Rogers Partners, Marlon Blackwell, Gensler among 2016 AIA CAE Awardees
By Justine Testado|
Thursday, Sep 8, 2016
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You hear time and time again that the right learning environment can positively impact a student's education, but it's an important notion that the AIA Committee on Architecture for Education (CAE) upholds in their Education Facility Design Awards. The yearly CAE awards program recognizes recent projects that the jury deems as exemplary educational spaces that further the client's mission and educational program — and shows off stellar architectural design, of course.
For this year's competition, 12 projects around the U.S. — and one in Canada — were selected as awardees. Take a gander at them below. Perhaps you might learn something from them.
AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE
Henderson Hopkins School; Baltimore
Architect: ROGERS PARTNERS
Project summary: “A 125,000-square-foot, K-8 partnership school and early childhood center is a progressive learning environment for children and a laboratory for the next generation of educators. The school is a cluster of ‘containers for learning’ inspired by East Baltimore’s row houses, stoops, and social civic spaces. Through its intentionally porous, safe, urban plan, and the craftsmanship of light, materiality and performance, its design respects history and supports the future of education and of its neighborhood.”
Mundo Verde Bilingual Public Charter School; Washington, DC
Architect: Studio Twenty Seven Architecture
Project summary: “Mundo Verde is a bilingual, sustainability-focused public charter that consists of two buildings: the renewed and refined historic school and a new Pre-K annex. Within the older building, breakout nooks and cubbies are carved from the generous corridors and abandoned ventilation chases. New windows provide natural light to the building core. As in the Annex, high ceilings and grand window expanses are supported by highly coordinated building system integration. The Pre-K annex facade is designed to be deferential to the historic school. A third floor learning terrace, large window openings, and building orientation provide for light-filled classrooms which frame the natural landscape of the interior play court.”
Richard Ivey Building, Richard Ivey School of Business, Western University; London, Ontario, Canada
Architect: Hariri Pontarini Architects
Project summary: “Echoing the architecture of Western University’s campus, a full height great hall anchors the main circulation, with the dining hall, library and amphitheatre extending into the surrounding landscape as distinct pavilions. Designing from the inside out, the architects created spaces that support Ivey’s unique case-based and team learning pedagogy. The research-based design process involved numerous workshops and a survey of 60 top business schools. The building’s materials—stone, concrete, glass, copper, steel, walnut, and Douglas fir—were selected for their elemental and timeless qualities. Innovative site strategies and embedded technologies were employed to achieve a sustainable design.”
Regional Plant 2 Teaching Facility, Wake Technical Community College; Raleigh, NC
Architect: Clark Nexsen
Project summary: “Located at the entrance of Wake Tech Community College, building creates a gateway to the campus and symbolizes the merging of technology, education and sustainability. While the primary function of the Regional Plant is to house heating and cooling systems, the project was an opportunity to highlight the striking aesthetic of building technology and to create a unique educational experience that reveals technology’s role in preserving the beauty of the natural world. The building serves as an educational facility for teaching students about energy efficient building systems. A simple rectilinear glass and steel box with a perforated metal screen layer houses, screens and displays the technology and creates a unique educational space for the college.”
Vol Walker Hall Renovation & The Steven L. Anderson Design Center, University of Arkansas; Fayetteville, AR
Architect: Marlon Blackwell Architects
Associate Architect: Polk Stanley Wilcox Architects
Project summary: “The addition provides 37,000 square feet of new studio, faculty office, and seminar space as well as a 200 seat auditorium and an exhibition gallery. This project is a complex but resolute hybrid of a historic restoration and a contemporary insertion and expansion. Post-tensioned concrete and Indiana limestone honor the weight and substance of the historic, while the west-facing fritted glass brise-soleil and steel curtainwall create a contemporary figure. The overall design is a didactic model, establishing a tangible discourse between past and present, while providing state of the art facilities for 21st century architectural and design education.”
