GGA Education 2019

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E D U C AT I O N PLA N N I N G AND DESIGN

CREATING ENVIRONMENTS THAT ENRICH PUBLIC LIFE GONZ AL EZ G O O DA LE A R CH I T E CTS


FIRM INTRODUCTION

GGA Design Studios LEED GOLD Certified

Creating environments that enrich public life Gonzalez Goodale Architects was established in 1980 with a mission to enrich our collective public life through design. Creating built environments that reinforce social engagement and support the advancement of our civic, education, and community-based clients is at the core of all we do. Our team is passionate about our work. We aspire to be recognized as an innovative, humancentered architectural design and professional practice, fueled by our diversity. Every project is the result of collaborative partnerships and multi-disciplinary research and design. From new public schools in urban Los Angeles, to hillside residential communities for the formerly homeless, we seek design solutions that deeply and positively respond to context and reinforce our clients’ missions. We live and grow by these three core values in the work that we do, the people we partner with and the built environments we create.

Pursue Quality

Collaborate and Share GGA

Honor our Commitments


Day Street Apartments New Tenants on Move In Day LA Family Housing w/ Gonzalez Goodale Architects

A diverse, human-centered architectural design practice With a long standing commitment to design and quality assurance, the firm has a total of 38 employees including eleven licensed Architects, a Certified Access Specialist (CASp) and a well rounded staff of dedicated and diverse designers. Beyond its three Principal Directors, the firm is further guided by a committed group of Associate Principal and Associate leadership. S-Corp Ownership Ali Barar, AIA Harry Drake, AIA CASp Armando Gonzalez, FAIA

Principals Ali Barar, AIA Harry Drake, AIA, CASp Staci Nesbitt, AIA, LEED AP

Managing Principal Ali Barar, AIA abarar@ggarch.com

Associate Principals Mary Wu, AIA Dennis Smith, AIA Hannah Trimbath

Number of Employees 38

Associates Annie Hong, AIA Jin Kim, LEED AP Robert Gonzales

GGA INTRODUCTION

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EXCHANGE AND SOCIALIZATION

FLEMINGS RESTAURANT

LA FAMILY HOUSING CAMPUS

SISTERS OF SOCIAL SERVICE CAMPUS

CALTECH STUDENT CENTER

LAUSD - RFK COMMUNITY SCHOOLS, MURAL PROGRAM


THE CITY IS THE SITE

ULV STUDENT CENTER

CALTECH HAMEETMENT CENTER

A principal motivation in our commitment

In this regard, almost every project we

to public education, mixed-use and civic

have designed embodies the concept of

architecture is the opportunity to shape the

campus and of active human exchange

communal urban spaces between and around

and socialization, at all levels of scale and

buildings.

intimacy.

It is in these spaces that the culture and

At the same time, these projects demonstrate

character of an institution is reflected, given

a wide variability based on the character,

a chance to breathe, and through public

values, and culture of an institution and its

dialogue and use of the space, to continue to

program aims, as well as the particular nature,

evolve into the future.

geometry, and constraints of each site. The City is the Site.

E X C H A N G E A N D S O C I A L I Z AT I O N

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EDUCATION PROJECTS

ALVERNO HEIGHTS ACADEMY LEARNING TECHNOLOGY CENTER ADAPTIVE RE-USE

Gonzalez Goodale Architects has designed new facilities, major facility additions, seismic renovations and remodel projects for over 30 K12 School Districts, Community College Districts, and Universities throughout California. At GGA we understand the need to provide strong educational design leadership when working with academic master-plans and strategic plans translating into design environments that maximize learning potentials. We begin with research and observation to understand a learning community, and collaborate with our clients to develop educational designs that support the best outcomes for educators, students, and communities. Some of our Higer Education projects over the last decade: LA Valley College (LACCD) Caltech Media Arts/Theater, Music and Arts Buildings Millikan Library Adaptive Reuse Programming Addition and Renovation Hameetman Student Center University of La Verne Campus Center Occidental College Athletic Department Adaptive Reuse Offices Long Beach Community College Educational, Administrative & District Complex Pasadena City College Athletic Complex, including Gymnasium and Stadium LA City College (LACCD) South Gym Renovation

Pierce College (LACCD) Campus Master Plan Update M&O Criteria Documents Criteria Documents Mission College (LACCD) Campus Master Plan Update Parking Structure Criteria Documents Rio Hondo College Lower-Tier Parking Walkway Ventura County Community College District District-wide Athletic Fac. Improv. 3 campuses Camarillo, Ventura, Moorpark


