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Thursday, August 19, 2010



Map Moves From Archive To Artwork


By EDWARD M. EVELD
The Kansas City Star


The official title of the 1926 document is blandly descriptive: “Industrial and Railroad Map of Greater Kansas City.” You’re forgiven if those words generate not a spark of curiosity, much less inspiration.

But what if the original desk-top map were the size of a building, the image re-created through a series of perforations on metal, the whole thing lighted from behind? And it had a lyrical, less literal name: “Rivers, Rails and Trails”?

At more than 22 feet high and 49 feet wide, the architectural artwork described by officials as “iconic and visually stunning” will be lighted Sunday on the University of Missouri-Kansas City campus, with a formal dedication Sept. 29.

The historical map, grown large as ornamental stainless steel screens and attached to the Miller Nichols Library addition, will burn magically at night. Think of a dye-injected X-ray, artfully illuminating the city’s arteries.

“We knew constructing this addition was a once-in-a-generation opportunity,” said Sharon Bostick, UMKC dean of libraries. “We wanted to make the most of it by creating a piece of public art that would be significant to the library and university but also pay tribute to the history of Kansas City.”

Actually, there are two identical “Rivers, Rails and Trails.” One nearly covers the west wall of the addition and faces the campus interior. The other is on the east wall, visible from Rockhill at East 51st Street. The 31,000-square-foot building houses the library’s new “book robot,” an automated retrieval system for much of the library’s collection. The retrieval system began operating this summer.

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Friday, August 6, 2010



Kansas City Chiefs Training Facility Expansion Scores Big!


KANSAS CITY CHIEFS TRAINING FACILITY, KANSAS CITY, MO.
Contractor: A2MG Inc, Blue Springs, MO.


Story from Architectural Metal, December 2009 - Read Complete Article


Football fans agree the new Kansas City Chiefs Training Facility in Kansas City, Mo., has scored a breakaway touchdown. The gleaming new three-story facility features an office building for staff, two auditorium-style meeting rooms, locker and equipment rooms, and a player and staff dining area. But the building’s most striking feature is its three-story atrium topped by a football-shaped copper roof – fabricated and installed by SMACNA contractor A2MG Inc. of Blue Springs, Mo.

A2MG Inc. installed the 3,500 square-foot roof under aggressive time constraints and in a challenging, limited space. They worked three stories up amid the wind and weather to install the oval roof that is shaped like the Chiefs’ beloved pigskin. The compound radius roof is constructed of 16-ounce copper flat-seam panels and surrounded by 1/8-inch anodized aluminum alloy plate panels around the roof’s perimeter.

The rooftop is also embedded with six pairs of rectangular skylights to provide daylight, and sits above a tall, airy atrium made of windows and steel that inside features player memorabilia and a players’ lounge. The skylights were designed on the roof to form the “seams” of the football.

With this high-profile project, A2MG helped create the unique focal point that symbolizes Kansas City’s love of the game.

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