Seton Hill Arts Center, Seton Hill University; Greensburg, PA
Architect: designLAB architects
Associate Architect: BSHM Architects
Project summary: “Channeling the Pittsburgh area’s industrial heritage, the steel frame and metal clad building was conceived as a ‘Factory for the Arts.’ The project features an outdoor Arts Yard where the making of 3D arts is visible from the commercial Main Street in its host city of Greensburg. The four-level facility features a full complement of studio spaces for traditional disciplines like painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture, dance and theater, along with tech-heavy digital and graphic arts. The new building is an economic catalyst for the city’s cultural district, drawing local artists, gallery observers, and performing arts attendees to support and critique student work.”
AWARDS OF MERIT
Fayetteville High School Addition and Renovation; Fayetteville, AR
Architect: Hight Jackson Associates
Associate Architect: DLR Group and Marlon Blackwell Architects
Project summary: “To maintain its competitive advantage in academics, Fayetteville Public Schools tasked the design team to strategically re-structure its high school education program into a small learning community (SLC) model. At more than 500,000 square feet, this project is the largest civic project in Fayetteville over the past 50 years. SLCs are designed with core learning studios that feature discovery, project-based learning, digital and applied learning labs to foster collaboration. Distributed administration, resource centers and dining allow students to spend a majority of their day within their SLC. The addition features abundant glass and overlooks a new landscaped street that creates a collegiate campus feel reflective of the school’s ties to the University of Arkansas.”
Harvard Business School, Tata Hall; Boston
Architect: William Rawn Associates, Architects, Inc.
Project summary: “Located on the banks of the Charles River, the arc-shaped building creates a porous edge to the campus and a new sense of openness between the school and the city of Boston. Dedicated to the Executive Education program the building groups students into clusters of eight-person suites, each with a common space for work, collaboration and presentations. The detailing and performance of the exterior facade allows the transparency of the ground floors to expose the public parts of the building.”
GateWay Community College Integrated Education Building; Phoenix
Architect: SmithGroupJJR
Project summary: “As an anchor in the heart of campus, this 122,000-square-foot facility meshes an entire new campus of functions into a single three-story structure. The building integrates mediated classrooms with life and physical science labs, a campus library, learning center, one-stop-shop for student services, and a multi-purpose classroom for performing arts. Outdoor spaces, both at grade and at the upper levels of the building, provide a popular amenity and an enhancement to student community life. Such spaces include an accessible roof deck and other educational areas catering to different college and community functions throughout the year. The project is targeting LEED Gold Certification.”
Kennedy Child Study Center; East Harlem, NY
Architect: Pell Overton Architects
Project summary: “Renovating a 1930’s warehouse building, the design team’s adaptive reuse of the 25,000-square-foot space presented a number of difficult challenges, including an unusually low ceiling and absence of any natural light. In response, one primary design feature took the form of a series of large, colorful lighting bays cut into the otherwise smooth ceiling effectively creating the perception of greater height and illumination from above. To further address the compressed nature of the lower floor, the administrative offices are arranged around two large open work areas, providing direct visual access to new windows and allowing natural daylight to filter deeper into the floor.”
Indian Springs School; Birmingham, AL
Architect: Lake|Flato Architects
Associate Architect: ArchitectureWorks
Project summary: “The 350-acre boarding and day school campus, originally planned by the Olmstead Brothers, was functional and serviceable but aging facilities were inhibiting the growth of educational programs and opportunities. This first phase of a comprehensive master plan includes new academic and administrative buildings and complementary landscapes that create a memorable, meaningful place. Porch ceilings and overhangs are crafted of wood and are natural frames of the surrounding environment. Roof monitors on the buildings provide daylighting to each classroom, while a storefront system and high-performance glazing afford views along the covered walkways and to the campus beyond. The project is targeting LEED Silver certification.”
Dwight-Englewood School Hajjar STEM Center; Englewood, NJ
Architect: Gensler
Project summary: “This new building at Dwight-Englewood embodies the school’s STEM mission, while still blending into the existing campus. Designers found inspiration in the integrative STEM curriculum to create a facility that fosters a cross-disciplinary community and is adaptable to change. Inside, seven flexible classrooms and eight science labs center around a double height community area that serves as an “Innovation Hub” where students are free to explore. Moveable furniture, audio-visual capabilities and writable surfaces encourage students to “hack” the space and their own learning process. Contrasting with the classrooms’ brick and wood façades, the warm cedar exterior also allows the building’s character to shift with the seasons.”
All photos courtesy of the AIA.
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