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              |  Image courtesy of STR Architects
 |  | Sarah E. Goode STEM Academy in Chicago was designed to  embrace positive social change in  facilities where residents share the common values that can build  communities.  Exterior athletic facilities,  accessible sidewalks and plazas, multi-functional spaces, and native  landscaping connect the school’s site elements in sustainable ways to the  neighborhood at large.   In a long-standing  association with the Chicago Public Schools, the Public Building Commission of  Chicago manages millions of dollars of work for the CPS and has been  instrumental in the "Modern Schools Across Chicago" initiative, a $1  billion dollar plan to bring brand new schools to Chicago's communities.  Under "Modern Schools Across  Chicago," the PBC and CPS have planned new high schools using a prototype design  in which the schools have a gymnasium and indoor pool, available to the public  during non-school hours.  Each project  embraces the type of positive social change and facilities where residents can  gather to share the common values that truly build communities.   Sarah E. Goode STEM  Academy, located in the Ashburn neighborhood of Chicago’s 18th Ward,  does exactly this serving 1,200 high school students and the community.  The design incorporates features into the building to make it safer, stronger, more  technologically adaptable and more environmentally friendly. Such features  include sturdy block walls, green roofs, programmable HVAC  systems, low emission building materials, and solar panels. |  
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              |  Image by Steve Hall/Hedrich Blessing
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              | The 17.3 acre site provides athletic facilities,  points of interest and education, and outdoor seating opportunities. New site landscaping was designed to complement  the modern architecture and enhance a campus-like, pedestrian oriented  environment.  It connects  the site elements to the school and the neighborhood at large. The exterior sport facilities  include a baseball field, softball field, running track, tennis courts, and  combination soccer and football field.   The site features accessible, multi-functional space including a biology  garden, diverse native plantings, community gardens, outdoor classroom/picnic  area, built bleachers and custom concrete sport seating, council ring, rain  gardens, a cistern, geothermal field, and native plant education signs. |  |  |  
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              | The north side of  the school contains 40 above ground community garden plots, a sculptural metal  cistern, and a multi-functional outdoor classroom/picnic plaza.  The community garden plots are 8’x5’ in size  and 10 of them are handicapped accessible.   The 4,000 plus gallon cistern collects rainwater from the school’s  roof.  A water gauge is mounted on the  outside of the cistern showing how many feet of water have been collected.  Gardeners can use 3 hose spigots at the base  of the cistern providing harvested water to water the community garden plots,  while overflow is released into the biology garden.  The classroom/picnic plaza has cluster  seating for 74 people with 4 handicapped accessible seats. |  |  |  
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              |  |  | Site paving and  sidewalks connect key nodes and provide safe and accessible routes from the permeable  paver parking lot, around the building exterior, in the main entry plaza, and  walks connecting the various site features, providing an ease of maintenance  and easy accessibility around the school.   A bike lane dissects the site connecting the east side of the site to  the parking lot where bicycle racks occupy the west end of the site.   Protected existing  trees along the 77th Street parkway and newly planted trees  throughout the site help to define space, provide shade, sequester carbon,  filter air and improve the quality of life for site users.  A specimen beech tree, affectionately called  the “Knowledge Tree”, is a prominent feature in the secondary entrance  plaza.  The “Knowledge Tree” compliments  the purple brick color of the architecture as do other herbaceous and deciduous  plants used in a variety of locations around the building.  Plants used around the site are thornless,  non-poisonous, and produce little fruit if near paved or other developed  areas.  Shrub species are predominantly  dwarf in character for security clearances.   The highly diverse native plant palette makes the site function as an  urban botanic garden for the STEM Academy’s biology students. The use of  potable water was minimized.  No  permanent irrigation system was installed. |  
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              | The extensive  vegetated green roofs are a system of monolithic continuous media layers using  sedum tiles.  On the larger green roof  area, expanded polystyrene foam shapes a berm to conceal an expansion joint and  create visual interest from inside the school.   Gravel nesting areas for killdeer birds, several bird houses for  different bird species, and fallen trees for perches create an alternative bird  habitat area above the biology garden.  Stormwater is  stored, cleaned and managed on the green roof, in the cistern and throughout  the landscape by key design, including the planting of native vegetation, rain  gardens, and in aggregate under the playing fields and permeable paver parking  area.  These site features increase its  overall perviousness from an initial 85% impervious condition, to a runoff  reduction of 42.6%.  Light color hardscape  materials lessen urban heat island effect along with 50% vegetated green roof  and 265 new shade, ornamental, and evergreen trees.  A  special planning strategy minimized haul-off costs by utilizing the tons of  gravel fill which would otherwise need to be removed from the site during site  prep – thus transferring savings into landscape elements.  Strategic elements of the plan that helped to  achieve this savings include raising the north end of the site, and built up  raised areas for viewing sports creating custom seating berms in lieu of  aluminum stadium seating for each sporting program on the site.  With a budget of 65 million, the overall  project cost was under budget at 62.4 million, with landscape site elements  being over 2 million of the cost.  The building and  site development strategies, green initiatives, and integrative team  collaboration contributed to the first Chicago Public School to achieve a LEED  Platinum rating.  The project also  achieved the 2014 Illinois Chapter ASLA President’s Award.  Additionally, the project has been accepted  into the Landscape Architecture Foundation’s 2014 Landscape Performance Series. Client: Public Building Commission of Chicago and Chicago Public Schools; Design Architects: Ronan/ DeStefano Architects; Architects of Records: STR Partners, LLC, Nia Architects/ JV |  |  Image by James Steinkamp
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              | Image courtesy of Steven Hall / Kate Joyce Hedrich Blessing Photographers |  
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