When the subzero windchills arrive on the Minnesota Vikings stadium construction site as they did Tuesday, project boss Dave Mansell sees his crew get smaller.
"It's about where you're from," said Mansell, Mortenson Construction's general superintendent on the project. "Guys from the Iron Range will be out there in short sleeves. But we've had a few of those guys from Texas drag up already. … They'll be back. Some people can handle it, some people can't."
Work on the $1.1 billion stadium project purred along Tuesday despite a windchill advisory that was extended through 10 a.m. Wednesday by the National Weather Service. Windchills are forecast to plummet into the 25-below range on Wednesday before heading back up toward the end of the week.
Few are more acutely attuned to the need for acclimation to cold weather than those who earn a living outdoors, like construction workers on tall buildings. "If you don't figure out how to work in the cold, you'll starve to death," Mansell said.
Everyone who shows up on the job comes in layers that include more than one jacket, flannel-lined pants and/or bibs, heavily insulated boots and gloves. On the concourses and in the pit, Carhartt and Gore-Tex are as haute as the couture gets.
But clothing alone does not a warm worker make. Mansell showed off two massive ground-level heaters that devour $5,000 in propane per day and send the heat throughout the structure. Workers can be seen backing up to heating vents throughout the stadium for quick warming breaks. Mansell said a staff of eight is devoted solely to overseeing the heating systems.
Temporary shacks throughout the concourses provide respites of 40 degrees. Workers keep extra clothes in the shacks that also hold chairs, a microwave and tools. A toastier form of shelter also pops up in some spots: insulated ice-fishing-style shelters.
'Eating more' helps
Jess Hill, an apprentice who was trying to get warm on a break, informed Mansell that the heaters weren't working well. Mansell turned to the foreman, Mark Domzil, and asked, "Why don't you buy a heater for this shack?"