Former Mayor Spearheads Historic Courthouse Renovation
Bexar County's 19th Century
Facility Receiving 21st Century Makeover
By Mark Rea
After enduring more than a century of San Antonio's constant
prairie winds and fickle temperatures, the historic Bexar
County Courthouse is receiving a long overdue facelift.
The $24.3 million renovation project, which includes restoration
of the courthouse's Pecos red sandstone and terra cotta exteriors
as well as renovation of the interior courtrooms, offices
and corridors, is being spearheaded by Nelson W. Wolff, a
former San Antonio mayor and current county judge.
As mayor in the early 1990s, Wolff began to seek financing
to revitalize what was rapidly becoming a rundown section
of downtown San Antonio, a few blocks from two of the city's
most popular attractions: the RiverWalk and the Alamo.
"We started with the Historic Civic Center Plan and
meetings with the officials from the nearby San Fernando Cathedral
in 1991," Wolff said from his office in the courthouse.
"There were several things that I wanted to do to preserve
this area; so by getting a civic group and the church involved,
that helped to bring other citizens on board for a broader
scope of projects.
"As far as the courthouse itself is concerned, close
to one million people pass through its corridors each year,
making it the most public of all buildings in San Antonio.
I thought the least I could do was try to find a way to preserve
it for future generations."
The San Antonio office of 3D/International Inc. is serving
as construction manager for the project as well as the architect
of record. Construction officially began in late 2001 as a
single-bid project, but was soon split into several smaller
packages.
"The Bexar County Commissioners Court decided it wanted
to have more opportunities for local community-based, small
minority and women-owned businesses to participate in the
renovation of its courthouse," said Betty Bueché,
3D/I vice president. "Consequently, they asked 3D/I to
break the restoration project into smaller bid packages and
then assist them with recruiting those kinds of firms."
The nature of the exterior work itself often limited the
kinds of contractors available to bid.
Approximately 200,000 stones make up the exterior of the
courthouse. The stones range from decorative pieces just 8
in. square to huge blocks adorning the front of the building
featuring a hand-carved "Eagle of Justice" with
a wingspan measuring over 15 ft. Additionally, there are over
500 windows in the facility with a variety of ledges and overhangs.
"There are only a finite number of workers who can do
the type of stonework we are doing," said 3D/I project
manager Pat Vance. "Because of the type of exterior we're
working with, and the age of the stone, we had to develop
a sort of a doctor's prescription for each stone, each joint
and each piece of this building."
The company assessed conditions of the exterior as early
as 1999 before the first stone was touched.
"Typically, construction involves the design-bid-build
mentality," Vance explained. "In the restoration
part of construction, there is an assessment and then we have
conversations about various approaches to the project. These
assessments can take some time especially with a building
of this size and level of detail.
"On this particular project, 3D/I did a very detailed
assessment of the building - so detailed, in fact, that we
were almost ridiculed because the large volume of plans we
created and the fact that those plans were so intricate. But
it has worked out to the favor of the project because the
level of detail is there to allow the masons to consult the
various digital images whenever the need arises."
Romancing The Stone
The 268,000-sq.-ft. courthouse was built on Dolorosa Street
in 1892, modified in 1926 and renovated several times until
an addition to the southwest corner was constructed in 1972.
But while the facility's interior was upgraded through the
years, its exterior was fading away.
Subject to nearly 110 years of a condition called wind scour
in which the surface breaks down so significantly and water
penetration becomes so deep, the sedimented sandstone layers
began to delaminate or "explode" from the inside
and periodically rained bits and pieces down to the sidewalk
below. As a result, many of the stones needed a total overhaul
while others required only minor repairs.
Using computer-generated models and state-of-the-art equipment,
Elmendorf-based masonry subcontractor Curtis Hunt Restorations
Inc. took a 21st century approach to restoration of the 19th
century building's exterior.
"One of the first things we did was perform mock-ups
with several different types of stain to match the existing
stones," said Michael Hunt, a fifth-generation mason
with the family-owned company.
"Those stains then had to be OK'd by Bexar County and
the Texas Historical Commission as well as 3D/I architecture.
"We wound up with nine different color samples for patching.
Each of our masons had a color palette to match with the individual
stones because not every stone is the same color or grain
structure. That way, we could blend into the existing stone
as closely as possible."