GLASSELL PARK EARLY EDUCATION CENTER LAUSD JOINT USE PROGRAM

Some of our K12 Education projects over the last decade: El Monte City School District: 10 ES Modernizations & Expansions Columbia Elementary School Portero Elementary School Four Growth Projects

SE High School & Middle & Continuation School Belmont No.11 Primary Center Walnut Park Elementary School Garfield High School Lincoln High School Solano Elementary School Expansion Franklin Es Expansion

El Monte Union High School District: Arroyo High School Mountain View High School Rosemead High School Administrative Headquarters Career Technical Education Maintenance Facility South El Monte Field House

Pasadena Unified School District: Longfellow Elementary School Allendale Elementary School Blair High School La Salle High School: Master Plan, Aquatic Complex Gymnasium, Performing Arts Complex

La Canada Unified School District La Canada High School Athletic Expansion Los Angeles Unified School District: International Studies Middle School (D-B) Huntington Park HS Modernization Multi-Campus Hvac Renovations Survey Of Venice and Lincoln High School Complex Flexible Academic Prototype RFK K12 Community Schools Glassell Park Early Education

Saugus Union School District: Es Expansion Master Plans (3 Campuses) 4 Growth Projects Somis Union School District: New K-8 Campus S. Pasadena Unified School District: Arroyo Vista Elementary School Marengo Elementary School

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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ROBERT F. KENNEDY COMMUNITY SCHOOLS


AND INSPIRATION PARK

Los Angeles Unified School District / City of Los Angeles

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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RFK Community Schools K-12 Campus Mid-Wilshire (Koreatown) Los Angeles, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: 522,410 sf 4624 students, Multiple libraries, small learning centers, multipurpose and technology centers, auditorium, olympic pool, joint-use playfields,

The context for this project is the 24 acre site of the former Ambassador Hotel in the Mid-Wilshire District of Los Angeles. The programmatic context was LAUSD’s charge to provide a genuine community school in a longunder-served area. It is a first instance of an integrated District K-12 campus, internally de-centralized by discrete Small Learning Communities. A summary of major challenges for this project included: • Housing a large program on a small site with dramatic topography, while still achieving discrete school identities and generous open space; • Acknowledging history without sacrificing programmatic needs; • Engaging an intensely urban condition without sacrificing safety; • Exceeding CHPS sustainability requirements. The architectural and cultural history of the site is reflected in interpretive reconstructions of the Cocoanut Grove; the Embassy Ballroom, and the north wing of the Hotel (re-stated as a glassy wall of classrooms facing Wilshire); in the construction of linear urban park, dedicated to the social-justice work of RFK and others, lining Wilshire; in a highly integrated public art program addressing cultural and political history on the site; and, finally, in a campus layout that reflects the skeleton of the old Hotel, albeit, in a way that is far more open to the surrounding urban fabric.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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BEFORE


Alverno Learning Technology Center Sierra Madre, CA

Client: Alverno Heights Academy High School Scope: 4,200sf library adaptive re-use to learning and technology center

Located along the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, Alverno High School is home to the historic Villa de Sol D’Oro, and over 20 Coast Live Oaks. Through the creation of a master plan, the project goals were to develop and improve the campus with its existing historical fabric; provide an enclosed gathering space; and design facilities that advance educational opportunities. We started these educational opportunity advancements with modernization work with a renovation of the existing library into a technology learning center (TLC). The project consisted of an adaptive re-use of the 1960’s traditional library lacking in technology, natural lighting, and generally up-to-date finishes. A complete systems, space, and furniture renovation now provides the campus with; flexible classroom spaces; vibrant study and social spaces; and a key space for large gatherings and student recruitment.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Arroyo High School Modernization Rosemead, CA

Client: El Monte Union High School District Scope: 18 Classrooms Renovation of 27-acre campus circulation and landscape;

The existing campus is an early 1960’s predominately one-story ‘finger plan’ campus, with an architecture of brick veneer and plaster buildings. The landscape of the central campus has reached significant maturity. The new classroom building responded to a lack of campus social space with U-shaped courtyard, addressing the entry of the existing library. Ringed by a 2-story arcade, with sculptural stairs on each end, this courtyard will be consistently activated by student circulation. The arcade piers and stair-walls reprise the brick architecture of the campus without mimicking it.

