Los Angeles Times

Skyscraper hits new milestone

Wilshire Grand builders celebrate completion of the concrete core of what will be the tallest structure west of Chicago

- By Thomas Curwen

Wilshire Grand workers complete building’s 892- foot- tall concrete core.

Rick Smegelski pulled back the hoist lever with his right hand, calculatin­g how fast his load was rising.

As operator of Tower Crane No. 1 at the constructi­on site for the Wilshire Grand, Smegelski looks upon downtown Los Angeles from his cab, 900 feet above Figueroa Street. Below him stood the signature element of this $ 1- billion- plus project, the tower, soon to become the tallest structure west of Chicago.

“I’m getting toward the end of my career,” said Smegelski, 59. “So this building is a pretty big feather in my cap. This will be here forever. I can take my great- grandchild­ren here and show them that I built it.”

One day this week, Smegelski had a special audience, and though he couldn’t see or hear them, he knew applause was rising from the assembled dignitarie­s: architects, engineers, constructi­on managers and representa­tives of the building’s owner, Korean Air.

“Hey up!” someone in the crowd shouted as the beam lifted by Tower Crane No. 1 cleared a latticewor­k of steel that will one day support a skylight sweeping between the tower and ad-

joining ballrooms.

The 35- foot, 2,100- pound beam had been trucked in from Eloy, Ariz., and was tagged with signatures of the many people who had a piece of the project, from workers who poured the concrete foundation to executives who signed off on the plans.

Constructi­on projects celebrate many milestones, especially ones as ambitious as the Wilshire Grand.

In 2013 came demolition of the 16- story hotel that once occupied this site. In 2014, workers poured the foundation, a marathon 18hour event, and now this, the completion of the concrete core, the central pillar of the tower.

The ceremony, known as the “topping out,” is a tradition for high- rises and includes sending an American f lag and a small fir tree to the highest point.

But Smegelski knew that the events below, complete with barbecue and speeches, was mostly symbolic.

Months of work lie ahead before the top of the building is complete: a steel- and-glass crown with a spire and beacon reaching to 1,100 feet. But still, the concrete core was a feat unto itself: 32,000 cubic yards of concrete and 50 million pounds of rebar rising 892 feet, 6 inches from the foundation.

Chris Martin, head of the architectu­ral f irm that designed the building, told the crowd that in one year — on March 8, 2017 — they will gather again to celebrate the end of constructi­on.

His words were both a promise and a reminder not to let up. The date coincides with the birthday of Yang Ho Cho, chairman of Hanjin Internatio­nal Corp., which owns Korean Air.

Smegelski’s beam, rising at 600 feet per minute, took 90 seconds to reach the top. He depressed his right foot, and the crane rotated toward the ironworker­s, who stood ready to wire and bolt it into place.

The work is nothing special, Smegelski said. “We do this all day long.”

For more than two years, the Wilshire Grand, rising from the bedrock of the city, has become the daily focus for these workers, and what seems chaotic and inconceiva­ble to passers- by is for them both routine and ordinary.

“Humans get used to the weirdest things,” said Marc Turcot, a superinten­dent with Turner Constructi­on Co., which is managing the work. “What you thought was impossible is now normal.”

When Turcot f irst came here in 2013, the Wilshire Grand presented challenges he had never encountere­d. The 2.8- acre city block was no bigger than a postage stamp, leaving little room to store materials. Negotiatin­g the f low of trucks took the patience of an air- traffic controller, and downtown — its 24- hour ebb and f low — crowded in on all sides.

The trades had conf licts as they got to know their jobs, he said. But job sites like this provide a lesson in human nature.

“Constructi­on has a way of f inding the best ways of doing things just by putting people together,” he said. “At some point, you have to give in in order to move forward.”

Today, the Wilshire Grand is a hive of activity, bearing the hallmarks of an assembly line as workers — up to 14 trades and 47 locals — have on average four days to complete their jobs on each f loor before moving to the next.

As the f inal yards of concrete were setting on the 73rd f loor, f inishing work had begun far below, where the space is hemmed in by windows, sheet- rock walls and the pre- fabricated bathrooms, shipped in from Madera, Calif., and lifted by crane onto each f loor.

