|
Escuela de Bellas Artes de Carolina
New Haven
Davis, Fuster Arquitectos
An arts school is built as a sequence
of loggias and courtyards
© Matthew Hranek
|
For more photos click on 'photos
& drawings' above.
To see the people and products
behind this project click on 'people & products.'
|
By James S. Russell, AIA
The architects had to overhaul and reinvent
the existing campus of the Carolina Fine Arts School, dotted
with three buildings dating from 1928 to the 1960s that accommodated
a school specializing in music education only. Carolinas
mayor José E. Aponte-De la Torre asked the architect
to rework the school to handle a much broader range of arts,
including dance and the plastic arts, as well as music.
The existing buildings had to be retained,
however, and not just for budget reasons. The school needed
to stay in use continuously as new structures were erected
on the site. The complex program for some 900 students as
young as seven and as old as 18 included a 500-seat auditorium;
a variety of music practice rooms; studios for painting, sculpture,
and printmaking; and studios for dance, along with the expected
variety of support spaces. The school authorities also asked
the architects to create distinct identities for each discipline
in their design, while providing places for everyone to mingle.
Rather than seek an overarching "big
idea," the designers allowed themselves to be guided
by a variety of influences as they fitted the new program
into the loose triangle of open space defined by the existing
structures.
Anchored by the symmetrical U of the
1928 building, which they turned over to primarily administrative
use, Davis and Fuster drew a hemicycle of music practice rooms
around an outdoor amphitheater and stagethe one outdoor
space regularly shared by the entire school. (It is used for
performances and as a place where children can wait for their
parents to pick them up.) Another hemicycle rounds the sharp
northeastern corner of the site, creating a courtyard for
the art studios. It attaches to the long, narrow, two-story
1960s structure, which has been adapted for dance instruction
and which faces another new courtyard. The auditorium and
its ancillary spaces link the dance building to the music
and administrative buildings.
Sun-shading devices respond to pragmatic
need in surprisingly expressive ways. Transition points offer
peek-a-boo views and willful if sometimes bewildering juxtapositions
of sun and shadow, columns, piers, and screens. Each gesture,
along with the splashing of fountains, draws the visitor to
the next unfolding of experience.
See the February 2002 issue of Architectural
Record for full coverage of this project.
Formal name
of Project:
Escuela de Bellas Artes de Carolina
Location:
Carolina, Puerto Rico
Gross square
footage:
63,000 sq. ft.
Total construction
cost:
$10 million
Client:
Municipality of Carolina,
Hon. José E. Aponte-De la Torre, Mayor
 |
Architect:
Davis, Fuster Arquitectos
63 Santa Cecilia
San Juan, Puerto Rico 00911
Tel: 787-728-6660
Fax: 787-728-6615
www.davis-fuster.com
jrcdavis@hotmail.com
|
| From left
to right: J.R. Coleman-Davis Pagán, Nataniel Fuster |
|