Final Beam Placed on First Buildings at New Cerner Campus
Jay Nixon,
Steve Dunn,
“This marks significant progress for the project and completion of the structural framework for the first two office buildings on our new campus,” said
Mike Nill, executive vice president and chief operating officer at
A tradition in the construction industry, the final steel beam, which weighed 600 pounds and was adorned with American and
“As the largest economic development project in
Jay Nixon. “With the more than 4,000 construction jobs that will be created, we are already seeing the economic benefits of this project. Once complete, this campus will further accommodate Cerner’s growth and bring up to 16,000 new jobs to the area, strengthening Missouri’s position as a top destination for growing tech companies.”
“Today’s topping ceremony physically confirms Cerner’s place as one of Kansas City’s greatest business stories,”
Guests also signed a second beam, which will be permanently displayed in the building to commemorate the efforts of the project’s construction workers.
“This ceremony is a builders' tradition recognizing the significant accomplishment of the last structural beam being put in place on a building,” said
Steve Dunn, chairman at JE Dunn. “The topping out celebration marks the end of the structural work, and more importantly is a chance to celebrate the workers who have made the project possible.”
Nill announced the first buildings will house more than 3,000 engineers and was designed with open concepts and collaborative meeting spaces to encourage creativity, dynamic thinking and community.
Details for the first two campus buildings include:
- Building 1 (south building) is 11 floors and consists of nearly 500,000 square feet. This building will include a dining hall, caf?, training labs and nine floors of office space.
- Building 2 (north building) will stand eight floors and encompass more than 305,000 square feet. It will include amenities such as a pharmacy, associate gym, a user lab and six floors of office space.
- Both buildings will have open stairways, large project rooms and ‘nodes,’ themed areas for collaboration and individual use.
Campus construction began in late 2014, with completion of buildings 1 and 2 expected at the end of 2016. Two additional buildings, the link and service center, have broken ground and are in progress.
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