On the 31st f loor, workers are putting the f inishing touches on the f irst hotel room, and tenants are being courted for the nearly 400,000 square feet of office space in the 18 stories below.

But as prosaic as the work can be, the view from the top seldom disappoint­s. From the 66th f loor, the city spreads out like a Berber carpet, each loop in the crowded fabric a home, an apartment or office building.

Far below, the downtown public library’s four- sided tower is dwarfed by skyscraper­s bearing the names of the city’s corporatio­ns. At eye level, these declaratio­ns read like cryptic ephemera: AON, Deloitte, PWC, KMPG.

Johnny McCormack has watched this view evolve. He has spent the last two years directing the delivery of concrete into the walls, and each week, a little more of Southern California emerged.

“Everything just drops out from underneath you and you watch the city get smaller and smaller, lower and lower,” McCormack said. “Every week you would see different buildings and different pools.”

First, the parking lot at Dodger Stadium became clear, then the headlights of the morning commuters streaming down Kellogg Hill in San Dimas, and one day an island no one in his crew knew existed. They thought it might be a ship, but then they found it on Google maps.

It was Santa Barbara Island, just on the edge of the horizon, more than 30 miles away.

The workers mark the passage of time by the completion of their jobs. They have seen tradesmen come and go: first the rod- busters, who fashioned the steel cages that support the concrete, and now the concrete workers, who are left with mostly patching work here and there.

They have felt seasonal winds rattle the core with 70mph blasts, and they have memories associated with this place they will never shake. When crane operator Smegelski looks back on his 28 months on site, he thinks about his friend and fellow crane operator Robert Manos.

Smegelski met Manos in Las Vegas on projects more than 10 years ago. They came to Los Angeles together, f inding a trailer in Temple City, closer to the job site than their homes and families in Santa Ynez and Bakersfiel­d.

Manos died last August after a short battle with a brain tumor. He was 47.

On his cellphone, Smegelski keeps a video in memory of Manos.

“All right, Robert,” says a voice over a shot of the constructi­on site. “This is for you: a tribute from your fellow operators at the Wilshire Grand.”

A loud blast from the air horns on the each tower crane booms through downtown in honor of Manos.

This week, they found space on the beam for the name of a friend who couldn’t be here.

 ?? Photog r aphs by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? CARPENTERS DAVID SPRENGER, left, and Abel Castenada work on the 51st f loor of the Wilshire Grand Center.
Photog r aphs by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times CARPENTERS DAVID SPRENGER, left, and Abel Castenada work on the 51st f loor of the Wilshire Grand Center.
 ??  ?? A PEDESTRIAN passes the Wilshire Grand Center going up at Wilshire Boulevard and Figueroa Street. The concrete core rises more than 890 feet above the foundation.
A PEDESTRIAN passes the Wilshire Grand Center going up at Wilshire Boulevard and Figueroa Street. The concrete core rises more than 890 feet above the foundation.
 ?? Photog r aphs by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? GLASS FOREMAN Gary Wahlenmaie­r, right, looks on as glaziers Carlos Riviera, left, and Joe Guevara add their names to a 35- foot, 2,100- pound steel beam.
Photog r aphs by Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times GLASS FOREMAN Gary Wahlenmaie­r, right, looks on as glaziers Carlos Riviera, left, and Joe Guevara add their names to a 35- foot, 2,100- pound steel beam.
 ??  ?? A WORKER frames steel for a skylight inside the Wilshire Grand Center’s atrium. Constructi­on is expected to be completed on March 8, 2017, the birthday of Yang Ho Cho, chairman of Hanjin Internatio­nal Corp.
A WORKER frames steel for a skylight inside the Wilshire Grand Center’s atrium. Constructi­on is expected to be completed on March 8, 2017, the birthday of Yang Ho Cho, chairman of Hanjin Internatio­nal Corp.
 ??  ?? THE VIEW from the 64th f loor of the Wilshire Grand Center under constructi­on in downtown Los Angeles. The building, when f inished, will have a steel- and- glass crown with a spire and beacon reaching to 1,100 feet.
THE VIEW from the 64th f loor of the Wilshire Grand Center under constructi­on in downtown Los Angeles. The building, when f inished, will have a steel- and- glass crown with a spire and beacon reaching to 1,100 feet.

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