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Best of 2005 Awards
Utility Temple Maintenance Garages
Award of Merit: Small Projects (under
$10 million)
A maintenance shed is a maintenance shed - unless it's a
"Utility Temple," three of which the New York City
Housing Authority completed earlier this year.
In the eyes of the Best of 2005 judges, these nifty brick-faced
buildings - which range in size from 1,800 to 4,000 sq. ft.
- prove that with a bit of whimsy and flourish, the most humble
of structures can become an architectural asset.
"This is a truly good small project," one judge
said. "I think the Housing Authority should be commended
for taking what could have been nothing buildings and trying
to do something with them on the grounds of public housing."
The garages, which cost $800,000 and $2 million to build,
house maintenance vehicles and equipment for complexes in
three boroughs - the Jackie Robinson Houses on Park Avenue
in Manhattan's East Harlem district; the Edmund Borgia Butler
Houses on Webster Avenue in the Bronx; and the Queensbridge
Houses on Vernon Boulevard in Queens.
Three project teams broke ground in 2003 on designs created
by Hall Partnership Architects of New York: Queensbridge starting
that April; Butler in August; and Jackie Robinson in September.
Work on all three finished this year - Jackie Robinson in
January; Butler in February; and Queensbridge last month.
While the structures have expected features in a garage,
such as galvanized steel roll-down doors and galvanized metal
roofs, they also have brick facing, iron fencing, and skylights
- small touches that make an aesthetic difference.
"[There's] very elegant detail in the façade,"
one judge said. "It's just great."
Each garage has singular features. For instance, the Jackie
Robinson has a waterproofing "rain wall" on the
exterior infill walls that allowed the team to hang the distinctive
façade without using sealants.
The architectural team used proportion, materials, and color
to "enliven" the setting despite a limited budget,
a goal achieved in the panel's view.
"It was very nicely done," one judge added.
Key Players
Owner: New York City
Housing Authority
Architect: Hall Partnership
Architects
Mechanical & Electrical
Engineer: George Langer Associates
Structural Engineer:
Goldreich Engineering
Queensbridge North/South Houses:
General Construction:
N.S.P. Enterprise
Edmund Borgia Butler Houses:
General Construction:
Pelcrete Construction
Landscape Architecture:
Michel & Associates
Jackie Robinson Houses:
General Construction:
GKC Industries
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