30 in 30: #28

The Melrose Community Center by Agrest + Gandelsonas in the South Bronx is "primarily geared towards teenagers, providing them with facilities for activities such as athletics, arts and crafts, videos, and computing," according to the architects.

Melrose Community Center

The project is composed of two distinct volumes: an ovoid piece containing a gymnasium and a bar piece containing classrooms. Both are linked by the entrance. The above view shows what would be the back of the building, though here it is at its most transparent with the single-loaded corridor of the bar facing the lawn and street beyond. The front door and its hard horizontal and vertical planes shown below is a much different character. This side facing the housing blocks that the community center serves.

Melrose Community Center

While the character of the bar building is "two-sided," the ovoid piece is consistent around its perimeter. Staggered aluminum panels sit above a concrete block base. A small window near the entry gives a peek into the gymnasium's interior. If this solid form were rectangular rather than oval, with sharp edges rather than a continuous soft surface, the "symbolic aspect of the project ... in its social function for the local residents who live amongst one of New York City’s highest crime rates" might be much different.

Melrose Community Center

Down the street from this project is the Bronx County Hall of Justice by Rafael Vinoly. The massive, 775,000 s.f. complex consists of an unrelenting facade on 161st Street but a sensitively-handled courtyard to the rear. I bring this up because in this courtyard is a circular chamber that recalls this earlier Community Center both in uniqueness of form (set against orthogonal buildings) and material treatment (solid with sloping element). Perhaps Vinoly saw this earlier success and incorporated a similar feature into his more high-profile commission.

Melrose Community Center

Directions:
The building is located at the southeast corner of Morris Avenue and 156th Street. It can be reached by the B,D,4 to 161 St Yankee Stadium.

Previously:
#1 - Church of the Crucifixion
#2 - 40 Mercer Residences
#3 - Dichroic Light Field
#4 - Juan Valdez Flagship
#5 - IAC/InterActiveCorp
#6 - South Court of NYPL
#7 - Louis Vuitton Store
#8 - Ironworkers Local 580
#9 - Korean Presbyterian Church
#10 - Roosevelt Island
#11 - Stabile Hall (Pratt)
#12 - Terian Design Center (Pratt)
#13 - Higgins Hall (Pratt)
#14 - Broken Angel
#15 - Alessi Store
#16 - Irish Hunger Memorial
#17 - Issey Miyake Tribeca
#18 - Stuyvesant Town
#19 - Shake Shack
#20 - Socrates Sculpture Park
#21 - Skyscraper Museum
#22 - Taschen Store
#23 - George Washington Bridge Bus Station
#24 - George Washington Bridge
#25 - skinklinic
#26 - Blue Condominiums
#27 - Sleepwalkers

Comments

  1. I am an archi student working on case study for Melrose Community centre...can you please help in providing more info if you have any... photos..plans..anything that can help is appreciated, please send to rebel5197@hotmail.com

    thanks

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  2. dozz - What you see is what you get. These are the photos I took there; I have a few others but it's just more of the same. You should probably contact the architects for plans and other drawings...or even visit the Community Center (if you can) and see if they can share anything.

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