Aerial view of Southline Avenue that shows cars driving into the campus

Southline

Southline | South San Francisco, CA

Visible from Highway 101, Lane Partner’s Southline development will transform the South San Francisco and San Bruno communities from an industrial patchwork to a sustainable, integrated campus. Uniquely located by San Francisco’s robust transit systems, this innovative mixed-use development creates a thriving transit-oriented campus accommodating tech and life science companies. The Southline development sets itself apart from the bustling South San Francisco biotech hub by setting a new live/work/play standard through its proximity to public transportation, San Francisco, and the surrounding amenity-rich neighborhoods.

Partners

Southline

Campus

Spread across 31 acres, Southline is one of the largest developments in California’s Bay Area and will add seven new buildings totaling 2.8 million sq. ft. of additional Class A office and life science space. DPR Construction is currently building Phase 1 of the project, including Building 1, an Amenities Building and parking structure.

BUILDING 1

Building 1 is a 318,000-sq.-ft. Class A office building with a steel structure. Catering to technology and life science companies, the building design offers efficient and open floor plates ranging from 45,000 to 100,000 sq. ft with floor heights ranging from 16 to 18 ft. Sustainably focused, the building is designed to achieve LEED Gold and Fitwel 2-Star Certification.

AMENITIES BUILDING

Welcoming employees to the Southline campus, the single-story, 29,225 sq. ft. mass timber Amenities Building includes a state-of-the-art fitness center, restaurant and bar, and outdoor terraces. This building is also designed to achieve LEED Gold Certification.  

PARKING STRUCTURE

The new 6-story, 289,000-sq.-ft. cast-in-place concrete parking structure will accommodate up to 987 vehicles.

Overhead view of the Southline campus that shows all 7-building including tow parking structure and the proximity to Caltrain and San Bruno
Glass front view of Building One with cars driving by with people walking and cycling on the opposite side of the street.
An across the street view of a one-story mass timber building that includes a pedestrian walking a dog and two people on the sidewalk conversing.
Exterior street side view of 6-story parking structure with people using the pedestrian crossing
Courtyard view with people socializing with a skyline view of two of Southline campus buildings.

Aerial View of Southline Campus Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Building One - Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

1-story mass timber Amenities Building Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

6-story parking structure Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Southline Courtyard - Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Overhead view of the Southline campus that shows all 7-building including tow parking structure and the proximity to Caltrain and San Bruno

Aerial View of Southline Campus Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Glass front view of Building One with cars driving by with people walking and cycling on the opposite side of the street.

Building One - Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

An across the street view of a one-story mass timber building that includes a pedestrian walking a dog and two people on the sidewalk conversing.

1-story mass timber Amenities Building Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Exterior street side view of 6-story parking structure with people using the pedestrian crossing

6-story parking structure Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Courtyard view with people socializing with a skyline view of two of Southline campus buildings.

Southline Courtyard - Rendering courtesy of DES Architects + Engineers

Optimizing

Project Delivery

Like many developments in the Bay Area, Southline has been challenged with rising construction costs and materials delays stemming from the global pandemic. If not addressed, each challenge could significantly impact Phase 1 of the project and the entire development. DPR leveraged our design-to-build approach to mitigate these challenges, optimize the construction process, identify cost savings, and create schedule efficiencies.

Design-to-build creates consistency and predictability in project delivery from initial concepts through occupancy. By applying principles of manufacturing with a builder’s mindset, the project team identified several opportunities across the Southline project to build structures more efficiently and at reduced cost.

Southline:

Pivoting to Mass Timber

Initially, Southline’s Amenities Building was designed to be built using a traditional steel structure. By sharing their subject matter and constructability expertise early in the design phase, DPR team members identified cost and schedule savings opportunities that could be achieved by changing the structural design from steel to mass timber.

As strong as steel but weighing considerably less, using a mass timber structure allowed the team to use lighter foundations, reducing the building’s overall concrete costs. Mass timber’s natural warmth and comforting aesthetics eliminated the need for many interior finishes, like drywall, throughout the building. Limiting these finishes reduced the total cost of materials and the time required to complete the interior build-out.

In addition to helping achieve the building’s sustainability goals, switching to mass timber positively impacted the project by reducing the schedule duration.

Front lobby of mass timber amenities building with two individuals conversing and another sitting down having a drink.
Southline:

Refined Parking Structure Design

Working with GPLA, Inc., a strategic partner, DPR’s self-perform concrete team engaged the owner and design team before design documents were published to validate the design and parking programming. 

A notable change was transitioning the structure’s design from a mat foundation to a grade beam foundation and concentrating footings underneath the walls and columns. This allowed the team to remove all unnecessary concrete that did not benefit the building structurally. The team recommended prefabricating the rebar cages required for the grade beams, streamlining the construction process and creating a safer onsite working environment.

The team also found opportunities by pulling all shear walls into the center of the building. This change allows for more air movement, daylight and an overall improved experience for the user. By taking the parking structure on with a design-to-build approach and sharing historical costs, constructability and engineering expertise, the team achieved significant cost and schedule savings.

Overhead view of parking structure concrete foundation
Front lobby of mass timber amenities building with two individuals conversing and another sitting down having a drink.
Southline:

Pivoting to Mass Timber

Initially, Southline’s Amenities Building was designed to be built using a traditional steel structure. By sharing their subject matter and constructability expertise early in the design phase, DPR team members identified cost and schedule savings opportunities that could be achieved by changing the structural design from steel to mass timber.

As strong as steel but weighing considerably less, using a mass timber structure allowed the team to use lighter foundations, reducing the building’s overall concrete costs. Mass timber’s natural warmth and comforting aesthetics eliminated the need for many interior finishes, like drywall, throughout the building. Limiting these finishes reduced the total cost of materials and the time required to complete the interior build-out.

In addition to helping achieve the building’s sustainability goals, switching to mass timber positively impacted the project by reducing the schedule duration.

Overhead view of parking structure concrete foundation
Southline:

Refined Parking Structure Design

Working with GPLA, Inc., a strategic partner, DPR’s self-perform concrete team engaged the owner and design team before design documents were published to validate the design and parking programming. 

A notable change was transitioning the structure’s design from a mat foundation to a grade beam foundation and concentrating footings underneath the walls and columns. This allowed the team to remove all unnecessary concrete that did not benefit the building structurally. The team recommended prefabricating the rebar cages required for the grade beams, streamlining the construction process and creating a safer onsite working environment.

The team also found opportunities by pulling all shear walls into the center of the building. This change allows for more air movement, daylight and an overall improved experience for the user. By taking the parking structure on with a design-to-build approach and sharing historical costs, constructability and engineering expertise, the team achieved significant cost and schedule savings.

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