For hairline cracks in the stone, masons use wipe-in fillers
developed by Minneapolis-based 3M Corp. "They consist
of micro-balloons, which are like little ball bearings,"
Hunt said. "We wet the stone and then apply these micro-balloons
with our thumbs. As it is applied and the stone dries, you
can actually see the cracks fill. Once it draws into the crack,
it expands and fills the crack to act as a water barrier.
"Typically, when you use ordinary masonry products in
cracks such as a joint, eventually that material will shrink
and you end up getting a crack on the other side. The micro-balloon
swells and prevents further water penetration and further
deterioration."
Special equipment and meticulous attention to detail is required
in the restoration of the decorative stones.
"They are retooling carved pieces and, in some cases,
recreating and realigning sculptures on the exterior,"
Bueché said. "These workers are craftsmen as well
as masons."
The foundation is granite-based with each support weighing
as much as 15,000 lbs. while the historical construction is
triple-wythe brick masonry with a red sandstone veneer or
structural red sandstone. Some of the original walls are up
to 42. in. thick.
Special Scaffolding
Because of the age and historic value of the courthouse exterior,
San Antonio-based Builders Equipment and Tool Co. Inc. specially
designed a scaffold system in which steel I-beams were utilized
to stretch across the courthouse's roof.
A massive truss composed of six 140-ft.-long trusses bolted
and braced together and weighing in excess of 33,000 lbs.
was supported by two shoring towers built on the west and
east sides of the courthouse. Once laid to rest on the shoring
towers, the truss spanned across the existing roof on the
north side of the building while the I-beams placed across
the truss completed the backbone of the suspended scaffold
system.
The design allowed scaffold to be erected on the truss to
the height of the shoring towers as well as suspend scaffold
42 ft. down from the I-beams without risking damage to the
roof.
The exact placement of the support towers took six months
of planning and collaboration between BETCO and Houston-based
Ford Engineering.
Copper For Drainage
Helping to deter future deterioration is an up-to-date drainage
system for the courthouse through the use of a specially designed
copper flashing technique.
"When the building was constructed, there was a design
flaw in that there were a lot of exterior ledges that were
flat and the water did not drain well from those areas,"
Vance said. "The type of stone on the exterior is very
porous and the freeze-thaw process of that water was helping
to destroy the stone.
"Of course, the restoration architecture technologies
that are being employed today are much different than some
of the technologies we had 10-12 years ago. Back then, we
used mechanical fasteners to restore items. Now we have found
that those mechanical fasteners will fail and cause even greater
damage to the fabric of the building itself."
Vance combined with Terry Willis of Austin-based sheet metal
subcontractor A.D. Willis Co. Inc. to devise a method whereby
the copper flashing is custom-formed, compressed and then
connected to the features of the building. The edges are crimped,
installed with lead shims and then caulked into place, eliminating
any fasteners and providing a waterproof protection.
Eventually, the copper flashing will develop a patina covering
and blend into the red sandstone for a seamless exterior finish.
And while Vance knows the measures his company has taken
on the courthouse exterior restoration will not last forever,
there are several guidelines built into the project for future
maintenance.
"Some restoration was done on the courthouse in 1988,
but this current effort has been more comprehensive,"
he said. "The restoration technology is so much more
advanced today as we learn more and more about how to repair
stones and keep these buildings in such a quality way that
they will last at least another hundred years.
"3D/I has software programs to download information
about this restoration project and develop an ongoing maintenance
program. Restoration for buildings of these kinds is an ongoing
process, but it is like the old saying about paying a little
now or paying a whole lot later. We hope this kind of program
will prevent future generations from having to spend $20 million
or $30 million to restore the building again."
| PROJECT TEAM |
|
CONSTRUCTION MANAGER/ARCHITECT: |
3D/International Inc.,
San Antonio |
|
LOCATION: |
San Antonio |
|
OWNER: |
Bexar County Commissioners
Court, San Antonio |
|
STONE RESTORATION: |
Curtis Hunt Restorations
Inc., Elmendorf |
|
SCAFFOLDING: |
Builders Equipment and
Tool Co. Inc. (BETCO), San Antonio |
|
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: |
Lundy & Associates
Inc., San Antonio |
|
CIVIL ENGINEER: |
Bain Medina Bain Engineers
Inc., San Antonio |
|
SHEET METAL: |
A.D. Willis Co. Inc.,
Austin |
|
BIRD CONTROL: |
Bird Masters,
Boston |
|