A school of architectural thinking
Los Angeles, CA
Request InformationThe 1907 Santa Fe Freight Yard Depot Becomes the School’s First Permanent Home in a 39-year History
LOS ANGELES, CA - April 22, 2011 - The Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) today announced it has acquired its campus located in the Arts District on the eastern edge of downtown Los Angeles. The sale agreement finalized on Thursday, April 21 between SCI-Arc and property seller Legendary Investors Group includes the approximately 90,000-sq. ft. original Santa Fe Freight Depot building, located on a 4.5-acre lot stretching along Santa Fe Avenue from 3rd to 4th Street—where the school is presently located.
At 1,250 feet (381 m) in length, the unique freight depot building is so long, that if it were upended, it would be as tall as the Empire State Building.
“SCI-Arc has been a vagabond school for almost forty years,” said Director Eric Owen Moss. “We kept the game moving... SCI-Arc’s light. SCI-Arc’s quick. SCI-Arc’s dexterous. We are, and building or not, we’ll remain so. That’s how we’ll survive,” added Moss in a school-wide announcement.
The campus purchase is a significant goal realized for SCI-Arc, as the depot will be the school’s first permanent home in a 39-year history. For downtown Los Angeles, the sale of the land and the Santa Fe Freight Depot building to SCI-Arc is a key moment in the economic stability of an underdeveloped area of the city—the eastern edge of downtown. By owning its campus, SCI-Arc becomes a permanent player with a significant stake and role in the long-term revitalization of the area—the third major redevelopment zone in downtown Los Angeles along with LA Live and Grand Avenue.
“The Trustees together with the leadership have worked hard to achieve this important milestone for the school,” said SCI-Arc Board of Trustees Chairman Jerry Neuman. “This acquisition guarantees the stability of SCI-Arc without compromising its forward-thinking nature.”
SCI-Arc’s commitment to putting permanent roots and expanding in the emergent Cleantech Corridor will be a key driver in the renewal of the Eastside of Downtown. The scale of the property, and the purpose of the school, offer an advantage for rethinking a city for the 21st century, using the best and brightest minds to reinvent economically sound and culturally relevant urban solutions.
Founded in 1972 by a group of seven faculty members and approximately 40 students who left Cal Poly Pomona to create a “college without walls,” SCI-Arc has been a nomad school for almost 40 years, with previous locations in Santa Monica and Marina Del Rey. Since SCI-Arc started renting the Santa Fe freight depot in 2001—transforming its concrete shell into a school—its students, faculty and staff have helped define and give shape to the local community, and encouraged others to activate and locate to this area on the outskirts of downtown Los Angeles. During the past 10 years, SCI-Arc has taken root in the neighborhood, bringing hundreds of young people into the once-abandoned area. Today, with the campus purchase, the school becomes a permanent part of the educational and cultural evolution of LA’s Arts District.
Designed by architect Harrison Albright, the depot was originally built in 1907 as two parallel 1,250-foot long twin structures stretching along Santa Fe Avenue. Albright used reinforced concrete for its turn-of-the-century design of the depot—its second use in Los Angeles. In the early 1990s, the western depot was demolished, leaving only one of the pair standing. The renovation of the remaining structure took about 9 months to complete between fall 2000 and summer 2001, and was designed by SCI-Arc alumnus and then faculty member Gary Paige of GPS Studio, in collaboration with SCI-Arc faculty, alumni and students. The first classes were held in the depot in September 2001.
About SCI-Arc
The Southern California Institute of Architecture is dedicated to educating architects who will imagine and shape the future. It is an independent, accredited degree-granting institution offering undergraduate and graduate programs in architecture. Located in a quarter-mile-long former freight depot in the Arts District in Downtown Los Angeles, the school is distinguished by its vibrant studio culture and emphasis on process. SCI-Arc’s approximately 500 students and 80 faculty members—most of whom are practicing architects—work together to re-examine assumptions, create, explore and test the limits of architecture. Recently, SCI-Arc was ranked second in design and computer applications in the 2011 America’s Best Architecture Schools survey from DesignIntelligence. SCI-Arc is located at 960 E. 3rd Street, Los Angeles, CA 90013.
For more information, please visit www.sciarc.edu.
4 Comments
I am relaying an e-mail from the school's Founding Director Ray Kappe, FAIA:
Wonderful news!
When I founded SCI-ARC in the Fall of 1972, with our six dynamic faculty and 75 commited students, it was always my goal to develop our school into one of the best in the country and to own our building. We accomplished the former in just a few years, achieving early accreditation and an international reputation, but it has taken us almost 40 years to achieve building ownership.
I congratulate all the members of the team who worked to make it possible. Special recognition should be given to Ian Robertson, past Chairman of the Board, who brought the building to my attention when I was heading up the search committee. He also engineered the million dollar grant that we received from the city of Los Angeles. I am especially happy that we are buying the building downtown that we wanted, and did not have to compromise. May SCI-ARC continue to flourish.
Special appreciation should also go to SCI-ARC's Founding Faculty:
Ahde Lahti
Glen Small
Bill Simonian
Shelly Kappe
Jim Stafford
Thom Mayne
As well as the 75 Founding Students, and all of the over 4,000 alumni
who are working, practicing, writing and teaching all over the world.
Ray Kappe
Amazing news for Sci-Arc, and for downtown LA. Congrats!
I attended SCI-ARC in the late 80's and will forever carry it's flag. Congratulations Ray!
Long Live SCI-ARC!!
Alright Sci_arc!
the best place to learn!
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