Renovation of several classrooms for the Career Technology Education; Site Utility and Accessiblity Upgrades

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Rosemead High School Modernization Rosemead, CA

Client: El Monte Union High School District Scope: 18 Classrooms Renovation of 27-acre campus circulation and landscape; Renovation of several classrooms for the Career Technology Education; Site Utility and Accessiblity Upgrades

The context was an aging campus that lacked coherence and usable central social space. A diverse program included renovation and addition to the campus library, a new classroom complex, renovated administrative offices, and re-design of covered circulation and open space throughout the campus In using new building form, in concert with re-shaped campus circulation routes and judicious use of mature landscape, we were able to create a far more socially cohesive campus, centered on a re-designed main quad. Philosophically, virtually all outdoor campus space have become usable social space. The buildings are both contextual with the original modernist campus, and bold/contemporary in their fresh use of color accent.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Solano Elementary Redevelopment Los Angeles, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: 9,000sf 2-story classroom building addition, including new administration area City of LA site work, including street vacation to create neighborhood pedestrian connection

A modern, simple box expression will become the new identity for the Solano School campus. This simple box expression creates a strong contrast to the existing mission-style architecture and will become a benchmark for the new era of the modern school to the campus. The main facade is also contrasted with different finishes, such as exposed concrete masonry units at the base and two different grades of plaster finished in dash texture and smooth texture at the top. On the same facade, a random punch-opening window system with overhangs will also enhance the contrast expression toward the array window pattern along the existing building facade. A contemporary, dynamic, playful, horizontal window mullion pattern has been introduced along the northwest facade, contrasted with a series of perforated metal panels placed vertically next to each window opening.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Columbia Elementary Expansion El Monte, CA

Client: El Monte City School District Scope : 46,700 square foot classroom building. 14,100 square foot multi-purpose building with ampitheater

Though not historic, both the planning and the architecture of the original campus were examples of neo-traditional, clean design. The school bounds El Monte’s civic and judicial center. With expansion from an elementary school to include a middle school, there came the need to provide middle school classrooms and multipurpose fitness and recreational programs without significantly disturbing either the patterns of use or the architecture of the new campus. Though the mass of both buildings was significant, and 2-story in height, the strategy was to locate them along the outer edges of the campus and preserve the open space core. Sustainability was addressed by outdoor circulation, extensive sun-shading, recycled materials, and the use of insulated translucent sky-lighting.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Glassell Park Early Education Center Glassell Park, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope : 13,000 square foot early education center; 63,000 square foot multi-family residential component and shared parking structure, offices, and community spaces.

Gonzalez Goodale Architects, in association with The Los Angeles Community Design Center, designed a joint-use community project that brings together 45 family units with an adjacent 13,322-squarefoot education center for both pre-school and school-age students, and provides seven classrooms, faculty and staff offices, and two private outdoor play yards and community educational gardens. This pioneering joint-use development is the first undertaken by the Los Angeles Unified School District. Uniting the two distinct uses is a 1,200-square-foot teacher education facility/community room built on the housing portion of the property. It is available for teachers and staff during school hours and to residents for after school and evening activities.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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New Urban LA Elementary Campus Los Angeles, CA (Koreatown) Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: 95,000sf campus library, small learning centers, multipurpose and technology centers, 1,100 students

This site sits at the southwest corner of an overall 24 acre campus, formerly the site of the Ambassador Hotel. The K-5 portion of the project, comprised of two pilot schools, occupies the southwest corner of the campus, and aligns with 8th Street. A summary of major challenges for this project includes: •

Re-engaging the site topography with the City along 8th Street

Achieving density, program diversity, joint use, and student safety in the city-center with limited land

Exceeding CHPS sustainability requirements

By responding directly to the urban grid, and providing two distinct interior courtyards, the campus both secures its grounds and achieves separate internal identity for its two pilot schools.

Another LAUSD ‘first’ is a campus-wide public art program that matured through close coordination between artists and architect. The K-5 public art installations pay homage to the site’s history, and to its place in culture, politics, and the performing arts. A central ‘floor mural’ dominates the playground’s plan view, and a 100-foot wall mural encloses one of the playground’s ends, creating a rich presence of art in the students’ everyday lives.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Special Needs Campus Expansion Pasadena, CA

Client: Villa Esperanza Services Scope: Approved campus master plan. Phase 1: New 10 classroom building with multipurpose room and central courtyard

