Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Meticulous restoratio­n underway

Air Force Academy chapel being renovated inside 14-story ‘cocoon’

- DAN BOYCE

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The Air Force Academy chapel is one of the most distinctiv­e pieces of architectu­re in Colorado.

But few people have caught a glimpse of it for more than a year. That’s because the entire building is undergoing an exhaustive restoratio­n inside a 14-story “cocoon.”

And it’s not likely to emerge any time soon.

The more than $150 million renovation of the Cadet Chapel at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs is going to take months — or perhaps more than a year, longer than originally expected; contractor­s are contending with more asbestos than they expected, as well as other unforeseen challenges.

“We knew that there was significan­t asbestos in this building. We just couldn’t get in all the places where asbestos would be to test,” said Duane Boyle, campus architect at the academy.

The project began two years ago and has required the constructi­on of a vast white temporary enclosure around the 150-foot-tall iconic aluminum building. This “cocoon,” as Boyle calls it, enables crews to painstakin­gly correct the legacy of one frugal design choice from the building’s initial constructi­on in the 1950s and early ’60s.

The chapel’s architect, Walter Netsch Jr., originally conceived of an elaborate gutter system to drain off rainwater falling onto the chapel. But Boyle said that idea was abandoned in favor of caulking all the seals on the building’s network of interlocki­ng exterior aluminum panels to cut costs.

“We had 32 miles of caulking on this building, which is kind of ridiculous when you start thinking about that,” Boyle said.

The caulking did not stand up to the elements of the Pikes Peak region, and the chapel has suffered leaks from the time it opened. Extensive water damage over the past six decades led to the restoratio­n, which involves removing every aluminum panel and more than 20,000 brick-sized stained glass blocks.

What is under the temporary building now is just a massive steel skeleton covered in rust-colored primer. Inside, the building is nearly unrecogniz­able. Fourteen levels of scaffoldin­g fill the main Protestant Chapel.

Many of the items that used to be inside, from the pews to the facility’s two massive church organs, are also being fully restored either due to water damage or disrepair.

Boyle said dealing with the additional asbestos contaminat­ion found in the chapel will push the project past its original 2023 completion date, though he is not prepared to estimate how much longer it might take.

But the plan remains the same: eventually every pew, organ pipe, aluminum panel and stained glass brick will be refinished or meticulous­ly recreated and put back exactly where it was before, with one important addition. Crews are finally installing Netsch’s original drainage system to replace the ineffectiv­e miles of caulking.

Gazing at all the work around him, Boyle recently offered a bold assessment of the undertakin­g he is in charge of: “I think it would compete as one of the most complicate­d and intensive historic preservati­on projects of all time.”

“We knew that there was significan­t asbestos in this building. We just couldn’t get in all the places where asbestos would be to test.” — Duane Boyle, campus architect, U.S. Air Force Academy

 ?? (AP/Colorado Public Radio/Hart Van Denburg) ?? U.S. Air Force Academy campus architect Duane Boyle stands amid 14 floors of scaffoldin­g Nov. 18 inside the Cadet Chapel on the campus of the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. He oversees the more than $150 million renovation taking place in the building.
(AP/Colorado Public Radio/Hart Van Denburg) U.S. Air Force Academy campus architect Duane Boyle stands amid 14 floors of scaffoldin­g Nov. 18 inside the Cadet Chapel on the campus of the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. He oversees the more than $150 million renovation taking place in the building.
 ?? ?? A worker in a hazardous material protection suit works Nov. 18 on asbestos mitigation in a sealed workspace high on the scaffoldin­g inside the chapel.
A worker in a hazardous material protection suit works Nov. 18 on asbestos mitigation in a sealed workspace high on the scaffoldin­g inside the chapel.
 ?? ?? United States Air Force cadet Brianna McVay (center) and fellow members of the academy’s Saber Drill Team practice Nov. 18 in front of the cocoon housing the chapel.
United States Air Force cadet Brianna McVay (center) and fellow members of the academy’s Saber Drill Team practice Nov. 18 in front of the cocoon housing the chapel.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States