My last post to close out my email/blog entries for the field season is
to generally share links to the photo albums from the season. This
season is no different.
An album with 60 of my favorite photos from the field season can be found at:
https://sundowner.colorado.edu/seefeldt/antarctica-2019/
(Note: These are the same 60 photos that I recently posted on Facebook, if you have seen that album.)
For those that are more ambitious and interested, a larger album with 187 of my favorite photos can be found at:
https://sundowner.colorado.edu/seefeldt/antarctica-2019-4_5/
I do not know when I will next be posting to this email list as I do not
know if/when I will have another trip to Antarctica. I appreciate
everybody who has been following along with my journeys, whether it has
been just for this past field season, or for the last five years with
this stretch of field work that I've had in my career. Thank you!
A place to share the stories and experiences that I encounter while doing field work in Antarctica.
Friday, January 10, 2020
AIMS
I have been back in Colorado for a little over a month. The combination
of recovery, the holidays, and now a run of deadlines at work has made
it an eventful last month. One of the items I alluded to a few times
throughout the field season was the rebuild of McMurdo Station.
Officially, it is referred to as AIMS, the Antarctic Infrastructure
Modernization for Science project.
McMurdo Station was opened at the primary base in Antarctica for the United States in February 1956. McMurdo was built to be the center of US operations for the International Geophysical Year (1957-58), which is the start of the modern era of Antarctica scientific research. McMurdo Station was built by the US Navy and the Navy continued to provide the support and logistics for US science in Antarctica through the 1980s under the codename Operation Deep Freeze. Because of the long history with the Navy, McMurdo has a strong influence of the Navy throughout. For example, the cafeteria is referred to as The Galley, as it would be called on a ship. Some of the heavy equipment machinery is still stamped "Property of the US Navy". Starting in the 1980s, more and more Navy supported functions were progressively turned over to the civilian contractor. This continued through the late 1990s with one of the last major functions being the helicopter support being transferred to a civilian contractor.
McMurdo Station is composed of numerous individual buildings. Most of the buildings are assigned a number (e.g. Building 155), except the numbers make no sense and are useless in helping you locate a building. In the early to mid-1990s there was a new science facility constructed, as well as several new dorms for lodging. Other than that wave of construction, most all of the buildings are decades old and it should come as no surprise that they are extremely energy inefficient. That is sort of big deal when the average winter temperature is around -15F and can get as cold as -50F. (The temperatures in McMurdo Station are frequently quite a bit warmer than they are even 10+ miles out onto the Ross Ice Shelf.) Most all of the buildings are disconnected from each other, which creates problems during Condition 1 weather when all personnel are confined to their current building, wherever that may be.
In the early 2010s a Blue Ribbon Panel concluded that keeping up with
the old and inefficient infrastructure would be prohibitively costly and
would not provide adequate support for science. A modernization of the
infrastructure was proposed with an effort to make it operationally
efficient, increase the energy efficiency, and to provide an
infrastructure to last over 30-50 years. Over the following several
years, architectural firms and review panels put together plans to
rebuild McMurdo Station. A little under a year ago it was announced that
the McMurdo Station rebuild, AIMS, would happen. Over the next
approximately 10 years, McMurdo Station will be a continual construction
zone as a large percentage of the current, inefficient buildings will
be removed to make way for the more energy efficient structures with a
consolidated footprint of the new McMurdo.
AIMS is a big part of the current field season and will continue to be
going forward. The new Information Technology and Communications
(IT&C) building has been under construction since the winter. I'm
not sure if the IT&C building is officially a part of AIMS because
it has been in the plans for about 15 years. However, it represents one
of the critical first steps. Many of the operations and resources
currently being handled in other buildings, will be moved to the
IT&C building allowing those other buildings to be removed. Several
of the C-17 cargo flights during the cargo delays in November were used
to deliver equipment and supplies for the IT&C construction. There
are also a number of activities going on around town that are being done
in preparation for the much larger construction to begin over the
winter and continue into next field season. For the last five years I
have stayed in the 203 dorms. The 203 dorms, the coffee house, the
"gerbil" (cardio) gym, one of the bars, and a current IT building are
scheduled to be demolished and removed, staring a couple months, to make
way for the main building that will be the hub of the new McMurdo
Station.
If interested, you can watch a video of AIMS showing aerial footage of
the current McMurdo Station and an animation of the proposed new
McMurdo.
https://future.usap.gov/aims-video/
I have been telling friends and colleagues that I don't think I'll ever see the final McMurdo Station. The first and most obvious reason is because I currently do not have any plans or funded projects for another field season. That could change in a year or so if a new project gets funded. However, given the general slowness that it takes to get things done, the 10 year plans for completion seems optimistic. I have left Antarctic field work twice before for over 10 years so I guess it is conceivable, and some people would say likely, that I will get to experience the new McMurdo Station, someday. We'll see.
McMurdo Station was opened at the primary base in Antarctica for the United States in February 1956. McMurdo was built to be the center of US operations for the International Geophysical Year (1957-58), which is the start of the modern era of Antarctica scientific research. McMurdo Station was built by the US Navy and the Navy continued to provide the support and logistics for US science in Antarctica through the 1980s under the codename Operation Deep Freeze. Because of the long history with the Navy, McMurdo has a strong influence of the Navy throughout. For example, the cafeteria is referred to as The Galley, as it would be called on a ship. Some of the heavy equipment machinery is still stamped "Property of the US Navy". Starting in the 1980s, more and more Navy supported functions were progressively turned over to the civilian contractor. This continued through the late 1990s with one of the last major functions being the helicopter support being transferred to a civilian contractor.
McMurdo Station is composed of numerous individual buildings. Most of the buildings are assigned a number (e.g. Building 155), except the numbers make no sense and are useless in helping you locate a building. In the early to mid-1990s there was a new science facility constructed, as well as several new dorms for lodging. Other than that wave of construction, most all of the buildings are decades old and it should come as no surprise that they are extremely energy inefficient. That is sort of big deal when the average winter temperature is around -15F and can get as cold as -50F. (The temperatures in McMurdo Station are frequently quite a bit warmer than they are even 10+ miles out onto the Ross Ice Shelf.) Most all of the buildings are disconnected from each other, which creates problems during Condition 1 weather when all personnel are confined to their current building, wherever that may be.
The Science Cargo (left) and Berg Field Center (right) are classic examples of key buildings in current McMurdo that are decades old, isolated, and extremely energy inefficient. |
The Crary Science and Engineering Center is the home of all of the science labs and offices. It was built in the early 1990s and will continue to be a key facility in the future McMurdo Station. |
The ongoing construction of the IT&C building, which is next to the Science Support Center. |
The 203 dorms and the four other buildings that will be removed to make way for the beginning of the construction of the new main building for the future McMurdo Station. |
https://future.usap.gov/aims-video/
I have been telling friends and colleagues that I don't think I'll ever see the final McMurdo Station. The first and most obvious reason is because I currently do not have any plans or funded projects for another field season. That could change in a year or so if a new project gets funded. However, given the general slowness that it takes to get things done, the 10 year plans for completion seems optimistic. I have left Antarctic field work twice before for over 10 years so I guess it is conceivable, and some people would say likely, that I will get to experience the new McMurdo Station, someday. We'll see.
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