The approximately 30,000 square feet of current building area is virtually all one-story and is highly impacted on a 62,000 square foot site that also includes parking. Institutional planning goals included: To provide an analysis of problems and opportunities at the 2060 Villa Street site; to develop a facility space program on which to envision site improvements; and to develop a master plan, phasing plan, and character sketches that communicate the future environment; Address the limited and crowded outdoor play. After measuring program needs for both facility and parking against the capacity of the current physical plant, it was determined that a virtually all-new physical plant will need to be developed, focusing on a higher density use of the site, but also on opening up usable play area for the school at the center of the site. Two distinct zones are created: A mixed-use 2-story parking/administration building to the west and a 1-story school focused around a series of courtyards on the east. Phase 1 was recently completed providing the campus a new 10-classroom building with multi-purpose room and courtyard.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Historic Elementary Campus Expansion Los Angeles, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: New 2-story classroom building, subterranean parking, increased and upgraded play space, and new food service building.

Set within a historic and sensitive neighborhood contextin Los Feliz, the need for new permanent classrooms at Franklin Elementary was balanced with the need for an inspirational and functional educational environment. Planning and design included the incorporation of a new, two-and-a-half story classroom building is sited on the northeast corner of the existing campus. The new building houses four kindergarten classrooms, nine primary classrooms, and supporting functions (teacher work room, project room, restrooms, and utility spaces) on top of a partially subterranean parking structure. The architecture of the new classroom building is broken into three main massing components: The “Bench” is the largest component and is comprised of the two-story northern classroom wing and the entirety of the partially subterranean parking garage. The Bench element is finished primarily with plaster and glazing. The “Box” is the second classroom component, a perched mass along the second floor of the south elevation, and is articulated and emphasized by the use of a patterned fiber cement panel system. Finally, the “Ribbon” is the circulation and activity space that connects these program spaces together, meandering along the two floors and to the playground below

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Huntington Park High School Modernization Huntington Park, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: 23 acre campus renovation, built 19251970’s Current work involves design and implementation of 4 new buildings, including 2 classroom buildings, gymnasium and pool structure. Remainder of campus upgrades will consist of substantial remodelling of existing building stock and complete site re-design.

Built in 1935, the aging Huntington Park High School campus fell within the district’s top ten list of schools most in need of comprehensive modernization. The master planning goals included replacing all relocatables with permanent two-story classroom buildings so that instructional spaces are in alignment with current standards and to free up valuable outdoor areas. Also identified was providing seismic upgrades if needed to at least four campus buildings and modernize remaining permanent buildings, and replace the indoor swimming pool and reconfigure the Gym locker rooms and staff spaces. Working with campus and facilities stakeholders, we analyzed the site and conceptual plans to update the master plan. Included were sitewide design options for replacement of temporary classrooms and complexes in need of an unreasonable amount of repair.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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New Design-Build Middle School South Gate, CA

Client: Los Angeles Unified School District Scope: 4 acre, 50,000sf, new middle school with joint-use gymnasium/auditorium and central quad

The International Studies Middle School was a result of intensive Design-Build team effort in competition for what was ultimately the winning design. While the architectural form is shaped by sustainable considerations, there is, in this site’s case, a happy correspondence between sustainability and the civic expression of the school. The design reflects the middle school age cohort with a building character that is light, free-spirited, and colorful, combining minimal concrete block with glass; crisp, smooth-finished painted plaster; metal trim; and a bright-orange expression of the building’s steel structure. In combination with the welcoming frontal glass and the network of social spaces, this material and formal aesthetic will provide a welcoming setting for students, teachers, and community alike.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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New K-8 Joint-Use STEAM Campus Somis, CA

Client: Somis Union School District Scope: 15 Acre site, 475 students, joint-use multipurpose room, on campus agricultural land, “Farm to School” cirriculum

Faced with aging and outdated facilities, an existing site declared unsafe by the State, and the desire to expand their curriculum to better represent their surrounding community, the Somis Union School District asked Gonzalez Goodale Architects to design and build a brand new K-8 school campus. The new campus will replace the current nearby school which has served as a central community meeting place for over 100 years. Along with Ventura-based Main Street Architects + Planners, Gonzalez Goodale has engaged the predominantly agricultural community to integrate a “Farm to School” curriculum into the new facilities. In addition to a 21st Century learning environment, the proposed design will give students access to outdoor learning areas, gardens, and instructional kitchens which will serve the food grown on campus.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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SIERRA MADRE BOULEVARD

A DROP OFF

84 PARKING

MICHILINDA AVENUE

5 2 4

B

1

1A / 3

54 PARKING

1. SWIMMING POOL

3. PRACTICE GYMNASIUM

1A.UNDERGROUND PARKING

4. NEW ENTRY / ADMINISTRATION / CLASSROOMS

(97 SPACES)

