Ellis/Browning has AIA prize for charter school
By: Paul Weideman
Published online: Sunday, January 01, 2012
Appeared in: Home, Santa Fe Real Estate Guide
Edition: January 2012 Vol. 14 No. 10
Also by Paul Weideman:
An “extraordinary response to the combination of
school program and landscape.” That’s what a jury
of architects called the Academy for Technology and the
Classics, designed by Ellis/Browning Architects, Ltd.
The 7-12 charter school facility, completed in August
2007, won a Merit Award from the American Institute of
Architects, Santa Fe Chapter. The awards were announced
in early December.
Joe Browning was allied with the academy as it searched
for a permanent site and finally brought the ATC into a
bricks-and-mortar school. “The charter school started out
at the National Guard and after 9/11 they had to leave,”
Browning recently told Home over coffee. “They found a
site near Genoveva Chavez Community Center and they
set up a portable-classroom school. I met them there in
about 2003 and they were determined to build a campus.
“What they did first was find an architect. I volunteered
with a group of ambitious parents and teachers who had
little funding, but they knew I was the architect on Monte
del Sol Charter School. The site we ended up with was
free from Rancho Viejo. It’s across from the Institute of
American Indian Arts campus, a great school, so it’s a
compatible neighborhood.”
When he began working with the public charter school
on a campus design, there were about 250 students.
The built plan is 14 classrooms. “The charter school
vision is for a small classroom size and more individual
rapport between students and teachers,” Browning said.
“Mathematics and the classics of literature are important
parts of the curriculum.”
The price tag for the sitework, installation of
infrastructure, and building construction was $4,776,000.
Future expansion won’t be a problem, at least from a real-
estate standpoint, because it’s a 10-acre site.
As explained in an Ellis/Browning concept statement,
the school echoes the form of ancient settlements in New
Mexico, with its north side bermed into a natural draw
in the earth and its two-story, south-facing arc sheltering
assembly, sport, greenhouse, and other outdoor activities.
Berming makes use of the naturally insulating earth to
minimize temperature extremes.
“It’s a very simple-looking design, but there was an
attempt to be part of the land on that grand, beautiful site,”
Browning said.
The firm maximized daylighting and passive-ventilation
systems to cut energy use. Several of the other green values
in the 26,570-square-foot school are recycled-content
steel framing; a reflective “cool roof ”; efficient lighting;
roof rainwater catchment and pumice-wick irrigation; and
permeable-surface parking areas.
The approved design included an assembly space that
would also have provided additional physical-education
space, but there was no budget for that. Browning said
school officials and parents are talking about building an
outdoor amphitheater, and adding solar collectors, down
the road.
Browning and his partner, Lisette Ellis, are now
busy with an activity that might seem unusual for an
architecture firm: tearing buildings down.
“We’re doing demolition work on the old Bruns Hospital
at the Santa Fe University of Art & Design,” he said. “The
state owns the site and is hoping to develop it.”
But why architects?
“Well, with a big demolition project like this, you have to
plan and bid, and also a big component now is recycling, so
we have a waste management plan. I think we’re recycling
75 percent of the wood, metal and concrete. This is more
than a dozen buildings, about 80,000 square feet, and we’re
documenting everything for the State Historic Preservation
Office.”