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GNSS REVIEW Survey Economics Chances of success Stag’s Leap Winery Pre-construction plan Mobile Mapping Airport scanning AUGUST 2017

AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

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Page 1: AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

GNSS REVIEW

Survey EconomicsChances of success

Stag’s Leap WineryPre-construction plan

Mobile MappingAirport scanning

AUGUST 2017

Page 2: AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

» JEFF WINKE

PRE-CONSTRUCTION PLAN Helps Build Winery Visitor Center

Software provides cut-fill, elevations, and slope

InSite SiteWork’s 3-D Live™ updates instantly as data is entered and edited. It validates contour and other grading data and simultaneously provides presentation graphics and site drive-throughs.

Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • August 2017 • Copyright 2017 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com

Page 3: AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

I n the world of fine wine there was a time long ago when those with sophisticated palettes would harrumph and turn up their nose at the thought of sipping an American-produced wine. It was harshly referred to as drinking swill. It was thought that the climate,

growing conditions, and grapes could not compare with what is found in France or other old world wine producing countries.

Then in 1976 at a prestigious wine competition, called the Judgment of Paris, a 1973 vintage Cabernet Sauvignon won first place among ten top red wines in a blind taste test by leading French wine experts.

The winning variety was not only astoundingly good but it astounded the judges when they learned they had selected a wine produced in California, by Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars of Napa. Jaws dropped, eyebrows raised, and likely… Oh My Gods were uttered (long before OMG became popular).

The result of the tasting has been described by Decanter magazine as “a victory that put California on the winemaking map, and established Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars as a global superstar.”

Since the astonishing win which was heard around the world, Stag’s Leap has continued to produce award-winning vintages and acquire other, neighboring vineyards. The winery has grown successfully.

A coordinated cursor between the zoomed-in PDF (left) and the full-screen view (right), is designed to provide a high level of accuracy while maintaining the overall perspective of a printed plan.

Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • August 2017 • Copyright 2017 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com

Page 4: AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

Positioned seven miles north of Napa on the valley’s eastern side, Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars is located on a 240-acre estate with 90 acres of vineyards. Wine grapes have grown on this land continuously since the 1880s.

Suffice it to say Stag’s Leap has become a go-to destination for the wine elite and hordes of tourists…. all wanting to see where some of the very best wine in the world is produced. To better accommodate guests, the winery needed a larger, multi-use facility for tastings, education, and business meetings.

Winery management wanted a site for its new $7 million visitor facility that would awe visitors as much as they hope their wine does. The selected site is on the northeast corner of the estate and perched on the side of a hill. It provides vista views of the expansive rows of grape vines, the land, and the dramatic Stag’s Leap rock formation as a backdrop—in essence, a stunning view of the terroir. A vineyard is often characterized by its terroir, a French term loosely translating as “a sense of place”

that refers to the specific geographical and geological characteristics of grapevine plantations, which help form the unique character of the wine.

Choosing the site for the new visitor center launched nine months of planning, engineering, and design required before site preparation could commence for a structure that would be built on a constructed ledge that essentially extended the hill that houses a network of man-made caves which have been used for years as cool temperature storage.

“This is a complicated and complex project,” states Bill Kopling, 3D modeler and takeoff technician with John Benward Company Inc., Sonoma, Calif. “We knew that success on the project depends on accurate cost estimates based on detailed, digital plans for stripping, grubbing, cut and fill, and structural fill placement.”

Founded in 1979, John Benward Company is a Class A general engineering contractor firm providing all forms of site preparation for construction projects in the

San Francisco North Bay Area—serving Sonoma, Napa, Northern Marin and Solano Counties. A specialty area is wineries. The company has extensive experience and a notable reputation within the California wine industry.

For Benward Company, the project included site prep for a new visitors center, a roadway leading in, and two parking areas—one for 25 cars and an overflow area, which can accommodate two buses.

The big challenge was to extend the site plateau 125 feet (150 feet on the toe end) by adding 22,000 cubic yards of approved “select” fill with plasticity index of 15 or lower to meet the geotechnical requirements set by the project’s engineering firm. The building pad extension is adjacent to the network of man-made tunnels. On the site were 1,200 cubic yards of cave tailings from boring activities to create the cave network that remained when the caves were built.

To extend the site plateau and ensure fill stability for the new visitor center would require construction of a keyway at the

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Aerial views of the site show vineyards and overgrowth before the roads and ample parking were constructed to provide easy guest access to the new landscaped visi-tor center with its impressive views.

Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • August 2017 • Copyright 2017 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com

Page 5: AUGUST 2017 GNSS REVIEW - archive.amerisurv.comarchive.amerisurv.com/PDF/TheAmericanSurveyor_Winke... · the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s

base and a series of four benches measuring four-feet high by 12-feet wide for the length of the fill plateau.

Before construction could commence, Benward Company created a comprehensive bid estimate using the data points provided by Stag Leap’s contracted civil engineers.

“We used SiteWorks software from InSite to calculate exact take-off and fill quanti-ties and utility quantities for the Stag’s Leap project,” says Kopling. “The software produces graphical construction layouts which helped us explain our cost estimates and provide visual imagery to help quantify the work necessary to create the project.”

During the planning and design phase of the project there were numerous changes and refinements to the construction plan. Benward Company was able to adjust quantities and its cost estimates each time with InSite SiteWorks earthwork and utility estimating software.

One time the winery’s design team made some major changes and Stag’s Leap

management wanted to see updated costs for the next budget round due in a few days. Kopling states, “It was a lot of work and I literally had about 16 hours to produce everything to a very detailed level. Plus, I had a personal priority at the time—my wife was recovering from brain surgery. InSite SiteWorks is so powerful and easy to work with that I was able to do all the data input and modeling with her near my side, so I could address her convalescing needs. That wasn’t the best situation, but I got to tell you that the software helped me pull a rabbit out of the hat that day.”

The software’s overlay feature accommo-dated updates to the subgrade and provided 3D views of the site as it developed.

“InSite SiteWorks software helped us win the job. It also helped Benward Company, the general contractor, and the Stag’s Leap facilities management considerably with its pre-construction planning and budget-ing,” Kopling says. “A key benefit is that it helped us explore options that without it

can be cumbersome and time consuming to complete.”

In looking back on the project, Kopling had this to say: “We’re proud to have helped Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars produce an abso-lutely stunning visitor center. They are truly good folks and deserve a facility as good as the wine they produce. And I’ll always remember how the InSite software helped us win the project and made it possible for me to be with my wife during a critical time. I know we’re supposed to keep our personal lives separate from the business, but there are exceptions… and in this instance my exceptional wife deserved my attention. This software allowed me to juggle several high priorities in my life without having to make a decision on only one. The portability of the software as well as a very understand-ing boss made this all possible.”

Jeff Winke is a business and construction writer based in Milwaukee, Wis. He can be reached through [email protected].

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Displayed with permission • The American Surveyor • August 2017 • Copyright 2017 Cheves Media • www.Amerisurv.com