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This profile was automatically generated using 19 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 19 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
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1. onlineathens.com
onlineathens.com/stories/08180 - [Cached]Published on: 8/18/2007 Last Visited: 8/18/2007
UGA planners and housing officials choose whether to install Internet access in each room or a computer lab in the building based on a dorm's location and the students who live there, said Paul Cassilly, UGA's director of design and construction.
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"There's not a rule (for who gets a lab)," Cassilly said. -
2. onlineathens.com
onlineathens.com/stories/02290 - [Cached]Published on: 2/29/2008 Last Visited: 2/29/2008
Soon after the building opened, officials discovered that water was seeping inside because of flaws in design and construction, said Paul Cassilly, director of design and construction in the UGA Office of University Architects.
Normally when a building shows those kinds of flaws, state officials require the architects that designed the building and/or the company that built it to fix the problem, and sue if necessary to recover the repair costs, Cassilly said.
But both the architect firm and the construction company that worked on Rusk Hall went out of business, he said. There is no one UGA can force to pay for repairs.
The building construction wasn't supervised by UGA officials, as most projects are now, but by a state agency called the Georgia State Financing and Investment Commission, he said.
A small amount of money remained in the construction budget after GSFIC officials signed off on the project - less than $100,000, Cassilly recalled. -
3. redandblack.com - Summer construction to update Athens by fall
www.redandblack.com/vnews/disp - [Cached]Published on: 5/3/2005 Last Visited: 5/4/2005
University administrators generally take advantage of the slow summer months to renovate buildings' interiors and begin large construction projects said Paul Cassilly, director of design and construction for the University Architects for Facilities Planning.
"Summer is a good time to start because students are out of the way," Cassilly said.
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On the whole, however, Cassilly said projects for the summer of 2005 will be low scale, mostly involving small renovations and ongoing upgrades to existing facilities.
He said the Chemistry Building's interior will be remodeled, and workers will start on a restoration to Old College -- which houses administrative offices -- that will run into the fall.
Work will begin on small construction projects near the Veterinary School. Groundbreaking for the Veterinary Animal Health Research Center and the Community Practice Clinic is also scheduled for summer.
Additionally, construction on the D.W. Brooks Mall will move into the next phase, which includes construction on the area from the Boyd Graduate Studies Building to Barrow Hall, Cassilly said.
Work also will continue on the Paul D. Coverdell Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences.
The University is in the sixth year of a campus construction and beautification project, which started in 1999.
"All of these projects are implied in the Master Plan, but the specifics aren't included," Cassilly said. "We're constantly revising and updating."
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