California Academy of Sciences Transition Facility
The California Academy of Sciences needed a temporary home to accommodate research, administrative, and public spaces while its old facility, in Golden Gate Park, was being replaced with a new design by Renzo Piano. The temporary space needed to endure five years of heavy public use and house exhibit and teaching spaces, a café, a retail store, a research library, laboratories, storage facilities, offices, and the large collection of the Steinhart Aquarium.
Based on what you have seen and read about this project, how would you grade it? Use the stars below to indicate your assessment, five stars being the highest rating.
The resulting design by Melander Architects emphasizes economy, reuse, and efficiency. The 217,000-square-foot, six-story industrial building allows for a clear, stacked separation of public and private uses. The first floor features the aquarium, while the second floor contains astrobiology exhibits and an interactive educational center. Administrative uses occupy the third floor, which acts as a buffer between the public floors and the collections, which are housed on the fourth through sixth floors.
Recycling numerous elements from the old facility kept costs down. Older, smaller aquarium tanks were repurposed in the temporary exhibits, concealed within a rack system comprised of plywood, Plexiglas, and infill panels. The existing retail store was reassembled in a new configuration reusing theatrical lighting. Similarly, several of the new components will also be reused in the new permanent facility. The new compact storage systems will hold many collections and the new off-the-shelf exhibit tanks will become back-of-house tanks.
The design reflects the building’s industrial origins, while being conceived as a “box of wonders” that emphasizes the exhibits while leaving the “box” untreated. The main aquarium was rendered as a curvilinear flowing form, contrasting with the building’s rectilinear nature. Materials were left in their rawest form, with concrete exposed and floor plates left open. Inexpensive yet durable materials include perforated birch and plastic laminate.
The main aquarium also has a unique transitional role. Beyond housing temporary exhibits, the 20,000-gallon, 18-foot-deep main aquarium is serving as a prototype for the new coral reef exhibit planned for the new facility. This temporary exhibit gives biologists the opportunity to develop successful husbandry techniques, incorporate the latest technology, and enlarge the aquarium's collection for the new facilities.Formal name of project: California Academy of Sciences Transition Facility
Location: 875 Howard Street, San Francisco, California
Gross square footage: 217,000 sq.f t.
Completion Date: December, 2006
Total construction cost: $13,000,0000
Owner: California Academy of Sciences
Architect:
Melander Architects, Inc.
212 Sutter Street, Sixth Floor
San Francisco, CA 94108
415 981 7087
415 981 7088
www.melanderarchitects.com
Want the full story? Read the entire article in our June 2007 issue.
Subscribe to Get Free Architectural Record newsletter | Architectural Record in print | Back Issues | Manage your subscription | Get Architectural Record digitally