5. FIELD HOUSE BELOW BLEACHERS

2. PERFORMING ARTS

SITE PLAN


La Salle Campus Expansion Master Plan Pasadena, CA

Client: La Salle High School Scope: City approved full campus master plan

Along with Design-Build partners Pankow Builders, Gonzalez Goodale provided master planning and architectural design services for a new performing arts and athletic facilities and La Salle High School in the San Gabriel Valley. The implementation of the master plan, including final design and construction of the performing arts complex, and new athletic facilities, including gymnasium, swimming pool and athletic fields will occur over a ten year period. The performing arts complex component of this project includes a 300 seat theatre with a mezzanine level, choral and music rooms, classrooms, art and dance studios, box office, gallery, scene shop and prop storage, and offices. The project will greatly enhance La Salle High School’s regional performing arts program, the only one of its kind in the San Gabriel Valley. Following City of Pasadena Master Plan Approval, Phase 1 athletics upgrades were recently completed.

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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High Point Academy Expansion Master Plan Altadena, CA

Client: High Point Academy Scope: Campus master planning & programming aligning with strategic plans, phased build-out plan

Building on the momentum of their Strategic Plan, Gonzalez Goodale Architects worked with the Altadena based K-8 school High Point Academy to modernize and maxmize their campus building and educational program. With an institutional value of ‘Awakening the JOY of Learning’ special attention was paid to spaces which could foster innovative and collaborative educational environments while also maintaining their ability to recruit and enroll at their current value-propositioned tuition. In reorganizing classroom spaces and locations, a strong identity is formed within grade levels by focusing on the specific needs of age specific educational needs. At the same time, new space was prioritized and carved out for teacher and support staff. In developing a build-out plan which aligned with the schools long-range plan, new and reimagined spaces included an adaptive re-use maker-space, a relocated and renovated library, expanded administrative offices, a new multi-purpose meeting hall, and a new ‘Heart of Campus’ central quad connecting all grade levels to nature and student community. E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Caltech Student Center

(Integrated Project Delivery IPD)

Pasadena, CA Client: Caltech Scope: 25,000sf student

center including multipurpose space, performance rehearsal hall, and student club spaces. (including full FF&E)

Estimate/final Cost:

$14.5M/$14.5M (stipulated sum) Duration of project:

2015-Spring 2019

The new student center will serve to activate an underused portion of the campus into a social hub for students and faculty. While respecting the historically significant context of the campus and the original design of the center, the renovation will focus on maximizing open gathering space, and minimizing impact on outdoor spaces. The project also aims to maximize collaboration and trust through its Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) method - a first for the campus. Guiding Principals for the Hameetman Center renovation are: • Provide an interior/exterior environment that facilitates collaboration for all members of the Caltech community • Engage and connect the interior functions of the building with all four exterior sides in a way that activates campus life • Provide an effective design that will meet the programmed needs and is appropriate for intended uses • Design and construct a facility to maximize the quality of all components within the given project budget • Incorporate elements / materials / systems that minimizes total cost of ownership (TCO)

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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ULV Campus Center La Verne, CA The cultural goals for this project were emphatically clear: It was to serve as an introduction to campus, a mixing chamber, and an ongoing vehicle to recruit and retain students, faculty, and staff. These goals were achieved in the built outcome. The challenges of an extremely long, narrow site were turned to advantage in the design of the building, which creates an interwoven, dense functional cross-section, spatially integrating entry hall, 2-story cafe, 2nd floor academic balcony, grand stairs, offices, and a 3rd floor conference pre-function terrace. This integrated spatial tableaux is continuously day-lit by an all-glass north-facing wall.

Client: University of La Verne Role of the firm: Prime Estimate/final Cost:

$18M/$18.5M

Duration of project: 2009-2011

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Caltech Millikan Hall Adaptive Re-Use Pasadena, CA

Client: Caltech

In an effort to create more on-campus office space, Caltech proposed to repurpose one of its aging library facilities, Millikan Hall, into converted office space.

Role of the firm: Prime

Guiding Principals for the Caltech Department of Institute Relations Office Programming and Interior Renovation Project:

Estimate/final Cost: $1.28M/$1.27M

Collaboration is the most critical aspect of the work of the Institute, and the environment - in terms of programming, planning, and character - should enhance and stimulate collaborative team interactions.

