped and placed Area C’s concourse level slab, the structural concrete frame was already installed, so the pump easily maneuvered its four-section, Multi-Z boom under the structure to reach exactly where the concrete needed to be placed.”

The 47Z-Meter also flexed its adaptability muscle on site.

“As the five-section 47Z placed concrete for Building B’s concourse level topping slab, its Z-Fold boom configuration was able to handle the restrictive space and easily navigate its way down and around the structural concrete frame,” says Garrett.

The 47Z placed 112 cubic yards of concrete (86m3) for this section.

“Due to job site conditions we had to have the boom pump back a certain distance from where the concrete would actually be placed,” comments Maddox. “With the 47Z we were able to achieve its maximum horizontal reach of 138' 1" (42.09mm) and place the concrete without having to add any extra hose system, keeping the job site clean.”

This concrete pump was also on hand to pump and place concrete for the seating bowl of the stadium, and on the same day, easily relocated to another spot on the site where it placed 12 cubic yards of concrete (9.2m3) for the caisson footing for a stadium light pole.

“The strict schedule demanded both pours be completed in the same day, and we knew we could depend on our versatile 47Z,” says Maddox.

Maddox continues, “And during one of our night pours, our 58-Meter pitched in to pump 360 cubic yards of concrete (275m3) at 108 cubic yards per hour (83m3/hr) for the suite level’s elevated slab in Building B. The width and elevation of this slab were so great that it required the 58-Meter’s maximum vertical reach of 188' 1" (57.33m) to get up and across the deck. Because of the unit’s vertical reach, we didn’t have to move the 58 – it stayed in the same location for the entire pour.

The concrete pump company’s powerful 63Z-Meter also made an appearance on site pumping and placing 61 cubic yards (47m3) of concrete for handicap seating, or ADA platforms, in the VIP seating area.

“We couldn’t access the field so we had the pump located in the player’s parking lot, and used its 190' 7" horizontal reach to stretch the five-section Z-Fold boom over a portion of Building A and to the point of placement,” says Garrett.

In addition, the pump company also had their compact City Pump on site to pump and place 18 cubic yards (14m3) of concrete for metal pan stairs.

The Mixed Lineup
Eight different types of concrete mixes were pumped and placed by Pioneer’s boom pumps. The mixes were used for footings, slab-on-grades, columns, walls, elevated decks, architectural walls, topping slabs/paving and the seating bowl.

“For the footings, we used a 3,000-psi mix,” says Chris Benifield, senior project manager for Precision. “The slab-on-grade mix for the exterior of the seating bowl includes more entrained air in it to help against freeze/thaw cycles.

“In addition, the slab-on-grade interior mix was a 4,000-psi mix. The architectural wall concrete mix used a smaller aggregate to provide fewer voids around architectural reveals in formwork.”

The elevated beam and slab mix required a high early strength mix design. The high early mix contained more cement to help reach its design strength faster and a higher overall strength than usual, according to Benifield. The mix allowed the concrete to reach 3,000 psi in as little as one day, the strength Benifield’s team needed in order to strip the formwork under the slab and continue on with their work. This mix fit perfectly with the fast-paced schedule of the project.

“In addition to the other mixes, we also used Chronolia, a LaFarge innovative concrete that retains its work-ability for two hours, offering easy placement, while achieving high early strength due to accelerated hydration growth giving us the ability to strip form work 4 hours after batching,” adds Benifield. “We used this mix on some of the columns at the suite level so the structural steel columns could be placed the next day.”

It’s a Home Run!
The Gwinnett Braves are well into their inaugural season and settling into their new home. The new stadium, according to the County’s economist, Dr. Alfie Meek, is estimated to bring in $15 million new economic activity to the county, support about 200 new jobs countywide and generate approximately $6.5 million in new personal income.

PROJECT PARTNERS

Owner/Developer: Gwinnett Convention & Visitors Bureau—Duluth, Georgia

Architect: HKS, Inc.—Atlanta, Georgia

Construction Manager: Barton Malow Company—Alpharetta, Georgia

Concrete Sub-Contractor: Precision Concrete Construction—Alpharetta, Georgia

Concrete Pump Sub-Contractor: Pioneer Concrete Pumping Service, Inc.—Smyrna, Georgia

Concrete Ready Mix Company: LaFarge North America — Alpharetta, Georgia

Equipment: Putzmeister 20Z-, 28Z-, 32Z-, 36Z-, 38Z-, 40Z-, 43Z-, 47Z, 52Z-, 58-, 61- and 63Z- truck-mounted concrete boom pumps. One Putzmeister City Pump.

A total of 10,785 cubic yards (8,246m3) of concrete was placed by the pumping company’s boom pumps for the Gwinnett Braves stadium.

A total of 10,785 cubic yards (8,246m3) of concrete was placed by the pumping company’s boom pumps for the Gwinnett Braves stadium.

The pumping company had their entire fleet of Putzmeister concrete pumps on site.

The pumping company had their entire fleet of Putzmeister concrete pumps on site.

A 40Z-Meter pumps and places 57 cubic yards (44m3) for the elevated concourse slab above the Gwinnett Braves players’ parking lot.

A 40Z-Meter pumps and places 57 cubic yards (44m3) for the elevated concourse slab above the Gwinnett Braves players’ parking lot.

The Gwinnett Braves’ new stadium.

The Gwinnett Braves’ new stadium.

Concrete takeaways :

? The new stadium, according to the County’s economist, Dr. Alfie Meek, was estimated to bring in $15 million new economic activity to the county, support about 200 new jobs countywide and generate approximately $6.5 million in new personal income.

? The entire fleet of Putzmeister’s concrete pumps, right from the compact 20Z-Meter to the seven-axle 63Z-Meter, were deployed.

NEXT UP IN SUCCESS STORIES

  • World’s Largest Concrete Boom Pump Reaches Success on Historic Project
  • The Grand Pour
  • Goldman Sachs Tower, Jersey City, USA
  • Stadium, Gwinnett county, Georgia, USA
  • Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth, USA
  • Lambeau Field, Wisconsin, USA
  • Hoover Dam bypass, USA
  • 9/11 monument, New York, USA
  • Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Seattle, Washington, USA
  • An Amazonian City

VIEW ARCHIVES

Next
Putzmeister Logo

Putzmeister South East Asia CT Pte Ltd.

No. 7 Kranji Loop
Singapore 739543

Phone: +65-6293 20 29 
Facsimile: +65-6293 11 58 
E-mail: 
contact.apac@putzmeister.com

PARTNERNET

CRM

  • PARTNERNET
  • CRM

Products

  • Concrete
  • Shotcrete
  • Telebelt?
  • Mortar
  • Tunnelling
  • Mining
  • Energy
  • Environment

UPDATES

  • Putzmeister in the news
  • Press Releases
  • PM Post
  • Events

Success Stories

  • Jin Mao building, Shanghai
  • Qinghai-Tibet Railway, China

Spare Parts


SUPPORT

  • Service
  • Warranty
  • Training

ABOUT US

  • Our History
  • Putzmeister at a glance
  • Global Leadership & Team
  • Technology

CAREERS


Used Machines


CONTACT US


Privacy Statement

  • PM SINGAPORE
  • PM JAPAN
  • PM KOREA

Imprint


MERCHANDISE

Downloads


Sitemap
青青伊人