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Best of 2005 Awards
P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center
Award of Merit: Rehabilitation and Restoration
The P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in the Long Island City
section of Queens offers emerging artists unique gallery space
in an early 20th Century former New York City public school.
The center, which has been affiliated with the Museum of
Modern Art since 2000, houses cutting-edge modern art both
inside and out. During the summers, a jury selects one young
architect to install a massive architectural structure to
celebrate the unique urban space - integrating the annual
installations into the building for its thousands of visitors
to explore.
But the city-owned structure was crumbling in recent years.
The city's Department of Design and Construction, acting as
developer, commissioned an $11.8 million repair project that
broke ground in 2002 and finished this spring.
Built in 1893 in the Romanesque Revival style, with a wing
added in 1906, P.S. 1 has highly articulated street façades
with a bluestone and schist foundation, Philadelphia pressed
brick walls, decorative terra cotta ornament, and slate roof.
The building's courtyard has common brick walls, concrete
steps to the first floor, and 15-ft. high concrete walls.
The building was already showing wear and tear in 1976 when
the Institute of Art and Urban Resources, a nonprofit that
transforms abandoned and underutilized properties into artist
spaces, began using it. A year later, the building underwent
a massive interior renovation.
Even as the indoor and outdoor exhibition space became more
popular with art enthusiasts, the exterior envelope of the
school continued to deteriorate. In 2001, the city launched
emergency repair work to keep masonry and windows from falling
off the building, restore the damaged timber roof, and clean
the deteriorated façade to recapture the detailed ornamental
work.
Soon, the more extensive repair project was under way. The
project team installed 200 squares of new roofing; completed
structural repairs to the timber attic framing; fixed and
restored the brick, stone, and terra cotta; and installed
more than 300 new metal windows with UV protection and interior
shades.
The construction only minimally disrupted operations at the
museum, which even made the work part of a display by attaching
LED lighting to the scaffolding around the exterior façade.
Now that the exterior work is complete, another smaller project
to illuminate the newly restored façade is in the works.
Key Players
Developer: N.Y.C. Department
of Design and Construction
Architect: Wank Adams
Slavin Associates
Construction Manager:
Bovis Lend Lease
Project Sponsor: N.Y.C.
Department of Cultural Affairs
Structural Engineer:
Severud Associates Consulting Engineers
Roofing, Masonry, Structural:
Nicholson & Galloway
Façade Preservation,
Flat Roofing: Bri-Den Construction
Flat Roofing: National
Roofing
Electrical: Egg Electric
Sidewalk Replacement:
Navillus Contracting
Lighting Designer:
L'Observatoire International Lighting Designers
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