The Stack Modular Housing in Manhattan
THE STACK MODULAR HOUSING IN MANHATTAN
Gluck+
ARCHITECTS
Gluck+
EXPEDITOR
Code
MANUFACTURERS
Efco, Karndean, Merillat, Sherwin-williams, Vaproshield, Ceco, Corian, Craftmaster Hardboard
MECHANICAL ENGINEER
Rodkin Cardinale Consulting Engineers
GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEER
Pillori Associates
DESIGN TEAM
Shannon Bambenek
Jacob Chartoff
Marc Gee Peter L. Gluck Thomas Gluck Charlie Kaplan
James Macgillivray Brian Novello Silan Yip
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Silman, The Harman Group
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER (FOUNDATIONS)
Silman
PREFABRICATION CONSULTANT
Inc., Deluxe Building Systems Inc.
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER (MODULAR)
The Harman Group
PHOTOGRAPHS
Amy Barkow
AREA
37710 ft²
YEAR
2014
LOCATION
United States
CATEGORY
Apartments
Text description provided by architect.
The Stack addresses the need for moderate-income and affordable housing in Manhattan. It finds opportunity on a small, difficult urban site by taking advantage of offsite construction methods.
Offsite construction offers an accelerated schedule and shorter financing period, turning sites that might otherwise be considered risky and turning them into opportunities.
It is a pilot project for developing a quality and economically viable housing solution to strategically rebuilding and filling gaps in outmoded housing infrastructure in the city.
Although not necessary to this construction methodology, the design of this 7-storey residential building expresses its modular construction.
Each individual unit is legible but also reads as part of a knit-together whole.
A common misconception of “modular” construction is that the units are products; each one containing a complete apartment of a specific design. In fact “offsite” construction is simply an alternate construction method.
The building is designed according to its needs and then “cut” into pieces that can be completely fabricated in the factory and then transported and erected in its intended location.
This is the first prefabricated steel and concrete multi-unit residential building to be erected in New York City.
Twenty-eight residential units (6 studios, 6 one-bedrooms, 14 two-bedrooms, 2 three-bedrooms) were built with fifty-six complete factory-finished modules prefabricated offsite.
5000 SF of infrastructure and foundations were built on site, in the same first three months that 28,000 SF, 6 stories of building, were simultaneously completed in the factory.
A steel column grid structure was built on top of a poured-in-place concrete foundation to receive the stacked modules, and is designed to allow for wider clear spans for commercial leasing on the first floor.
The two came together in a four week period of installation. It will have taken approximately 10 months for construction—6 months less than if built with traditional construction methods.