mag

Project File: District revives abandoned building

Briarmeadow Charter School, Houston
Oct. 1, 2001

Finding new uses for abandoned buildings is an idea on which Houston Independent School District has capitalized. At one time, Briarmeadow Charter School was a food-processing plant with 90,000 square feet of space. For a price of $7 million, the plant has become an innovative school serving 550 K-8 students.

The project required the interior of the main building to be gutted, leaving only a concrete shell and some pre-engineered metal structures. The intent of the project was to instill the feeling of having a new school rather than just the transformation of an old plant. In order to achieve this goal, the design included a variety of finishes, such as corrugated and insulated metal panels, plaster and decorative concrete blocks.

A skylighted rotunda at the main entrance to the school, classrooms arranged in clusters of four around a carpeted space and a cafetorium with a movable partition further humanized the large building.

Architect for the project is ArcTec Associates (Houston); general contractor was Satterfield & Pontikes Construction (Houston).

For more information on these projects and others, visit www.schooldesigns.com.

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