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Cast-in-place parking structures |
![]() Photo by Sky-Pix, courtesy of Cadman
Seattle BMW’s service building has concrete tilt-up walls, poured-in-place shear walls and post-tensioned concrete floors. The showroom, sporting a rooftop logo, was also built with tilt-up walls.
Seattle BMW |
Location:Seattle
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BMW Seattle, a two-block redevelopment located just east of Qwest Field, is the largest auto dealership in the state. The complex comprises a 254,000-square-foot service building and a 50,000-square-foot sales center. The four-story service building houses 480 parking stalls for new car inventory, customer service and employees. It also includes 66 service bays, customer write-up areas, a customer lounge, technician offices, car wash and detailing areas. The building has concrete tilt-up walls as well as poured-in-place shear walls. Columns, too, are poured-in-place concrete. The floors are post-tensioned concrete. A combination of short-span flat plate and long-span beams are used in the building’s column-free areas. The two-story sales center houses a showroom, customer lounge and business offices. The walls are concrete tilt-up, selected because they are faster to build than conventional wall systems and provide a functional and durable design. The project earned a LEED silver certification.
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