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Thursday, October 17, 2013

NASCAR Hall of Fame

The new NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, North Carolina opened in May 2010. Lead design architect Pei, Cobb, Freed & Partners   envisioned a möbius strip-styled stainless steel roadway racing around the perimeter of the main building. Zahner engineers implemented the ZEPPS™ Process to enable simple and straight-forward construction of an otherwise immensely complex shape.
The möbius is clad in Angel Hair™ Stainless steel,a product developed by Zahner to reduce the glare and bright spots while providing a gorgeous satin finish. Even in bright sunlight, the surface has significantly less glare than mill finishes on stainless steel.



















Wednesday, October 9, 2013

NASCAR Hall of Fame Wins National Architecture and Engineering Award

(Chicago, IL) – The NASCAR Hall of Fame in Charlotte, N.C., has earned national recognition in the 2013 Innovative Design in Engineering and Architecture with Structural Steel awards program (IDEAS2). In honor of this achievement, members of the project team will be presented with awards from the American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) during a ceremony at the project site on Wednesday, October 9, at 11 a.m.
Conducted annually by AISC, the IDEASawards recognize outstanding achievement in engineering and architecture on structural steel projects across the country. The IDEAS2 award is the highest, most prestigious honor bestowed on building projects by the structural steel industry in the U.S. and recognizes the importance of teamwork, coordination and collaboration in fostering successful construction projects.

The project team members include:
  • Owner/Developer: City of Charlotte; NASCAR Hall of Fame, Charlotte, N.C.
  • Owner’s Representative: NASCAR, Charlotte
  • Architects: Pei Cobb Freed & Partners LLP, New York; and Little Diversified Architectural Consulting, Charlotte
  • Structural Engineer: Leslie E. Robertson Associates, RLLP, New York
  • General Contractor: BE&K Building Group, Charlotte, N.C.
  • Design-Build Contractor for Ribbon: Zahner, Kansas City, Mo.
  • Steel Fabricator and Bender/Roller: SteelFab, Inc., Charlotte (AISC Member/AISC Certified Fabricator)
  • Steel Detailer: Hutchins & Associates, Clemmons, N.C. (AISC Member)
  • Steel Erector: Williams Erection Company, Smyrna, Ga. (AISC Member/AISC Advanced Certified Erector)
The NASCAR Hall of Fame is a National award winner in the category of projects Greater than $75 Million, making it one of only four projects around the country to receive the National honor. Each year, the IDEASawards honor National and Merit award winners in three categories, based on constructed value: projects less than $15 million; projects $15 million to $75 million; and projects greater than $75 million. Each project is judged on its use of structural steel from both an architectural and structural engineering perspective, with an emphasis on: creative solutions to project’s program requirements; applications of innovative design approaches in areas such as connections, gravity systems, lateral load resisting systems, fire protection and blast; aesthetic and visual impact of the project; innovative use of architecturally exposed structural steel; technical or architectural advances in the use of the steel; and the use of innovative design and construction methods.
In approaching the challenge of designing a Hall of Fame for NASCAR, the project’s design team sought to capture the essential spirit of NASCAR and its sport in architectural form. In exploring the possibilities for expressing speed and spectacle, the architect and structural engineer were drawn to the arena of action, the racecourse, where fans and race teams come together each race week for the experience of race day.
Curving, sloped forms are evocative not only of the dynamic and changing sinuous shape of the racetrack but also of the perception of speed, which, of course, is at the heart of any race.
“Totally bewitching, it grabs hold of your senses long before you find the words to articulate what it has accomplished,” commented Paul Dannels, FAIA, a founding principal of sdi structures, Ann Arbor, Mich., and a judge in the competition.
The expression of these forms could only have been achieved through the use of steel, both as cladding and structure, encompassing several long-span and architecturally exposed structural steel (AESS) elements and employing innovative approaches to connections, detailing and the interface of structural steel with stone, glass, and steel as a finish material.
The Hall of Fame consists of four basic elements:
  • A large glazed oval shape forming a Great Hall serves as the symbolic core of the Hall of Fame.
  • A rectangular volume houses visitor services, including entry and exhibit space on upper floors.
  • An expressed Hall of Honor is situated as an iconic element within the Great Hall.
  • A broadcast studio enlivens the Hall of Fame Plaza, the sweeping forecourt that welcomes visitors.
Design explorations of speed and spectacle evolved into an architectural element, the Ribbon that envelops the full-block building in a form that speaks to the imagery and spirit of NASCAR. Beginning as a curved, sloping exterior wall enclosing the building, the Ribbon twists in a free span over the main entry to form a welcoming canopy. Long, thin incisions in the metal skin, which are animated by running are analogous to the blur of a car racing past the spectator at tremendous speed. Within the Great Hall, a signature element of a curved, banked ramp leads the visitor from the main floor to exhibit levels above. The ramp contains a display of race cars frozen in a moment frame from a race, capturing in another way the speed and spectacle that is the essence of the sport.
The selection of the material for the Ribbon was critical to realizing the design intent. The team drew on another aspect of the world of NASCAR – its technology – and was inspired by the process of shaping raw sheet metal to form the body of the race car. This fundamental element has underlain all NASCAR race cars since the beginning of the sport. From a design point of view, metal imparts a light and airy feeling to the architecture. As the cladding material the stainless steel softly reflects light and accentuates the dynamic aspect of the Ribbon as its sculpted form changes around the building.
The structure’s significant spans were achieved with structural steel trusses:
  • A set of trusses spanning 175 ft achieve a grand column-free ballroom.
  • A 100-ft-long, bi-level footbridge, supported by a pair of one-story-deep trusses, links the ballroom with the existing Charlotte Convention Center.
  • Two- and three-story-high trusses cantilever 30 ft over the broadcast studio.

