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Digital Building Components Wins CFSEI Award for CFS-Framed Panels at Mayo West Tower in Phoenix

Digital Building Components received the CFSEI 2023 second place award in the municipal/services category for fabricating and installing the cold-formed steel (CFS)-framed panels at Mayo West Tower in Phoenix, Arizona.

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Featured image: The cold-formed steel (CFS) wall panels at May West Tower are 24″ thick and 24′ x 15′ in size. Project profile courtesy of CFSEI. All photos courtesy of Digital Building Components. 

Mayo West Tower, Phoenix, Arizona, is a seven-story structure (concourse plus six floors above grade). It features approximately 140,000 square feet of pre-finished exterior cold-formed steel (CFS) non-load bearing wall panels. 

The building is an addition increasing the capacity of the existing hospital. It includes an emergency department, laboratory medicine, intensive care, medical-surgical beds, observation beds, apheresis, ambulatory infusion center, dialysis and radiology. 

Dana Hennis CFSEI vice chair Venkata Charan Digital Building Components Kara Peterman CFSEI chair

Dana Hennis (left), P.E., S.E. and CFSEI vice chair presents the award to Venkata Charan, P.E., Digital Building Components, as Kara Peterman, Ph.D., CFSEI chair looks on.

The Mayo West Tower is concrete over metal deck with steel moment frames and pre-finished exterior CFS non-load bearing wall panels encompassing the structure.

Digital Building Components (DBC) based in Phoenix is the 2023 CFSEI Design Excellence Award winner for the project, taking second place in the municipal/services category in the Cold-Formed Steel Engineers Institute’s award competition.

The CFSEI Award entry was submitted by Venkata Charan, P.E., of Digital Building Components. Venkata Charan, P.E., Digital Building Components accepted the award for the Mayo West Tower project at the 2023 CFSEI Expo held recently in New Orleans.

Unique CFS Panel Thicknesses

What sets the Mayo West Tower apart from other exterior projects is the building’s exterior panel size. The walls are 24″ thick with a 6″ exterior insulation finish system (EIFS) over 6″ J girts placed over 12″ CFS studs. 

Digital Building Components cold-formed steel wall panels Mayo West Tower

Digital Building Components fabricated 1,500 cold-formed steel (CFS) wall panels for Mayo West Tower.

cold-formed steel framed panels

The panels varied in shape and size but nearly all are 24” thick.

DBC fabricated around 1,500 wall panels pre-finished with windows preinstalled. The sizes of the panels are approximately 24′ by 15′ and are 24″ thick. But some panel thicknesses narrow to 4” around window openings.

During the Mayo West Tower project’s inception phase, DBC’s design team considered different ideas to fabricate 24″-thick pre-finished walls, 24’ in length with preinstalled windows. The team decided to use 12″ studs as the first layer wall. Then, the DBC team placed the 6″ J girts horizontally. The J girts act as bracing for the long panels, which proved to be an important feature during their shipping and hoisting.

 However, the DBC team realized that for hoisting there was an issue with transitioning from a 24″-thick wall to a 6″-wall. The architect did not want a panel joint separating them, so DBC and Pangolin Structural together devised the solution of fabricating them as separate panels and connecting them with welds. Doing so would hold each panel in place for lifting.

24” to 4” Thick Transitioning

Another challenge involved the transition from a 24″-thick wall panel to a 4″-thick wall occurring within a window opening. DBC and Pangolin came up with the idea of extending the header within the 12″ studs and adding 2-1/2″ studs as infill studs to make up that transition. This enabled us to efficiently reduce the gauge of the 2-1/2″ studs, saving money for the client.

DBC cold-formed steel

DBC’s CFS-framed panels are 24″ thick, but transition to 4″ thick at openings.

DBC fabricated sloped window CFS studs.

DBC fabricated sloped window sills using angled bent plates and 2-1/2” CFS studs.

Another unique feature about Mayo West Tower panels is their sloped window sills. DBC and Pangolin designed the panels to keep the traditional window sills with a 12″ track. But, the teams tweaked the design by adding an angled bent plate with 2-1/2″ CFS studs to create the sloped sills.

“L” and “Z” Shaped Panels

Several panels in the project are not simple rectangular wall panels. Instead, they are “L” shaped and “Z” shaped around the corners. 

For example, one of the walls is around 30′ long and is only 6′ wide and has an “L” shaped corner that extends 3′ out from the main panel. DBC and Pangolin came up with the idea of creating boxed studs at the end and using CFS straps as “X” bracing to increase the stiffness of the connection between the main panel and sub panel. 

Mayo West Tower CFS framed panels cold-formed steel

Mayo West Tower features “Z” shaped and “L” shaped CFS-framed panels.

The most difficult part with these “L” panels is they needed to be connected to a thin strip of slab 12″ wide that extends 7′ from the main building. DBC and Pangolin’s solution was to bypass these panels by two floors and stack them together. This made installation of the panels less difficult.

Designing Panels at Parapet

Designing walls at parapet was another unique aspect of the project. The parapet walls needed a panel splice within the main wall to account for future vertical expansion of the hospital. DBC designed the parapet to be stitched with screws to the lower panel for future removal.

 

Mayo West Tower

Mayo West Tower shown in white above.

Mayo West Tower

5777 E. Mayo Blvd
Phoenix, AZ 85054

Completion Date
December 2022 (Dry In)

Construction Cost
$41 million

PEOPLE

Owner:
Mayo Clinic

Architect of Record:
Ray Smith, HKS, Inc.

Engineer of Record for Structural Work:
Christa Chau, PK Associates

Cold-Formed Steel Specialty Engineer:
Tony Polusny, P.E., Pangolin Structural and Casey Quackenbush, Pangolin Structural

Cold-Formed Steel Specialty Contractor:
Travis McCoy, P.E., S.E., LEED AP, Digital Building Components and Venkata Charan, P.E., Digital Building Components

 

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