Community in action for a better school |
How to turn the neccessity into a virtue? Some developers understand that their projects can't thrive in isolation, an insight which developers Toby Bozzutto and Scott Plank have declared a principle for their projects. They also applied it to the $100 million, 292 apartment building called Anthem House, which they recently completed in in Locust Point in partnership with a local school for which Scott Plank's War Horse company donated over a million dollars to improve the public elementary and middle school with a wellness center.
Anthem House: Lost perimeter trees needed to be replaced under Critical Area rules |
MRA went all the way, including a catchy name, planting of 1,300 trees, shrubs and plants, a community build day attended by the mayor, a middle school, STEM, a curriculum a partnership with Bluewater Baltimore, metal fabricators, an avian urban ecologist, a press release, a video and a website. And since yesterday also a D Center design conversation devoted to "Birdland", the name of the special offsite mitigation project.
So much "out of the box creative thinking" caught even progressive developers such as Bozzutto and Plank off-guard before they jumped on this second wellness aspect as well, even though the $16,500 tree mitigation effort had ballooned into a $400,000 project, counting all pro-bono efforts and donations.
MRA President Richard Jones on TV at Rancis Scott Key |
There is a quantitative side to it as well: MRA had figured out that all Baltimore school-yards together add up to three times the size of Patterson Park, certainly an area large enough to think about, not just de-paving school yards for green but including flora and fauna as a practice field for students, incorporated in the curriculum in support of physical activity, creativity, science and the outdoors, especially learning about three especially targeted bird species.
Mayor Pugh at the community action day |
When the Locust Point students at the Francis Scott Key Middle school were asked to design a birdhouse with wooden ice cream sticks, they responded: "I am not a builder". It is amazing "how hard it is for the kids to accept that somebody asks them to create something " says MRA President Richard Jones. But once students got into the spirit of creative making, Ryan Carver and Emily Reid of Gutierrez Studios who served on the jury found it "hard to pick a winner" out of the 60 entries. Only two birdhouse designs could be picked to be built in metal in Gutierrez' studio without causing habitat overcrowding.
Enthusiasm is contagious.
MRA had dreaded the prospect that the planned community planting day would not bring out enough volunteers to plant all the 1,300 items that were sitting in front of the school and that their office colleagues would
Students, teachers, architects and bird house designs |
Turning necessity into a virtue can have a good return on an investment, even in a case that had pretty much gobbled up MRA's entire marketing budget. The outcome that strengthened community, gave the school an attractive front yard with four distinct learning environments and giving many students a sense that creating and learning can go hand in hand, using hand and mind was already worth it even before the experience is scaled up and applied eslewhere.
Klaus Philipsen, FAIA
Project Birdland
'Project Birdland' transforms Francis Scott Key Elementary/Middle School
Landscape Architecture Magazine
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