One of the most significant AESS elements in the project is the Vierendeel frame supporting the glass façade of the Great Hall. The lateral-load-resisting system at this façade also functions as the braced frame that supports the Ribbon.
The structural bid set was issued six months before the 100% CD set. The steel tender was divided into multiple packages to enable detailing and fabrication of portions of the project to proceed before the full design was complete. A 3D Tekla model was used in the steel detailing to identify and resolve potential conflicts in the field. These efforts and effective team communication allowed the long scheduled public opening to occur on time.
The 13 IDEASwinners for 2013 were chosen from nearly 100 submissions received from architectural and engineering firms throughout the U.S. Each submission is reviewed and award winners are selected by a nationally recognized panel of design and construction industry professionals.
The IDEASaward dates back more than 70 years to the earliest years of AISC’s existence. Roger E. Ferch, P.E., president of AISC, said, “The entire NASCAR Hall of Fame project team has shown how structural steel can be used to create structures that combine beauty and practicality. The result is a structure that serves the history and heritage of NASCAR extremely well, while providing an example of what can be achieved when designing and constructing projects with steel.”

High-resolution images of the NASCAR Hall of Fame project are available upon request by contacting AISC’s Tasha Weiss at 312.670.5439, weiss@aisc.org. To learn more about the IDEASawards and to view all of this year’s winning projects, visitwww.aisc.org/ideas2.
                                                                       Photo Credit: Paul Warchol Photography, Inc.





Thursday, August 1, 2013

Hotel Near NASCAR Hall of Fame Museum


Need a hotel near the NASCAR Hall of Fame Museum?
The NASCAR Hall of Fame

The Hampton Inn Charlotte Uptown is a prime location right across the street from the Charlotte, NC NASCAR Hall of Fame! That's right. It's within walking distance! If you're looking to experience it all, stop on by and ask us about our special "Hall of Fame" Rate.

When you book with us, you've put yourself just seconds away from years of history, dedication, and tradition. The NASCAR Hall of Fame, featuring more than just your traditional walkthrough, offers fun and exiting games, attractions, and family fun for all ages. They say when you first walk in you feel like a kid again. Experience it all at the hall!

