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Graham Windows Case Study: Thomas Edison Battery Building

Date: 30 August 2019
Source:
Graham Windows Case Study: Thomas Edison Battery Building
Photo source
Photo courtesy of DGP Urban Renewal LLC

Date: 30 August 2019

The industrial-to-residential redevelopment of the Thomas Edison Battery Building would require the replacement of nearly 2,500 8- and 10-foot windows.

Graham was well on its way to meeting both the historic criteria and strict thermal performance requirements when, at the eleventh hour, the installer requested a redesign.

 

HELPING TO POWER A LANDMARK RENOVATION

By the turn of the 21st century, the Thomas Edison Battery Building was the last of the renowned inventor鈥檚 factories still standing. But it was clearly on its last legs, abandoned and neglected after nearly 100 years of existence in West Orange, NJ.

鈥淚t was bad,鈥 says Stephen Torell, PE, LEED AP, senior project manager for Prism Construction Management.

By 2001, it was so bad, the building and the 21 acres surrounding it were designated a redevelopment site. The designation generated little interest. In fact, five years passed before Prism Capital Partners unveiled a plan for a mixed-use restoration including retail and residential. West Orange embraced the developers and their vision for 鈥淓dison Village.鈥

Then came the housing crash, followed by the Great Recession, and some legal wrangling. It wasn鈥檛 until 2016 that the project finally got underway in earnest. And with nearly 2,500 windows requiring replacement that would meet rigid historic and thermal criteria, finding the right manufacturer was one of Torell鈥檚 priorities.

He was coming off a similar project in which the window component was handled in the traditional way. As he explains, 鈥淲e awarded the windows to an installer and after that it was determined which manufacturer they鈥檇 use.鈥 Torell was working with another project manager on that project and didn鈥檛 purchase the windows. But, he says, 鈥淭here were issues with the window, and I ended up having to kind of clean it up. I decided the next time, we were going to do the process a little differently.鈥

That 鈥渘ext time鈥 was Edison鈥檚 Battery Building and its conversion into The Residences at Edison Lofts. Torell went to the window manufacturers first.

鈥淓arly on in the process,鈥 he says, 鈥淚 took a ride out to York (PA 鈥 Graham Architectural Products鈥 headquarters), met the people and had a tour. Everyone was excited. And I just knew in the back of my mind, these are the guys. They want to do the job. They care about it.鈥

The job wasn鈥檛 easy. The openings were up to 10 feet tall. Matching the sightlines and satisfying historic reviews while delivering thermal performance was a challenge.

According to Dennis Kelly, Graham鈥檚 executive vice president, Graham delivered 鈥渁n extensively modified 6800, mostly through dies and tooling, primarily for aesthetic purposes. We have lighter systems that would have given them the same look, but we just couldn鈥檛 build them that big. The 6800 is our massive projected window series, so we had to stay within that series for its structural performance, but we really had to make it look like a lighter gauge.鈥

Modifying the look to meet historic needs required nearly 40 new dies.

Nick Irwin, Graham鈥檚 sales rep, says, 鈥淭he grid on this particular job was a very deep grid, so we had to modify the glazing depth to fit the glass and the grid into the pocket, which was somewhat challenging. And the muntin configuration 鈥 that was a whole new die itself, because that had a lot of articulation to it.

鈥淭hen the perimeter of the sash, where the grid ties into the frame, also has to have articulation to it, because it has to match the grid profile. You have to carry that profile around the entire perimeter of the operating sash. We had to push a new die not only for the grid, but also for the sash, which means you have to push a new die for the sill and push a new die for the head.鈥

鈥淏ut this is the kind of stuff we thrive on,鈥 Irwin adds. 鈥淭hey say, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 what we want to do,鈥 and we鈥檙e like, 鈥極K, bring it on.鈥欌

That attitude would eventually face a tougher test.

Bill Wilder, Graham鈥檚 director of technical sales, picks up the story. 鈥淲e had this all figured out: It was one window, with a fixed lite above and an awning below, with a separator bar running across.

鈥淚t鈥檚 like the 11th hour. The installer was getting ready to place the order. We already had the contract in. The price was settled. Then the installer came to us and said he can鈥檛 install these all in one unit.

鈥淭he windows were all, like, 8-, 9- and 10-feet tall. He says, 鈥業 can鈥檛 install them like that. Can you make them a stacked unit?鈥 He wanted two windows that could be field-stacked 鈥 put the lower one in, and then put the top one in, stacked out in the field. Otherwise, they would have had to hoist them up on the outside. Because in some of the areas of the building, they were having interior walls put up, so it wouldn鈥檛 be easy to maneuver a 4-foot by 10-foot window around 鈥 especially one that weighs 300 pounds.鈥

Graham鈥檚 manufacturing and design people immediately went to work. They found ways to make the manufacturing more efficient, so they could save time without passing along additional costs.

鈥淲e basically changed the way the window was manufactured and assembled,鈥 Wilder says. 鈥淲e found ways to simplify the assembly process. And it probably ended up better for our people as well. They weren鈥檛 handling a 300-pound window 鈥 they were handling two 150-pound windows, which is a lot easier to handle.鈥

The final product pleased everyone. In fact, according to local news source TAP into West Orange, West Orange Historic Preservation Commission (WOHPC) member Marty Feitlowitz 鈥渃omplimented Prism officials for working closely with WOHPC on making sure the Edison factory鈥檚 windows comported as closely as possible with the original ones.鈥

Torell is pleased too. 鈥淢y impression of Graham? Very favorable. Great team player. Easy to work with. They had no problem doing any color we wanted, doing custom extrusions. You name it, it was pretty much whatever we needed.鈥

 

PROJECT SNAPSHOT

Owner/Developer/Contractor

DGP Urban Renewal LLC

General Contractor

Prism Construction Management

Architect

Minno & Wasko Architects & Planners

Dealer/Installer

Airguard Windows

Window Design Consultation

Bill Wilder, Director of Technical Sales

Nick Irwin, Sales Representative

Graham Architectural Products

Products

Custom S6800 Series aluminum historic windows

600450 Graham Windows Case Study: Thomas Edison Battery Building 黑料专区

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