*Update: Lincoln School Project*
*Honoring our History, Building Our Future*


Honoring Our History…Building Our Future. This statement has been at the
head of every blog post since 2017, but how does it really relate to the
project? Since the beginning of the project, the School Building Committee
(SBC) has collaborated with about a dozen town boards and departments, and
this work has helped to shape a project that serves our educational goals
and advances the town’s commitment to sustainability, while reflecting the
history of the building and the campus.

One of the SBC’s partners throughout the process has been the Lincoln
Historical Commission (LHC).  The LHC is the town board that administers
Lincoln’s “Demolition Delay Bylaw” (article XXI of the town’s bylaws
<http://www.lincolntown.org/DocumentCenter/View/58682/2019-General-Bylaw-FINAL>)
which requires every building project that includes demolition to meet with
the LHC to determine 1) whether the structure has historical,
architectural, or cultural significance; and if so, 2) whether the
structure is “preferably preserved.” The LHC worked with the SBC to
understand the architectural significance of the Lincoln School and to
think about how to incorporate that history into the renovation.

To mark the transition from the first phase of the project to the second,
we invited Andrew Glass, chair of the LHC, to write about the ways the
renovated building pays tribute to its innovative history while creating a
learning environment that will serve our students for decades to come.
Sunshades on middle school; view towards dining commons.

*The Lincoln School:  Smith Building and Brook Building Complexes*

Lincoln residents and architects Lawrence B. Anderson (1906-1994) and Henry
B. Hoover (1902-1989) made significant contributions to Modern architecture
in Lincoln.  Dean of the MIT School of Architecture and Urban Planning,
Anderson, with his firm Anderson & Beckwith, designed several buildings for
the Lincoln School campus, including the Smith complex from 1947 through
the early 1950s and the Hartwell building in 1957.  Hoover designed more
than three dozen Modern houses and municipal buildings in Lincoln,
including, in 1937, Lincoln’s first Modern house.  With his firm Hoover &
Hill, Hoover also designed several buildings for the Lincoln School campus,
including the three Hartwell pods between 1959 and 1964 and the Brooks
complex between 1963 and 1964.

The oldest part of the Lincoln School, the Smith Building complex was one
of the earliest school buildings in the nation to incorporate Modern design
principles. *Architectural Forum *recognized the innovative qualities of
the complex in an August 1950 article, which can be found here
<https://usmodernist.org/AF/AF-1950-08.PDF>. As noted by the *Architectural
Forum*, these qualities include:

   - The transparency between the interior and exterior of the building
   achieved through the use of continuous bands of fenestration (windows);
   - Careful attention to how daylight enters the building, including
   through use of a sunshield between the lower and clerestory windows, which
   served to shade the lower windows from low-angle morning sun and reflect
   light up to the interior ceiling through the clerestory;
   - The use of long bar-shaped classroom buildings to create an
   encompassing gesture around the Center Field; and
   - The use of acoustical tiles to reduce noise reverberation in the
   classrooms.

Hoover’s Brooks Building complex built on these Modern design
principles.  In creating the auditorium, he used innovative acoustical
“clouds” to help direct sound to the back of the theater.  Hoover was a
master of integrating the landscape into his designs, which is reflected in
the close connection of each classroom to the exterior and in the creation
of a courtyard in the Brooks Building complex.

For the current project, architectural firms SMMA and EwingCole are
restoring much of the Smith Building complex and all of the Brooks Building
complex, working within the Modern design principles developed by Anderson
and Hoover.

   - Drawing on Anderson’s and Hoover’s legacy of the innovative use of
   technologies, the revitalized Lincoln School will be an all-electric, net
   zero building. To reduce heat load and solar glare in the classrooms, the
   design restores the use of sunshields as pioneered by Anderson.  The
   filtered light will also reduce the need to rely on artificial lighting
   within classrooms.
   - Interestingly, because in the 1940s the Town chose to build a more
   costly gable roof rather than the shed roof proposed by Anderson, the Town
   opted not to build the dedicated cafeteria and kitchen that Anderson
   recommended.  The revitalized School has a dedicated cafeteria and kitchen
   for the first time, the design of which draws on Anderson’s legacy of using
   continuous bands of fenestration and clerestory windows to create
   connections to the outdoors and to provide abundant natural daylight within
   the building.
   - Replacing the oldest portion of the Smith Building complex, the design
   for the new main entrance and Learning Commons also honors Anderson’s
   Modern design principles using transparent materials and sunshields.
   - Anderson’s gymnasium and Hoover’s classrooms with their innovative use
   of wooden beams will be restored for decades more use by students.
   - Honoring Hoover’s legacy of innovative open-plan interior spaces and
   close connections to the exterior, the revitalized School contains “hub”
   learning spaces for grades 3 through 8.  Classrooms are arranged around a
   central common space promoting a neighborhood feeling among the teachers
   and students of a grade.  Easily-operable glass partitions between the
   classrooms and the hub allow teachers and students to create larger or
   smaller learning spaces to suit the needs of students’ varying learning
   styles and allow the landscape to be seen well within the interior of the
   building.
   - The Dining Commons, Learning Commons, and Media Center will open
   directly onto outdoor terraces that will serve as outdoor learning spaces
   and community gathering areas during non-school hours. *(Note: The
   construction of the Learning Commons in phase 2 required the demolition of
   the oldest Smith building. Click here
   <https://lincolnsbc.org/lincoln-school-project-construction-phase/> to see
   videos showing the building before, during and after demolition!)*
   - Finally, the School Project has restored the Auditorium, including the
   innovative acoustical clouds.  The Town will enjoy many years of comfort at
   Town Meeting and performances in the newly renovated space!

The LHC appreciates SMMA and EwingCole’s sensitive renovation of the Smith
and Brooks buildings and the creative incorporation of Modern design
principles into the revitalization project. - *Andrew Glass*

*This week's SBC meeting is being held on Tuesday, September 14th at 7:00pm
via Zoom. Agenda and link can be found here
<https://www.lincnet.org/domain/5>.*
Glass partitions in hub; view through to the outdoors.
-- 
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