Opening May 11, 2010 in Uptown Charlotte, the 150,000-square-foot NASCAR Hall of Fame is an interactive, entertainment attraction honoring the history and heritage of NASCAR. The high-tech venue, designed to educate and entertain race fans and non-fans alike, includes artifacts, interactive exhibits, 275-person state-of-the-art theater, Hall of Honor, Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant, Sports Avenue retail outlet and NASCAR Media Group-operated broadcast studio. The five-acre site also includes a privately developed 19-story office tower and 102,000-square-foot expansion to theCharlotte Convention Center, highlighted by a 40,000 square-foot ballroom. The NASCAR Hall of Fame is owned by the City of Charlotte, licensed by NASCAR and operated by the Charlotte Regional Visitors Authority.

 

The NASCAR Hall of Fame Complex




Thursday, May 23, 2013

Family ties strong in 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame class

CHARLOTTE -- Dale Jarrett showed up dressed for a pool party and ended up in the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
Jarrett was among five people selected for the Hall's 2014 class on Wednesday, though it came as a shock to the popular former champion; he wore khaki pants and a blue-and-white plaid button-down shirt so he could arrive at his son's high school graduation party dressed for the occasion.
"I came by to support the Hall of Fame because I believe in this place," said Jarrett, who was in his first year of eligibility. "… I wasn't planning on having my picture made or anything like that. I am very much surprised this happened on the first ballot."
Jarrett will be joined by NASCAR's first superstar, Fireball Roberts, two-time champion Tim Flock, engine builder Maurice Petty and Busch Series star Jack Ingram when the Hall inducts its fifth class on Jan. 29, 2014.
The 1999 Cup Series champion and a three-time Daytona 500 winner, Jarrett got a hug from his father, Hall of Famer Ned Jarrett, when his name was announced by NASCAR CEO Brian France. He shook his head in disbelief and his eyes appeared to well with tears.
"Once I saw I was on the (nominees) list, I was very appreciative of that and figured in a few years down the road it would probably happen," he said. "But I really came here with no idea. I just really didn't think that."
Team owner Joe Gibbs, whom Jarrett drove for from 1992-94, said in part in a statement:
"We are thrilled to hear that Dale has been named to the NASCAR Hall of Fame today. It is well deserved. His contributions to the sport are well documented and I can tell you his contributions to Joe Gibbs Racing really helped us to establish ourselves in the sport.
"The whole Gibbs family ... really appreciated Dale taking a chance on us as our first driver. He gave us our first win which just happens to remain our only Daytona 500 win."
Like Jarrett, Petty was also voted in on his first try. The younger brother of "The King" Richard Petty, Maurice was responsible for building the engines that powered seven championships and a record 200 wins.
He became the fourth member of the Petty clan to be inducted, along with Richard, father Lee and cousin Dale Inman, who was the team's crew chief.
Petty said the hair on the back of his neck stood up when his name was announced.
"Golly, it's great," he said. "That the Lord for it."
Maurice suspected Richard did some extensive lobbying on his behalf, but joked he didn't owe his brother anything for it.
"No," he said with a laugh. "He owes me for building all those motors."
Ingram made his name in one of NASCAR's lower series – the Late Model Sportsman division, which later became the Busch Series (now Nationwide). He won three Late Model Sportsman titles and added two more when the series reorganized to become the Busch Series in the early 1980s.
Wearing a big grin, Ingram said he "almost fell out of that chair" when his name was called. He leapt up, waved to those in attendance and walked down a row of seats accepting congratulations and shaking hands.
"It's a great, great thing to happen to somebody that put a life into short-track racing and Saturday night racing," he said. "To be recognized for what you accomplished is a good feeling."
Roberts, who lost on a tiebreaker during last year's vote, was arguably NASCAR's first superstar. A two-time winner of the Southern 500 and the 1962 Daytona 500 winner, Roberts -- nicknamed for his baseball pitching prowess -- is known as one of the greatest drivers to never win a title. He died in a fiery crash in 1964.
Flock, a two-time champion in the 1950s who was famous for racing with a pet monkey in his car, had 39 wins in only 187 starts. He retired in 1961, though his win total still ranks 18th on the all-time wins list. He died in 1998.
Flock's widow, Frances, wore a top with a monkey on it to symbolize Jocko Flocko (the monkey's name). She smiled broadly as she told reporters about the time Tim had to make a pit stop because Jocko had been hit in the head with a pebble, causing the primate to go wild in the car.
The top five vote-getters were elected from a ballot of 25. There was no minimum percentage required for induction, and voters each chose up to five names.
With 76% of the vote, Flock had a higher percentage than any other inductee in the class. Petty was next at 67%, followed by Jarrett (56%), Ingram (53%) and Roberts (51%).
NASCAR said the next top vote-getters were modified racer Jerry Cook – who barely missed for the second straight year – two-time champion Joe Weatherly and Wendell Scott, the first African-American driver to win a NASCAR race.
The class was voted on earlier Wednesday by a 54-member panel that included USA TODAY Sports' Nate Ryan, other media, NASCAR officials, track operators and former competitors. Ryan voted for Roberts, Flock, Turner, Lorenzen and Weatherly.
PHOTOS: 2014 NASCAR Hall of Fame class



