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School’s Natural Color Palette of ALUCOBOND® Plus Cladding Addresses Sensory Needs of Special Education Students

The new Quora Education Center in Little Canada, Minn., celebrated its grand opening in August 2018 as the latest educational facility in Minnesota’s Northeast Metro 916 Intermediate School District designed specifically to address the sensory needs of students receiving special education services.


Highlights

• LSE Architects led a two-year study to determine the best design “to meet the needs of students who learn best in a safe environment free from the auditory and visual distractions found in the original school”.

• Incorporating ALUCOBOND® Plus panels in the Spectra color-shifting finishing system in the center’s design fulfilled one of the owner’s primary wishes that “this new building not be overbearingly, painfully institutional in a depressing, sad way,” according to Davidson, LSE.

• The new $43-million Quora Education Center is home to five schools – including Quora High School – and serves 300 students in grades 5-12 enrolled in both general education and special education programs.

Project: Quora Education Center

Location: Little Canada, MN

ALUCOBOND PLUS: Rusted Metal, Chestnut, Ocean, Amazon

Architect: Lawal Scott Erickson (LSE)

General Contractor: Kraus-Anderson Construction Co.

Fabricator/Installer: Atomic Architectural Sheet Metal, Inc.

Photography: ©Mark Kempf


The Project

Quora Education Center was designed by Minneapolis-based Lawal Scott Erickson (LSE) Architects, Inc., as a replacement for and on the same property as the district’s Capitol View Center – a 1950s-era traditional brick school building with poor acoustics and a lack of private learning spaces for students receiving special education services. LSE Architects led a two-year study to determine the best design “to meet the needs of students who learn best in a safe environment free from the auditory and visual distractions found in the original school,” according to an architect’s statement.

To address these issues, LSE Architects designed the new center with flexible learning spaces for small groups and one-on-one instruction as well as with more sensory rooms and natural lighting. Interior decor includes soft, movable teen friendly furniture. Attention to students’ needs also is reflected in the selection of a sensory friendly natural color palette for the school’s exterior.

Quora Education Center is clad in a total of 24,300 square feet of 4mm ALUCOBOND® Plus aluminum composite material (ACM) by 3A Composites USA in the company’s ALUCOBOND® Natural and Spectra color lines, including: 12,500 square feet of Natural Rusted Metal, 9,600 square feet of Natural Chestnut, 1,400 square feet of Spectra Ocean and 800 square feet of Spectra Amazon.

(ALUCOBOND® Plus consists of two sheets of 0.020″ aluminum thermobonded to a proprietary fire-resistant core and is manufactured in the standard 4mm thickness. ALUCOBOND® Plus provides extraordinary flatness and rigidity, excellent formability, low weight and outstanding weather resistance. ALUCOBOND® Plus wall panels have a flame-spread index of less than 25 and a smoke-developed index of less than 450 when tested in accordance with ASTM E 84, and have a Class A interior finish classification.)

The new $43-million Quora Education Center is home to five schools – including Quora High School – and serves 300 students in grades 5-12 enrolled in both general education and special education programs. The three-level 157,000 square-foot Quora Education Center also provides administrative offices for more than 200 staff members.

The White Bear Lake, Minn.-headquartered Northeast Metro 916 Intermediate School District – a cooperative program of suburban school districts located outside St. Paul, Minn. – provides intensive special education services that would be too costly for individual member districts to afford. Quora’s special education programs serve students with autism spectrum disorders, developmental cognitive disabilities, emotional/behavioral disorders and other health disabilities.

Design

The selection of a natural color palette of ALUCOBOND® Plus installed as building cladding helped to fulfill a critical design goal that “the building should not be flashy or overly colorful” to avoid distressing students with special needs, according to Guy Davidson, AIA, senior designer, LSE Architects.

“Given the former building’s inadequate site and play areas, I began to think about maximizing the children’s experience in their new play areas and how to make the building reflect that feeling,” said Davidson. “The Chestnut wood-finish and Rusted Metal ALUCOBOND® panels were an easy, natural fit into the natural landscape idea. Those colors became the unifying overall body of the building. The building’s separate programs came to be signified by the use of the ALUCOBOND® Spectra Amazon and Ocean panels – especially at the separate entries for these programs. I wanted kids looking from the playground to the building to see the sparkle of the Ocean blue and Amazon green panels and be uplifted but not distressed. The new site is delightfully expansive and natural. I think that natural feeling was also delivered in our building design.”

The ALUCOBOND® Plus Natural and Spectra colored ACM panels were juxtaposed with red brick on the building’s façade. “The owner loves the brick because the iron spot elements within each brick give the walls life with a scattered sparkle rather than the wall becoming a large singular element,” said Davidson. “The color is warm but stays a bit in the background to allow the other materials equal play.”

