Thornton Tomasetti Employees from Washington D.C. and Austin, Texas, Receive American Concrete Institute Design Award
The ACI Design Award recognizes advanced concepts and techniques applied to a specific design project, and is given to the paper’s authors and engineer/engineering firm responsible for the design.
Published in 2018, “Naked Concrete” details Thornton Tomasetti’s structural design for the 16-story trophy office building formerly known as Reston Station OB1. Developed by Comstock Partners and designed by JAHN, the 371,000-square-foot tower near the Wiehle-Reston East Metro station is a recognizable fixture in the Dulles Corridor. The design award marks the second time ACI has recognized the project. It took top honors in ACI’s 2018 Excellence in Concrete Construction Awards in the high-rise building category.
Completed in 2017, 1900 Reston Metro Plaza showcases a unique lateral system with a diagonalized, exposed concrete exoskeleton. The tower’s floors are constructed of two-way, post-tensioned, 10-inch-thick concrete slabs with six-inch drop panels. The exoskeleton columns are constructed of 10,000 psi strength concrete and slope at 11 degrees from vertical matching the building’s north and south edges.
A five-story, open air plaza on the north side of the building is surrounded by tree columns that splay out from the base to support the 11 levels above the plaza. The building also features an outdoor roof terrace and eight levels of below-grade parking.
This marks the second consecutive ACI Design Award for Thornton Tomasetti. In 2019, Tamaro and Vice President Chris Crilly, PE, LEED AP, received the award for their technical article “Concrete Pushes Mexico to New Heights,” on the seismic design of Mexico’s tallest building, Torre KOI. Tamaro and Crilly co-authored the article with Roberto Stark, Principal of Stark+ Ortiz, which served as the local engineer for the project.