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(Photo by Michael Goodman for ENR)
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In South Central
Los Angeles, an area long plagued by overcrowded schools,
the offspring of a partnership between the district and a
state-owned science museum is taking shape. The progeny of
the collaboration will serve two needs, as a neighborhood
elementary school with a math- and science-focused curriculum
and as a resource center for educators and the local community.
The goal is to "create a place
where people could get very excited about science," says
Dave Combs, California Science Center deputy director for
education. The structure, now approaching completion near
the museum in the northeast corner of Exposition Park, is
a long, narrow, two-story steel frame that is partially submerged
in the landscape at one end and seems to lift off the ground
at the other. It will house 24 classrooms for first through
fifth grades, clustered in groups of six that each share a
common room to be used for group experiments.
Directly to the south of the new
Science Center School building, a 150,000-sq-ft armory, built
in 1912, is being renovated for kindergarten classrooms and
to host the new Amgen Center for Science Learning. A canopied
outdoor "lunch garden" and elevated walkways connect
the new and historic buildings.
This hybrid has had a long gestation
period. Substantial completion, slated for the end of March,
comes 15 years after the project was first awarded in a design
competition to Santa Monica, Calif.-based architect Morphosis.
"Weve never had a project that has been around
this long," says Thom Mayne, Morphosis principal.
But the scheme selected in 1989
was for a very different project. Initially, the Los Angeles
Unified School District and the Science Center planned to
demolish the armory. But the project stalled, in part due
to efforts to preserve the masonry structure. With help from
the State Historic Preservation Office, the Science Center
was able to secure $10 million in Federal Emergency Management
Agency funds for seismic reinforcement and other safety upgrades,
making inclusion of the armory possible.
The Science Center and LAUSD approached
Morphosis in the early 1990s to see if the firm was still
interested in the project. "We were attracted to the
whole program and to the idea of adaptive reuse," says
Mayne. With the incorporation of the existing structure, "the
project actually became more interesting," he says.
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READY
FOR TAKEOFF Science Center School is partially
submerged in the landscape at one end and seems to lift
off at the other end.
(Images above and top courtesy of Morphosis) |
In addition to the FEMA funds,
the $48-million project draws on several other financing sources,
including various state propositions. It is also using "qualified
zone academy" bonds, a U.S. Dept. of Education program
that allows disadvantaged school districts to issue interest-free
bonds. The project has no land acquisition costs, since the
district will lease the school from the state. "Putting
the funding package together was an enormous task," says
Dean Miyazaki, project manager from 1996 to 1999 and now LAUSD
director of preconstruction services. "There isnt
any project for the district as complicated."
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| SCIENCE
PLAYGROUND Bamboo will grow in Big Lab (top). Cables
temporarily supported tension ties during floor slab reconstruction
(bottom). (Image top courtesy of Morphosis, photo above
courtesy of Bernards Bros. Construction) |
Most of the the armory will be
devoted to an exhibition and event hall that Science Center
officials have dubbed the "Big Lab." Contractors
have removed almost all of the roof over the hall but left
steel trusses intact, opening the 32,000-sq-ft space to the
sky. Inserted within this space is a cluster of multipurpose
rooms that has an elliptical footprint. An 8,400-sq-ft bamboo
garden will be planted on the level above these rooms. Mayne
estimates the plants will grow to 50 ft in three years. "For
a kid, this will be astounding," he says.
The Big Lab also will house exhibits
that "will encourage active experimentation," says
Jeffrey Rudolph, California Science Center president and CEO.
A library for educators, lab space and classrooms is also
being built in the armory and will allow the Science Center
to become involved in teacher professional development, says
Combs. "This gives us the opportunity to expand our educational
reach," he says.
Retrofitting the armory to accommodate
these exhibits and facilities while bringing it up to current
codes and seismic standards was a major challenge. A mandate
from the state preservation office to maintain the armorys
exterior appearance made work more difficult. "We had
to minimize the impact on the historic fabric and still work
around the program requirements," says Bill Wallace,
vice president of Englekirk & Sabol Consulting Engineers
Inc., Los Angeles.
For example, armory walls were
reinforced from the interior. The north and south walls were
supported for out-of-plane forces with 12-ft-deep horizontal
trusses spanning 100 ft.
Portions of the walls were also
strengthened by adding rebar and shotcrete to the inside face.
Complicating design and construction
were the unknowns lurking behind the walls of the early 20th
Century building. "At every turn we encountered unforeseen
conditions," says Rick Hijazi, LAUSD senior project manager.
The team intended to save the original
wood tongue-and-groove roof but found it was in worse shape
than anticipated. SHPO approval of the roofs replacement
with metal deck took almost three months, says Moty Eisenberg,
project manager for the construction manager, the Los Angeles
office of Bovis Lend Lease. Lead paint also complicated demolition.
"It caused a lot of headaches but it all worked out in
the end," he adds.
Another unforeseen condition was
soil too sandy to permit slot cutting for foundation underpinning.
The contractor temporarily redistributed loads to newly reinforced
walls above, wherever the foundation was undermined. "We
sequenced work so we could use the walls above to span the
load while we put new footings in place," says Steve
Burdo, project manager for general contractor Bernards Bros.,
San Fernando, Calif.
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| FUSION
Project combines early 20th Century armory (left) with
two-story addition (right). (Photo by Michael Goodman
for ENR) |
Removing and reconstructing
the first floor slab in the armory was another challenge.
Bolted to the underside of the slab were tension ties that
prevented roof trusses from kicking out. The ties could not
be demolished along with the slab and needed temporary stabilization.
The contractors solution was to suspend each tie from
above with a series of cables. "We also could have shored
from below, but this would have conflicted with underground
utility work," says Burdo.
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LAUSD and Science Center officials
hope construction and design team members are not the only
ones challenged. When the school opens in the fall, educators
are confident that students will also find the environment
stimulating. Says Rudolph: "It is a great opportunity
for us to improve science education."
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