Santa Fe Freight Depot
Santa Fe Freight Depot is a quarter-mile-long building in the industrial area to the east of Downtown Los Angeles, now known as the Arts District.
Use as a freight depot
Built in 1907, the depot was designed by Harrison Albright, a pioneer in the use of reinforced concrete, as a railroad freight depot. The Santa Fe Coast lines secured the property along the Los Angeles River and spent approximately $300,000 building the enormous concrete building.[1] The depot was built to replace a freight center that had burned to the ground, and the narrow steel-reinforced concrete structure became a local landmark.[2] At 1,250 feet in length, the building is so long that, if it were upended, it would be as tall as the Empire State Building.[3][4] The building had 120 bays with opening on both sides, allowing freight cars to unload on one side while trucks were loaded on the other side.[3]
Conversion to SCI-Arc's campus
By the 1990s, the depot was a vacant building covered in grafitti. The building had been stripped to the concrete, with a single room as long as four football fields.[3] Then, in 2000, the Southern California Institute of Architecture, or SCI-Arc, obtained a lease on the property with plans to relocate its campus to the location.[5] Over the next two years, SCI-Arc renovated and converted the building, considered an "industrial leftover," into a 61,000-square-foot state-of-the-art architecture school.[6] The renovation was designed by SCI-Arc graduate and faculty member Gary Paige who described the building as a "found object -- one with ceilings up to 20 feet high and broad views of the downtown skyline."[7] Paige also added: "We like the unrelenting and extreme nature of the building."[7] One reviewer noted that the structure was a mixed blessing: "Time had been generous to it, giving the interior surfaces a seasoned patina akin to character lines on a wise face. The problem was typology: Being as long as the Empire State Building is tall, the shotgun building was unremittingly linear, with only one jog breaking the monotony of its quarter-mile length."[6] Another review called wrote:
"The recombinant building is a lesson in engineering and architecture. Thirty thousand square feet of studios and seminar spaces, a workshop, a thesis pit and a bridge to the library have been stacked, cantilevered and suspended to form an open-ended, permissive, flexible space. It seems that anything can happen within these walls. Enter a studio through its doorway (which has no door), and you are standing on what is more like a stage, looking out through a proscenium framed by new steel posts and girders set parallel to and in tandem with the old concrete columns and beams."[3]
Prior to the opening of the SCI-Arc campus, the neighborhood around the depot was referred to as a "gritty corner of downtown." Since 2000, SCI-Arc's presence has helped revitalize the neighborhood. However, the area's revitalization has driven up the property's value and resulted in an expensive legal battle that ended with a determination in June 2005 that SCI-Arc did not have the right to purchase the depot building and land in which its campus is located.[8] A developer also purchased the vacant land to the west of Sci-Arc, announcing plans in 2004 to construct a pair of 40-story towers, each with 384 luxury apartments.[2]
Pritzker Prize-winner and SCI-Arc co-founder Thom Mayne wrote an editorial in 2005 urging the city to step in to make sure that SCI-Arc was encouraged and preserved as an important urban catalyst for Downtown Los Angeles. Mayne noted that SCI-Arc had taken root in the neighborhood bringing hundreds of young people into the once-abandoned area, and noted that SCI-Arc's move to the former freight depot was "the prototype of an institution that resonates with energy and creativity."[9]
Historic designation
The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006.
See also
References
Vorlage:Registered Historic Places
- ↑ Big Projects of Santa Fe: Nearly Half a Million for Local Facilities; Plan for Great Freight Yard Greatly Appreciated; San Francisco Terminals Also to be Expanded, Los Angeles Times, 11. Januar 1906
- ↑ a b Bob Pool: Apartment Tower Plans Have Loft District on Edge; An architecture school with designs on the parcel next door is beaten to the punch by developers, Los Angeles Times, 12. Februar 2004
- ↑ a b c d Greg Goldin: Open Doors: SCI-Arc rediscovers itself -- and the city -- downtown, LA Weekly, 21. September 2001
- ↑ Mayor Riordan Breaks Ground for Architecture School's New Downtown Campus, Business Wire, 27. März 2001
- ↑ Jesus Sanchez: Architecture School Plans Move to Edge of Downtown; Education: Westside institute's proposal for old railway building in artists district is major boost for central city revitalization, Los Angeles Times, 19. April 2000
- ↑ a b Joseph Giovannini: An architect transforms a freight depot for his alma mater and employer in a quarter-mile-long structure, Architectural Recrod, 17. September 2007
- ↑ a b Christopher Reynolds: First the Trains, Now the Arts, Los Angeles Times, 21. Juli 2002
- ↑ Jeffrey L. Rabin: Architecture School Loses Bid to Buy Its Home; A judge rules SCI-Arc does not have a binding contract to purchase the former Santa Fe freight depot that it now leases in downtown L.A., Los Angeles Times, 22. Juni 2005
- ↑ Thom Mayne: Commentary: A Downtown Resource in Danger, Los Angeles Times, 9. Mai 2005