Menu Content/Inhalt

Home arrow News arrow Science Center School in L.A.’s Exposition Park
We have 75 guests online
Email:
 
Advertisement
Advertisement

Contact Information:

Main Office /
Warehouse

851 Enterprise Way, Fullerton, CA 92831
Map

 

Phone: 714-808-0134
Fax: 714-808-0141

Main Office Hours:
7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. (PST)
Monday thru Friday
eMail


Science Center School in L.A.’s Exposition Park

Morphosis forcefully generates a sense of identity for the Science Center School in L.A.’s Exposition Park

By Suzanne Stephens

Science Center School is part of the L.A. Unified School District (L.A.U.S.D.)
photo by Tom Bonner
The realization that a thrusting, steel-framed, lattice-laden structure attached to an early-20th-century brick-and-cast-stone armory is actually a public elementary school comes as a shock. It’s such a far cry from the drab, low-rise, concrete-block buildings usually pushed through by school districts. The discovery that one of this country’s most aggressively original architects, Thom Mayne, FAIA, of Morphosis, designed the Los Angeles school only intensifies the surprise. Mayne has brought a sui generis architecture consistently to the public sector. If a bold and brash large-scale work, such as the Science Center School, almost overwhelms its diminutive (in height) student body, few would hold that against him: The school, for 690 K-12 students, along with a teacher-training center, brings a unique energy to a dismal building type.

While the Science Center School is part of the L.A. Unified School District (L.A.U.S.D.) system, its unusual program places it in another category altogether. With a core concentration of science, math, and technology, the charter elementary school has joined up with the California Science Center’s professional educational training and community outreach program (the Amgen Center for Science Learning) in operating the facility.

The renovation of the 120,000-square-foot armory (now named the Wallis Annenberg Building for Science Learning and Innovation), for which Kaplan Chen Kaplan Architects acted as preservation consultants, proved daunting. The team of architects needed virtually to strip the armory to its shell for an event and exhibition hall, plus install eight elementary school classrooms along with a commons room, labs, a library, and various teacher-training facilities. After removing the main hall’s first floor, the team built a boatlike structure on the new floor slab above the parking level. It contains multipurpose spaces within its prowlike form, while supporting a lush, 8,400-square-foot bamboo garden on its top deck. Just to the north of the historic building, Morphosis designed a new two-story, bar-shaped structure linked via bridges to the armory. The steel-framed, 34,000-square-foot wing contains 20 classrooms, four in a group, clustered around five common rooms reserved for scientific experiments. A long rampway paralleling the wing takes students down to the playground or to the armory, where another above-grade longitudinal bar, the lunch garden, is attached to its north edge.

The architecture of the new wing draws on Morphosis’s signature lexicon of steel lattices, bar buildings, bridges, and berms. Here Mayne pushed the linear structure upward toward the east so that his gridded lattices, bridges, and stair extensions jaggedly protrude above the intersection of Exposition Boulevard and Figueroa Street.

Want the full story? Read the entire article in our May 2006 issue.
Subscribe to Architectural Record in print, or get Architectural Record digitally

The People

Architect
Morphosis Architects
www.morphosis.net/
Principal: Thom Mayne
Project Manager: Paul Gonzales
Project Manager: Daynard Tullis
Project Architect: Mario Cipresso, Selwyn Ting, Kristina Loock
Project Designer: Silvia Kuhle, Jean Oei, Dave Grant, Scott Lee, David Rindlaub, Patrick Tighe, Brandon Welling, Eui-Sung Yi, Josh Coggeshell, Tim Christ, Fabian Kremkus
Project Team: John Enright, Jerome Daksiewicz, Martin Josst, Devin McConley, Jose Valeros, Josh Sherman, Ben Damron, Simon Demeuse, Henriette Bar, Tarek Qaddumi, Sandrine Wellens, Eric Nulman

General Contractor
Bernards Brothers
Jeff Bernards
www.bernards.com

Structural Engineer
Englekirk and Sabol Consulting Engineers
Bill Wallace, Pete Hatalsky
www.englekirk.com

MEP
Donn C. Gilmore Associates
Mike Gilmore, Rob Grant
Specifications
CMS Consultants
www.cmsconsultants.com

Hardware Consultant
Brownell Associates
Mike Brownel

Civil Engineer
Cali Land
Kevin Lai

Kitchen
Dewco

Landscape Architect
Katherine Spitz Associates
Katherine Spitz
www.katherinespitzassociates.com

Cost Estimator
Davis Langdon Adamson
Rick Lloyd
Exposition Park
Zimmer Gunsul Frasca
Master Planning
Brian Glover
www.zgf.com

Historic Preservation
Kaplan Chen Kaplan, David Kaplan
www.kckarchitects.com

 
< Prev   Next >