Racetrack magnate Bruton Smith; Rex White, the 1960 champion on NASCAR's premier circuit; and Larry Phillips, a short-track legend and five-time champion on NASCAR's Weekly Racing Series, were among first-time nominees not elected.
Joining Smith, White, and Phillips were 17 holdover nominees from last year's ballot that didn't get in. Those were Red Byron, Richard Childress, Jerry Cook, H. Clay Earles, Ray Fox, Anne B. France, Rick Hendrick, Bobby Isaac, Fred Lorenzen, Raymond Parks, Benny Parsons, Les Richter, T. Wayne Robertson, Wendell Scott, Ralph Seagraves, Curtis Turner and Joe Weatherly.
The nominees were chosen by a 21-person committee consisting of NASCAR officials, Hall of Fame reps and track owners. On the panel are: Hall of Fame executive director Winston Kelley; historian Buz McKim; NASCAR Chairman/CEO Brian France; Vice Chairman Jim France; President Mike Helton; Vice President of Competition Robin Pemberton; Senior Vice President of Racing Operations Steve O'Donnell; Competition Administrator Jerry Cook; former Senior Vice President Paul Brooks; former Vice President Ken Clapp; International Speedway Corporation CEO Lesa Kennedy; Martinsville Speedway President Clay Campbell; Texas Motor Speedway President Eddie Gossage; Atlanta Motor Speedway President Ed Clark; former Indianapolis Motor Speedway President Tony George; Dover Motorsports CEO Denis McGlynn; Pocono Raceway board of director member Looie McNally; Bowman Gray Stadium operator Dale Pinilis; Riverhead Raceway operators Jim and Barbara Cromarty (1 vote); Rockford Speedway owner Jody Deery; and Kingsport Speedway Operator Robert Pressley.
Last year, the three highest vote totals of those who weren't inducted belonged to Roberts (who lost to Buck Baker on a tiebreaking vote for the final slot in the 2013 class), Cook and Flock.
PAST CLASSES OF HALL OF FAME
2010: Richard Petty, Bill France, Dale Earnhardt, Junior Johnson, Bill France Jr.
2011: David Pearson, Bobby Allison, Ned Jarrett, Bud Moore, Lee Petty
2012: Darrell Waltrip, Cale Yarborough, Glen Wood, Dale Inman, Richie Evans
2013: Rusty Wallace, Cotton Owens, Herb Thomas, Buck Baker, Leonard Wood

