Church Expands Youth Center with Ecore Flooring - Facility Management Flooring Quick Read

2022-07-02 08:17:59 By : Ms. Angela Zhang

Trending FM Topics from Industry Thought Leaders eBook No registration required View Now » 5 Winning Strategies for Your Post-Pandemic Office Playbook » Facility Strong: How to Fund Investments in Resilience » 5 Steps to Upgrade HVAC Filtration » Sustainability in Grounds Care: One University's Success Story »

Facility Manager Cost Saving/Best Practice Quick Reads    RSS Feed

 June 17, 2022 - Contact FacilitiesNet Editorial Staff »

From modest beginnings in 1982 with a small congregation of just 30 members, the Church in Cerritos has grown steadily through the years to establish a strong foothold in the Southern California community. As more members began attending services, the congregation purchased a lot and built a meeting hall to accommodate over 200 members just three years later. In 2012, they moved to a new location in the Cerritos neighborhood better suited to accommodate the Church’s continuous growth. Most recently, the Church enhanced its facilities, even adding a recreational youth center. Located adjacent to the main Church building, the recreational center is a space for sports such as basketball, volleyball and other youth activities. 

To optimize the use of the space, the project team sought surfacing solutions that offered multi-functional performance, along with safety and acoustic properties. They were able to find a single-source solution for their surfacing needs in Ecore’s resilient flooring selections. 

“The vision for the youth center was conceived many years ago,” says Tim Wang, a Church in Cerritos - member responsible for facilitating the construction of the project. “We envisioned a space that could be enjoyed by people of all ages for a range of activities, so we had very specific priorities when it came to our flooring selections, including ease of maintenance, safety, durability, function, and aesthetics. Noise level was also a concern for our neighbors. We considered wood flooring, but we felt the upkeep and maintenance requirements would be too demanding. We also wanted shock absorbing surfaces that could mitigate impact and the risk of injury while also providing good traction.”  

The new building, totaling nearly 9,000 square feet, spans two floors with a multi-purpose space on the main level and a running track upstairs. To meet all of the performance requirements, two Ecore surfaces were specified for the center, including Bounce 2 and Performance Rally. 

More than 5,150 square feet of Bounce 2 flooring in two different color schemes were installed throughout the multi-purpose area of the center. This high-performance surface features a synthetic wood-grain surface fusion bonded to a 5mm performance backing to deliver the look of real wood in a product that is more economical, ergonomic, safe, durable and easier to clean. 

The second-floor track was finished in 3,800 square feet of Ecore’s Performance Rally product in a visually impactful blue tone. This 14.5mm engineered surface is made with Ecore’s exclusive itsTRU technology, a proprietary manufacturing process that starts with rubber that is diverted from landfills and incineration and upcycled into vulcanized composition rubber (VCR) using a pressurized process that fusion bonds the VCR to the flooring surface. The technology develops and captures energy to absorb the impact force related to aggressive functional training and return usable energy back to the body. 

Next Read next on FacilitiesNet LEED Zero Certifications Reach 23 Million Square Feet Operating buildings to deeply reduce their impact on the environment is the future of facility management.NEMA Standard Aims to Raise Accuracy of Submeters Standards seeks to help managers as they expand the use of electrical submeters in energy management applications.Are You Measuring Your Organization’s Scope 3 Emissions? Supply chain emissions are notoriously difficult to measure accurately, but it’s increasingly important to do so to gain a complete picture of an organization’s carbon footprint.OSHA Cites Two More Dollar General Stores for Safety Violations Store managers told OSHA inspectors the exit doors needed repairs to close properly and were frequently padlocked and blocked with a board while employees were present.

Operating buildings to deeply reduce their impact on the environment is the future of facility management.

Standards seeks to help managers as they expand the use of electrical submeters in energy management applications.

Supply chain emissions are notoriously difficult to measure accurately, but it’s increasingly important to do so to gain a complete picture of an organization’s carbon footprint.

Store managers told OSHA inspectors the exit doors needed repairs to close properly and were frequently padlocked and blocked with a board while employees were present.