City skyline.

Indeed Office Tower

Indeed Office Tower | Austin, Texas

The Indeed Office Tower is a 39-story, 674,192-sq.-ft. Class A office tower located in the heart of Austin’s Central Business District. The ground floor features an office lobby accessible from 6th street, 7,080-sq.-ft. retail space, fitness, and conference center. Office space is located on Levels 16 – 36 (21 Levels) with exterior terraces on approximately half the office floors.

U.S. Green Building Council

LEED v4 Core & Shell (CS) Platinum Certification

Project

Details

The project includes a 17-level parking garage that consists of five levels with an “L” shaped sub-grade parking accessible from Colorado Street and 12 levels of above-grade parking located directly beneath the office floors accessible from 7th Street. The subterranean loading dock is accessible from Colorado Street and an urban park is included above the “L” portion of the garage. The office building and garage consist of a cast-in-place concrete structure with a full curtainwall exterior.

The scope of work on the project includes demolition and implosion of the existing eight-story building and parking deck on 3/4 of City Block 71, as well as the historic restoration of the former Claudia Taylor Johnson Hall building connecting the office building's commercial environment with the cultural, recreational and retail activities as an open-air market space.

Office lobby with furniture and art installation on ceiling.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Office lobby with stairs and wooden reception desk.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Office conference room with two women around table with black chairs.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Exterior view of lighted office tower entrance with trees and sidewalk next to it.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Eagle-eye side view of office tower on sunny day.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Courtyard with trees, grass and sidewalks outside of office building.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto
Elevator lobby with view to floor below.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

A spectacular lobby welcomes tenants and visitors alike.

Clean, crisp and spacious entryway makes quite the first impression.

Confident design and quality construction of workspaces lend to productivity.

Even when it's empty at night, Indeed Tower still shines.

Austin's Business District welcomes the newest gem to the neighborhood.

Tenants get fresh air and scenic views in the adjacent courtyard.

Elevators convey bold detail, as well as transportation.

Office lobby with furniture and art installation on ceiling.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

A spectacular lobby welcomes tenants and visitors alike.

Office lobby with stairs and wooden reception desk.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Clean, crisp and spacious entryway makes quite the first impression.

Office conference room with two women around table with black chairs.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Confident design and quality construction of workspaces lend to productivity.

Exterior view of lighted office tower entrance with trees and sidewalk next to it.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Even when it's empty at night, Indeed Tower still shines.

Eagle-eye side view of office tower on sunny day.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Austin's Business District welcomes the newest gem to the neighborhood.

Courtyard with trees, grass and sidewalks outside of office building.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Tenants get fresh air and scenic views in the adjacent courtyard.

Elevator lobby with view to floor below.
Photo by Albert Vecerka/Esto

Elevators convey bold detail, as well as transportation.

Self-Perform Work

Where Concrete Meets Steel

The last (highest) concrete slab included large anchor rods to support a structural steel crown. When reviewing the sequence visualization for the overall project, the SPW team highlighted the crown connection as a high-risk condition to coordinate in a virtual mock-up. By modeling every structural element including reinforcement, the team identified multiple conflicts with the anchor rods that would connect the steel crown with the slab; several beams needed to be widened to fit the anchor rods within the concrete, and the anchor rod layout needed to be adjusted to allow rebar to pass through.

With this discovery, the team was able to adjust the beams and anchor rod spacing to avoid conflicts prior to erecting the concrete form work. The team gave the rebar fabricator the layout for the columns to accommodate the spacing requirements.

Without the sequence visualization revealing the need for additional structural modeling and coordination, the team likely wouldn’t have discovered the structural issues until they were near pouring the last slab and preparing the anchor rods. Not only did this save thousands in rework and prevent risky field modifications, but model-based planning also improves the safety, reliability, predictability and quality of the work being put in place.

Ultimately, the team met their original pour dates and had a successful top out.

Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.
Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.
Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.
Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

Exterior office tower with other towers reflected in window.

A View From Above

Drone Photography Courtesy of DPR Construction

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