A chief charge of the project is to balance the need for office privacy (both acoustic and visual) against the desirability to maximize both daylight and views throughout both floors.

Specifically, the views north to the mountains should be embraced.

Durability in performance of systems and materials is critical due to the challenges of obtaining funding for ongoing, routine maintenance of buildings.

ADA accessibility needs to be addressed per floor.

Maximize flexibility for future renovations.

Completion of project: 2015

E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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Occidental College Historic Renovation Los Angeles, CA

Client: Occidental College

Originally designed in the 1930’s by Myrun Hunt as a locker room and pool house for the adjacent aquatic center, the current Athletics Department building has been repurposed and reconfigured several times. Currently, the historic structure is a multi-decade mix of now undesirable finishes and environmental conditions including drop ceiling, bulky casework, cramped private offices, and for most - little to no access to natural light.

Role of the firm: Prime Estimate/final Cost: $870K Duration of project: 2016-Under Construction

With a need to develop the space within a tight budget and schedule constraint, the approach was taken to pull back the layers and leave the original character and volume of the building exposed. The celebration of details and structure form a dynamic but efficient work environment which fosters collaboration and functions as a recruitment tool for potential college applicants. Other guiding principles to the renovation included: •

Develop an environment that Communicates the Vibrant Energy of the Department through physical openness and transparency.

Form a Front Porch to the Campus, with the project acting as an ambassador to the campus.

Provide for a large Major Multi-Functional Space that facilitates a wide range of uses

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Major Renovation and Seismic Upgrades


LACCD Gymnasium Renovation

CLIENT: Los Angeles Community College District; LA City College SCOPE: 29,500 sf seismic, finishes, and systems renovation The project site is located along the western edge of the Los Angeles City College campus. With brick-clad neighbors to the north and south, the challenge of the external renovation was to bring this originally utilitarian building more in context with the campus aesthetic, within a highly limited budget. Internally, the migration of existing locker rooms to a new gymnasium building, created an opportunity to provide additional dance and exercise space within the South Gym, requiring, at the same time, seismic upgrades, new air conditioning, ADA accessibility, and comprehensive improvement of the building’s systems and finishes. Internally, the building was re-configured to both maximize dance/studio/ exercise space and to improve circulation clarity and way-finding. In terms of building finishes, the design took the sustainable strategy of stripping-off, rather than laying on new finishes - with an emphasis on exposed concrete floors and exposed concrete structure, with a minimal overlay of servicing ducts and acoustically absorptive clouds. Enlivening the interior passageways are side-lit, full-height wall panel line-drawings of student dance, aerobic, and yoga movements. Externally, the screening for this roof-top air conditioning is used as a continuous perforated metal ‘mask’, that wraps down over the major building entries on east and west, and establishes a stronger entry identity for the building. In response to the brick context of the campus, the building employs a simple running horizontal painted color collage that establishes a color harmony with its neighbors.

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District-Wide Athletics Facilties Upgrades


Ventura, Oxnard, and Moorpark College

CLIENT: Ventura Community College District SCOPE: Track and Field; 3,000-seat grandstand and press-box; Entry plaza with restrooms and concessions; Auxiliary field sports field improvements; ADA and fire/life safety upgrades to main gymnasium and Wellness Center support components. VENTURA COLLEGE Track and field area 200,000 sf, plaza building (restroom/concession) 3,000sf, bleacher size 3,000 seats. New sports stadium complex with all weather running track, synthetic playing field, grandstand, and main entrance plaza with concession and restroom buildings. Renovation of Athletic Event Center, small gymnasium, tennis complex, aquatic center, and classrooms. Existing field renovations include baseball stadium and softball stadium. OXNARD COLLEGE Track and field area 175,000sf, plaza building (restroom/concession) 2,000 sf, bleacher size 2,800 seats. New sports stadium complex with all weather running track, natural playing field, grandstand, and main entrance plaza with concession and restroom buildings. Construction of new softball field, soccer fields (3), tennis courts (10), and walking/running par course that winds throughout the campus. Renovation of existing baseball stadium. Renovation of existing locker rooms, training room, and classrooms. MOORPARK COLLEGE Track and field area 170,000 sf construction of all weather running track, synthetic playing field, and main entrance plaza with concession and restroom buildings at the existing stadium. E D U C AT I O N A L C A M P U S P L A N N I N G & D E S I G N

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135 WEST GRE EN ST R E ET, S U I T E 2 0 0 PASADENA, CA 9 1 1 0 5 626.568.1428 www.ggarch.com


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