At the transition from the parking garage to the upper steel superstructure, there are two transfer girders adjacent to both sides of the chapel. The steel columns supporting the top two floors do not align with the concrete columns of the ground floor of the parking garage. The columns in the parking garage are offset in order to maximize parking spaces. Due to this offset, the two story steel column frames into a steel girder which transfers the load into the nearby concrete column. In order to transfer the large axial forces, a W33x130 transfer girder was chosen. The column load results in large shear forces on the girder that had to be transferred to the supporting columns. The shear connection required a beam with enough depth to fit an adequate number of bolts. The transfer girder flange also needed to be wide enough to support the 10 inch column and base plate. In order to ensure stability of the transfer girder, web stiffeners were welded to the transfer girder underneath the flanges of the column. One end of the transfer girders framed directly into a 24 inch by 24 inch concrete column. Framing the steel girder into the concrete column requires that stud anchors supporting a steel plate be cast into the concrete column during construction. The double angles of the transfer girder will then be welded to the embedded plate. The calculations for the transfer girder are shown in Appendix L and a detail of the connection is shown in Drawing S09-4 and S09-5.