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Staten Island, NY | 10,000 SF | 2011 | Passive Design Features
Photographs by APT
“At the Richmond Terrace Houses in Staten Island, pivoting stainless-steel screens will allow the glass wall to be exposed when there are activities at the center and protected at other hours.”
- The New York Times
This community center addition and renovation is located within a dark brick housing project, facing its interior grounds. The challenge was to create a welcoming and open addition for the users of the Center while also enhancing its existing interior.
Our concept was to open the new addition to the adjacent, verdant grounds and to create interconnected interior spaces filled with light and air. A circulation spine with a translucent, illuminated ceiling demarcates the addition from the existing Center.
A stainless steel roof and a band of glazing wrap the new building, while inside, modular red storage units separate the new classrooms and a multipurpose room from each other. Glass partitions, some movable, are used parallel to the glass facade so that natural light can filter deep within the new spaces.
Although the client did not target LEED certification, the team designed the project to strict sustainable guidelines, incorporating abundant natural light and views to the lush grounds, materials with recycled content, and low VOC for all finishes.
Publications
2002 The New York Times, "BLOCKS; Projects' Community Centers Open Up, With Glass and Air"