Our Latest California Project is The Big One

 |  Education, Sundt People
CPP Rendering
The two eight-story towers will house 980 students and a dining facility.

Sundt’s impressive student housing resume in California keeps getting bigger. So do our projects there.

We’re starting work on the Cal Poly Pomona Student Housing Replacement Project. Once complete, the university will have two new eight-story towers that will house 980 students and a 35,000-square-foot dining facility. Both housing towers are structural concrete that we are self-performing, giving us better control of schedule and cost.

This is the largest project for Cal Poly Pomona and the biggest for our California Building Group. We’ve had tremendous success working for the California State University System (Channel Islands, San Jose State, Chico State and San Diego State), University of California System (UC Davis and UC San Diego) and private universities (Western University, University of the Pacific and Pepperdine).

“We were awarded the project because of how well we know student housing in California,” said Project Manager Mary Homan.

The project takes up a little more than 10 acres; the site is 16 acres. Included is a storm drain running between the footprints of the two housing buildings and main water transfer lines running between the dining hall and one housing building.

“It was not only challenging to design around these existing utilities, but it’s challenging to build around, over and under them,” Mary said.

This is the first collaborative design-build project for Cal Poly Pomona and the fourth for us with CSU.

“The collaborative design-build process has been working very well for the team and university,” Mary said. “We’re able to tackle issues as a team rather than working more independently, and the owner is fully engaged in the process, which helps with decisions being made in a timely manner.”

We’re scheduled to go vertical on the student housing next month followed by the dining hall in January. The project is scheduled to be completed in October 2019.