Sandi Simon Center for Dance at Chapman University
Eric Staudenmaier
Product Spec Sheet

ElementBrandProduct Name
Solid surfacingCaesarstone
CarpetTarkett
Windows Metal frameArcadia Inc
UpholsteryCamira
Rubber Cork Floor TilesCapri Collection
Paints and stainsDunn Edwards

Product Spec Sheet
Solid surfacing
Carpet
by Tarkett
Windows Metal frame
Upholstery
by Camira
Rubber Cork Floor Tiles
Paints and stains

Sandi Simon Center for Dance at Chapman University

Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects as Architects

The Sandi Simon Center for Dance is an expansive new education and performing arts center at Chapman University that redefines a former orange packing house. Landmarked by the National Register of Historic Places, LOHA’s adaptive reuse strategy preserves the exterior identity while opening the interior structure with a calculated cut through the original floor that allows for a reorganization into three levels and forms a new circulation through the space. 

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

The Dance Center houses five studios for dance instruction, a performance studio that provides space for small concerts and master classes, two classrooms, a training room, and faculty offices. It addresses not only the studio and classroom needs of the dance program, but also provides spaces for students to socially engage.

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

Originally built as a two-story headquarters for the Santiago Orange Growers Association in 1918, the post and beam heavy timber frame building is representative of the industrial vernacular style of its time. Villa Park Orchards Association took over the building in the late 1960s to expand its operations. Chapman University’s purchase of the building signifies a dedication to the preservation of this local historic landmark.

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

LOHA’s adaptive reuse strategy required precise planning and innovative strategies to transform the former orange packing house, from a one-story warehouse space with an unused, uninhabitable basement, into a multi-level Center for Dance. This process included celebrating unique elements of the existing building, utilizing the original wood flooring as a material for the new design, and incorporating new structural elements. 

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

The design approach of opening the former floor of the 1918 orange packing building allows light to permeate from the historic sawtooth roof—with its north-facing clerestory windows--to all levels of the Dance Center. This innovative strategy preserves the exterior identity of the culturally and historically significant shell, while amplifying the beautiful features of the interior. 

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

Polycarbonate, selected for its reflectivity and translucency, layers walls and openings in ways that allow the architecture to reflect the ideas of movement and the ephemeral nature of performance embodied in the program. Enormous historic trusses were left exposed and rendered at once lofty by the view from the lowest level and tangible from the proximity to them at the mezzanine; and historic, operable clerestory windows have been retrofit with actuators to open and expel heat when triggered by the mechanical system.

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

The three levels allow for student performances, studios, classrooms, and study spaces within the vibrant circulation and encourages interactions and conversations to spill out of the studios into the atrium between classes, into the courtyard for warm up, yoga, social space, and into the larger campus.  

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

Team:

Architects: Lorcan O’Herlihy Architects [LOHA]

Principal-in-Charge: Lorcan O’Herlihy, FAIA

Principal: Ian Dickenson

Project Director: Ghazal Khezri

Project Lead: Joe Tarr, Abel Garcia

Project Team: Morgan Starkey, Kathryn Sonnabend

Project Assist: Kevin Murray, Wentao Guo

Interior designer: Dotrio, Inc.

Structural: Structural Focus

MEP: Buro Happold

Civil: KPFF

Acoustical: Veneklasen Associates

Historic: Historic Resources Group

Signage: IN-FO.CO

Theatre Consultant: Auerbach Pollock Friedlander

Architectural Lighting: Auerbach Glasow and HLB

General contractor: R.D. Olson

Photographer: Eric Staudenmaier

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier

Materials used:

Windows
Metal frame: Arcadia 

Interior Finishes
Paints and stains: Dunn Edwards
Solid surfacing: Caesarstone
Floor and wall tile: Arktura (acoustic wall tile); Capri (rubber cork floor tiles)
Carpet: Tarkett
Special interior finishes unique to this project: Extech (polycarbonate panels); Westcoat (concrete microtopping); Rosebrand (theatrical drapery)

Furnishings
Upholstery: Ultrafabrics/Camira
Other furniture: Hussey (telescoping seating)

photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
photo_credit Eric Staudenmaier
Eric Staudenmaier
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