Manufacturer’s representative Environmental Building Products, LLC, of Excelsior, Minn., introduced the new ALUCOBOND® Natural Wood Series to LSE Architects as well as had presented the ALUCOBOND® Spectra color-shifting finishing system to Davidson for his previous design of the Jumer’s Casino & Hotel in Rock Island, Ill.

(ALUCOBOND® Natural panels feature finely textured aluminum surfaces that scatter light for a close-up visual effect while retaining the luster of smooth aluminum from afar. ALUCOBOND® Natural surfaces amplify the inherent beauty and character of brushed aluminum and other natural elements – including wood, rusted metal, graphite, stainless steel, zinc and mirrored glass – while providing the durability, light weight and ease of maintenance of modern ALUCOBOND® ACM. The ALUCOBOND® Spectra color-shifting finishing system allows architects to incorporate a unique, ever-changing color spectrum in the cladding of sophisticated building designs. ALUCOBOND® Spectra panels change colors as different wavelengths of light are reflected back to the audience, depending on the viewing angle.)

“We reviewed many, many color schemes,” said Davidson. “Some had much more of the Spectra colors and less of the Natural colors. The schemes with a predominance of Spectra were viewed as too dramatic; whereas, the schemes with predominant Natural colors with some Spectra were more calming and ‘just right’ in the end. The idea was to amplify the building entries to create individual identities into a building where seven separate programs co-existed. Students would know: ‘That’s my entry.'”

The sky-like blue of the Spectra Ocean and the flora-like green of the Spectra Amazon panels were a “perfect fit” with the Rusted Metal and Chestnut in the building’s overall natural color scheme, according to Davidson, who said he thought students “would enjoy that flash of color as well as the ability to recognize their individual entry from the large play fields in front of the building.”

Davidson said the selection of the Rusted Metal and Chestnut ALUCOBOND® Plus panels will keep the building from becoming “dated” and provide ease of maintenance for the school district.

“The fact that I could get the timeless look of wood and rusted metal in long-lasting ALUCOBOND® material – instead of actual wood, for example – is great,” said Davidson. “This building was the third constructed by this owner within three years, so they are very sophisticated about what materials work and last.”

Incorporating ALUCOBOND® Plus panels in the Spectra color-shifting finishing system in the center’s design fulfilled one of the owner’s primary wishes that “this new building not be overbearingly, painfully institutional in a depressing, sad way,” according to Davidson.

“My experience with the Spectra Cuprol colored panels on the Jumer’s Casino & Hotel showed me that Spectra is an exciting, fun material,” said Davidson. “And, per the natural color scheme selection process, we found the right balance of Spectra and Natural colors for Quora.”

Davidson brought the exterior natural color theme indoors by incorporating Rusted Metal panels as an interior accent in the center’s main vestibule. He described this interior design choice as “sometimes fun to put a piece of material at touch level to make the rest of the material that’s not touchable that much more familiar.”

LSE Architects began the design study for Quora Education Center in 2015 and partnered with general contractor Kraus-Anderson Construction Co., of Minneapolis, on building construction, which was begun in June 2016 and was completed in August 2018.

Fabrication and Installation

Atomic Architectural Sheet Metal, Inc., of Vadnais Heights, Minn., fabricated and installed the ALUCOBOND® Plus ACM and worked with LSE Architects on the color palette selection.

“This is not a ‘plain jane’ brown building,” said Rick Schmidberger, vice president, sales, Atomic Architectural Sheet Metal. “The amount of the Chestnut wood-grain and Rusted Metal panels installed on this project is unique compared to the other projects we work on. Adding the Spectra finishes at the entries helps to create a pleasing contrast without taking away from the overall feel of the exterior. This building has character but a natural look. We’re proud to have been a part of this project.”

Atomic Architectural Sheet Metal began fabrication of a total of 1,250 ALUCOBOND® Plus panels in June 2017 and completed installation with a dry-joint system in April 2018. The ALUCOBOND® Plus panels ranged in size from 6-inches by 12-inches up to 4-feet by 8-feet.

The new Quora Education Center was constructed on the property’s old football field within approximately 30 feet of the in-use Capitol View Center, which was scheduled for later demolition. In order to minimize distractions for students during construction, murals were installed around the construction site.

“The old building really was an attempt to shoehorn very distinct and, in many ways, incompatible school programs into an old junior high school building from the 1950s,” said Davidson. “To say that the new center works better is like saying that I like light bulbs better than candles. The old building wasn’t bulldozed until after the new building opened, which required extraordinary logistics during construction. Accomplishing what we did was an amazing feat.”

Introduced in 1969, ALUCOBOND® is the original and world’s best-known aluminum composite material. ALUCOBOND® is manufactured in the United States in the Benton, Ky., plant of 3A Composites. The 3A Composites USA headquarters are based in Davidson, N.C. For more information about ALUCOBOND® ACM, call 1-800-626-3365, email info.usa@3AComposites.com or visit www.3ACompositesUSA.com.


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Colors Used

Rusted Metal
Chestnut
Ocean

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