Loading
  • 21 Aug, 2019

  • By, Wikipedia

Freedom Center (Omaha)

The John Gottschalk Freedom Center is a newspaper production facility located at 14th Street and Capitol Avenue in Downtown Omaha, Nebraska. Built for the Omaha World-Herald, the building is considered to be one of the most automated and technologically advanced newspaper facilities in the world. The Freedom Center has been labeled a "catalyst" in the redevelopment of Downtown Omaha, along with such other new downtown development as the opening of the Missouri riverfront, the First National Bank Building, the CHI Health Center Omaha and the Gallup University campus. The facility covers four blocks, and houses the new shaftless printing presses, material handling center, assembly equipment, and a parking garage.

Design

The facility was opened in August 2001, and cost almost $125 million to build. It consists of three structures designed by HDR, Inc. They include a five-level, 321,000-square-foot (29,800 m) press hall featuring 3 MAN Roland presses from Germany; a 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m) paper-storage facility capable of storing 3,000 rolls of newsprint and a 600-stall parking garage. Large portions of the exterior are glass, allowing downtown traffic to see the storage facility and presses.

The storage facility/press hall is connected by a tunnel than runs underneath 13th Street. Most newspaper facilities of this size have been built on greenfield sites. The Omaha World-Herald was dedicated to keeping its newspaper facilities downtown, which required a more vertical structure, and the tunnel. Transfer Vehicle System (TVS) robotic vehicles are used to deliver newsprint to the press.

The presses weigh 1,661 U.S. tons and can produce 75,000 newspapers per hour. The John Gottschalk Freedom Center produces four editions of the Omaha World-Herald daily, in addition to a Sunday edition and daily editions of the Daily NonPareil for neighboring Southwest Iowa.

Construction of the modern facility served as the impetus for redesigning the layout of the actual newspaper.

References

  1. ^ McMeekin, T. "Integration key to smooth operations at Omaha World-Herald," Newspapers and Technology. Retrieved 7/24/08.
  2. ^ ""The Omaha World-Herald John Gottschalk Freedom Center: State of the Art, Concrete-Rich Challenge,", L&M Construction Chemicals Concrete News. Retrieved 8/25/08. Archived August 10, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Tours", Omaha World-Herald company website. Retrieved 7/24/08 Archived December 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Downtown development" Archived 2008-09-08 at the Wayback Machine, Greater Omaha Economic Development Partnership. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  5. ^ "Great Plains", U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Policy Development and Research. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  6. ^ Kotock, C.D. "How Omaha looks is serious business" Archived 2006-11-10 at archive.today, Omaha World-Herald. January 11, 2004. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  7. ^ "2006 Architectural Engineering Conference Keynote Speakers" Archived 2008-08-20 at the Wayback Machine, Architectural Engineering Institute. May/June 2006. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  8. ^ "The Omaha World-Herald Freedom Center Grand Opening Ceremonies: September 1, 2001", OmahaHistory.com. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  9. ^ "Omaha World-Herald Freedom Center", HDR Inc. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  10. ^ "'Scary smart' students pass the grade during paper's security audit", University of Nebraska at Omaha College of Information Science and Technology. Retrieved 7/25/08.
  11. ^ Moozakis, C. "Newspapers seizing automation with renewed sense of urgency" Archived 2006-12-28 at archive.today, Newspapers and Technology. Retrieved 7/24/08.
  12. ^ Johnson, R. "Designing for readers: How the Omaha World-Herald’s redesign changed their thinking" Archived 2009-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, Design Update. Fall 2002. Retrieved 7/25/08.

41°15′41″N 95°55′59″W / 41.26139°N 95.93306°W / 41.26139; -95.93306