Collado Earns Top Engineering Excellence Award for Haven Plaza Resiliency Project

February 25, 2021    Newsroom

Collado Engineering has earned a 2021 Diamond Engineering Excellence Award in the category of Building/Technology Systems for its innovative design of a flood resistant Utility Services Building for Haven Plaza, a mid- to low-income housing complex on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. The plant is part of a resiliency program to harden infrastructure for the complex, which was massively damaged in 2012 by Superstorm Sandy.

Presented by the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) New York affiliate, the Engineering Excellence Awards (EEA) are judged on a rigorous set of criteria, which includes complexity, innovation, and value to society. Diamond award winners from each state chapter can compete for ACEC’s prestigious Grand Conceptor award in February 2021.

“We are so pleased to be honored with the highest award in the Building Technology/Systems category for the Haven Plaza project. Our work has had an immediate and direct impact on average New Yorkers, providing them with the security that their lives would not be disrupted by another flooding event like Sandy,” said Andy Hlushko, President of Collado Engineering.

Financial support for the project was provided by the New York City Department of Housing Preservation & Development (HPD) and the New York City Housing Development Corporation (HDC) under the City’s Build it Back program.

Moving to Higher Ground, Greater Self-Sufficiency
In the wake of Sandy’s surge, the residents of all 371 apartments in the four buildings that comprise Haven Plaza were stranded without power, heat and hot water service and only partial cold-water service, due to flooding of critical mechanical and electrical infrastructure equipment located in the cellar of two Haven Plaza buildings. An explosion and subsequent power outage at the adjacent Con Edison power plant knocked out electrical service to the remaining two buildings of the complex.

Haven Plaza Square LLC, an affiliate of the Association of New York Catholic Homes and the New York Institute for Human Development, commissioned Collado Engineering, CTA Architects and Robert Silman to design an infrastructure system that would withstand the effects of a future natural disaster, allow the complex to be self-sufficient, and reduce operating costs.

Collado’s solution—a new free-standing Utility Services Building with a first floor that stands one foot above the FEMA base flood elevation and six feet above ground level—houses a new on-site dual fuel steam boiler plant, the domestic hot water generation equipment, and electrical service provisions for the plant and 4 Haven Plaza. The boilers, which normally operate on gas, can be switched to diesel fuel, if necessary, via a diesel fuel storage tank located in a floodproof “bathtub” cellar area. Electrical infrastructure for 1, 2, and 3 Haven Plaza was also raised to elevated platforms for floodproofing. Each building is equipped with manual transfer switches, allowing portable generators to provide standby power to critical loads.

Public Investment on Display
CTA Architects designed the utility building with transparency in mind, utilizing 1,300 sf of glazed curtainwall, 1,500 sf of metal façade and 500 sf of green wall. Prominently visible in the busy East Village neighborhood, the plant showcases for the public the investment made in the property’s engineering infrastructure.

The building’s poured concrete structure, designed by Robert Silman structural engineers, allows for a column-free space to accommodate the large equipment. Due to the low-bearing quality of the soil, fifteen 100-ton capacity concrete piles were incorporated into the foundation system. Location of the new Utility Services building was strategic, enabling the use of much of the existing underground distribution on site.

All work was completed while the housing complex remained occupied, requiring continuous communication with residents to coordinate service shutdowns and schedule.