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Prism Plane Office Building

Schweiss Doors
www.schweissdoors.com
schweiss@schweissdoors.com

Though it blends beautifully with the colorful prismatic glass curtain wall around it, the Schweiss Doors hydraulic designer door incorporated as part of the remodel of a Boulder, Colorado office building has no trouble standing out. In its closed position the door looks an appropriate part of the overall wall, but open, it forms a grand opening to connect indoor and outdoor areas at the project dubbed Prism Plane.

Denver-based Tres Birds Workshop used the Schweiss hydraulic door to create a beautiful artistic look without the high-end cost. The door is clad with curtain wall glass with colored film layered inside the laminated glass. Color change is constant, depending on the angle of viewing, the position of the sun or the position of the door. The curtain wall weighs 4,178 pounds, which is close to the weight of the door it is mounted on.

Tres Birds, a full-service architecture and general contracting firm, was in charge of the total remodel and recommended a Schweiss hydraulic door. Unlike most architectural firms, Tres Birds simplifies the building process because the company uses its own talented people to do the design work and others in the firm to oversee the construction.

“The area where the hydraulic door went was at an old loading dock,” says Aaron Tweedie, Architectural Project Manager for Tres Birds. The Schweiss door opened that space up. The door really allowed us to connect it to the inside of the Class A office space building that now opens up to an outdoor whole green area that the owner wanted to create.”

Tweedie says his firm likes doing large custom openings in buildings and has looked to Schweiss Doors before.

“We chose the hydraulic door over a bifold door due to the clear open space at hand that required all the overhead room we needed and we wanted an awning,” Tweedie says. “It gave us more of an awning component outside the building. Specific to this project, we only went with Schweiss. We knew from previous quotes that Schweiss was going to be less costly. It’s a relatively affordable door compared to others.”

The 36-foot, 7-inch by 9-foot, 11-inch hydraulic engineered door is equipped with electric photo eye sensors, a keyed up/stop/down switch, a hydraulic two-speed valve and bottom foam seal. A powerful Schweiss hydraulic pump and two large cylinders were required to lift the weight of the 9,728-pound door.

“The Schweiss door is kind of the lynchpin in the design connecting to the outside, serving as one big public communal space,” Tweedie says. “We wanted to create outdoor space and we needed to create a central space within the building. Before, the building had four isolated stair cores sort of built in their own little corners that didn’t connect. There was no double-height space connecting them from anywhere.”

He noted that the energy code in Boulder is extremely stringent, requiring projects be 20 percent more energy efficient than the building code would otherwise require. The perception is that roll-up-style doors typically have air leakage around them and can’t be used because they are not as efficient. The ability to use a Schweiss door required glazing that had to be NFRC-rated and certified for the glass and entire curtain wall system. Sensors that connect to the building management system require that if the door is open that is automatically adds 10 degrees of difference between cooling and heating whether or not it feels comfortable.

“People just love watching the door work,” Tweedie says. “Those who work in aircraft hangars or whatever are used to seeing big things operate, but the average office worker doesn’t get to push a button and watch thousands of pounds of something move. There’s a lot of pleasure and delight that people get watching the door come up or down. The owners love the door. During the process of the build, there was a moment we really got smiles on their faces when we sent them a video of the door operating. The door came exactly as we ordered it and the welds were great.”

The Gold Label Door company in Denver installed the door. “The install went very well,” says Thomas Myers, Commercial Project Manager from Gold Label. “Jeremy and Brent at Schweiss Doors were extremely helpful with answering any questions we had on this custom-made door.”

About Schweiss Doors

Schweiss-logoSchweiss Doors is the premier manufacturer of hydraulic and bifold liftstrap doors. Doors are custom made to any size for any type of new or existing building for architects and builders determined to do amazing things with their buildings, including the doors. Schweiss also offers a cable to liftstrap conversion package. To learn more, visit www.bifold.com or www.schweisshydraulicdoors.com.

And to learn about Schweiss' new Build Your Own Door Kit, which gives customers the plans and essential components to build their own Schweiss Doors, visit  www.bifold.com/build-your-own-door.php.

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