University of Alberta Medical Isotope Cyclotron Facility
This project features the renovation of the existing curling rink to a high-tech medical laboratory through an Integrated Project Team Delivery/Design-Build model. The MICF project consisted of three parts - the concrete vault, the central building (22,250 sq.ft. curling rink retrofitted to a laboratory grade finish) and a 2-storey office building. The concrete vault was to house a Cyclotron, which produces a radioactive isotopes called Technetium-99m.
Schedule control and management were priority components of the pre-construction and construction phases as the completion date was fixed due to funding constraints. Stuart Olson facilitated budget Risk assessment and mitigation, which was addressed weekly between the DB Team and the University to ensure schedule and cost would not impact the success of the project.
This project achieved Green Globe certification.
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