Monday, April 15, 2013

Hall of Fame Nominees Announced

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- A mixture of champions, engine builders and innovators highlight the five newest nominees for the NASCAR Hall of Fame.
The new nominees announced on Wednesday are 1999 Sprint Cup champion and ESPN analystDale Jarrett, engine builder Maurice Petty, Speedway Motorsports Inc. chairman Bruton Smith, 1960 Cup champion Rex White and five-time NASCAR weekly series national championLarry Phillips.
Jarrett is the son of two-time Cup champion Ned Jarrett, a member of the 2011 Hall of Fame class. Dale Jarrett won 32 times, including three Daytona 500s.
Petty was the chief engine builder for Petty Enterprises. He is the brother of Hall of FamerRichard Petty, a seven-time Winston Cup champion and NASCAR's all-time winner with 200 victories.
Smith built Charlotte Motor Speedway and is known as an innovator among track owners, introducing condominiums, VIP suites and club-like restaurants to the sport. As the chairman of SMI, he owns eight tracks that host 12 Cup events.
"It is a great honor to be nominated as a candidate for the NASCAR Hall of Fame," Smith said in a release. "Bill France Jr. once asked me to help him build NASCAR and I have literally been building monuments to the sport for my entire lifetime. Millions of people have attended NASCAR events at our speedways over the years and we've tried to be creative and innovative in an effort to help push the sport to a higher level. It's always been a perfect fit for me because I love racing and I love NASCAR fans."
White was considered one of the sport's most consistent drivers, recording top-five finishes in nearly half of his 233 races. He finished outside the top 10 only 30 percent of the time in collecting 28 wins.
Phillips won an amazing 226 times en route to an unprecedented five wins in NASCAR's Whelen All-American Series.
The five nominees join 20 others previously selected by a 21-person nominating committee.
The five 2014 inductees will be selected from the list of 25 by a 54-member voting panel for the Hall's fifth class on May 22.
The entire list of 25 includes:
•  Red Byron: First champion in NASCAR's premier series now known as the Sprint Cup series in 1949.
•  Richard Childress: 11-time car owner champion in NASCAR's three national series, including six with Dale Earnhardt in the Cup series.
•  Jerry Cook: Six-time NASCAR Modified champion.
•  H. Clay Earles: Founder of Martinsville Speedway.
•  Tim Flock -- Two-time Cup series champion.
•  Ray Fox: Legendary engine builder and owner of cars driven by Buck BakerJunior Johnson and others.
•  Anne Bledsoe France: Helped build the sport with husband, Bill France Sr.
•  Rick Hendrick: 13-time car owner champion in NASCAR's three national series.
•  Jack Ingram: Two-time champion in NASCAR's second-tier series (now Nationwide) and three-time Late Model Sportsman champion.
•  Bobby Isaac: 1970 Cup champion.
•  Dale Jarrett: 1999 Cup champion and three-time Daytona 500 winner.
•  Fred Lorenzen -- Winner of 26 Cup races, including the Daytona 500 and World 600.
•  Raymond Parks: NASCAR's first champion car owner.
•  Benny Parsons: 1973 Cup champion.
•  Maurice Petty: Chief engine builder for Petty Enterprises.
•  Larry Phillips: Only five-time NASCAR Whelen All-American Series national champion.
•  Les Richter: Former NASCAR executive, former president of Riverside International Raceway.
•  Fireball Roberts: 33 Cup wins, including the 1962 Daytona 500, and the sport's first true superstar.
•  T. Wayne Robertson: Helped raise NASCAR popularity as R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company senior vice president.
•  Wendell Scott: First and only black driver to win a Cup race in 1964.
•  Ralph Seagraves: Formed Winston-NASCAR partnership as an executive with R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.
•  O. Bruton Smith: Builder of Charlotte Motor Speedway and chairman of Speedway Motorsports Inc. that owns eight NASCAR tracks that host 12 Cup events.
•  Curtis Turner: Early personality known as the "Babe Ruth of stock car racing."
•  Joe Weatherly: Two-time Cup champion.


•  Rex White: 1960 Cup champion.