Inner-City Arts
Michael Maltzan Architecture
Los Angeles, California, USA
Inner-City Arts serves over 30,000 at-risk youth from Los Angeles public schools each year, providing a range of art facilities and services, and an oasis in an otherwise challenging urban environment.
Built in three phases over 15 years, the one acre campus was
conceived as a contemporary open air village, an indoor/outdoor
tradition perfectly suited to the Southern California
climate.

Photo © Iwaan Ban
/Michael MaltzanI wanted to create a compressed urbanism....to craft an urban village with a series of indoor and outdoor spaces.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
Located in a drab and borderline neighborhood, surrounded by
derelict buildings, Maltzan made a bold statement painting the
buildings white.
An urban community center and agent for change...a positive force
in that neighborhood.

Photo © Iwan Baan
Phase I, in collaboration with Marmol Radziner, was completed in
1995. This first stage included the renovation of an old auto body
shop into classrooms and studios as well as a new ceramics
classroom (first tower).
The architects exposed the bow-string roof trusses, added roll-up
doors, and opened the building to an outdoor plaza.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
To serve the rapidly growing community, as well as make Inner-City
Arts' facilities available to teenagers, parents and their
children, Phase II was completed in 2005, adding to the campus a
larger studio space, kitchen, a wood shop, and animation
studios.
Phase III, completed in the Fall of 2008, included a black box
theater, an administration building, new ceramics studio (a second
tower), a covered kiln yard, a wedge-shaped library/resource
center, rooftop parking deck, gardens and gathering spaces. This
doubled the capacity, enabling Inner-City Arts to serve over 16,000
students and 1,800 classroom teachers each year.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
The buildings and classrooms are arranged around a landscaped
central plaza. The "campus as village" fosters a way of living,
working and relating that informs the larger city that surrounds
the school.
This central gathering space is both a retreat from the street
beyond as well as a functional working space for the facility,
surrounded by a series of flexible adjacent studios.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
Each child has his or her own work: performance, ceramics, dance,
painting, sculpture, animation. But the group gathers as a
community to interact in the public space of the central
courtyard.
The new Ceramics Center, with its tall, sculptural tower and
outdoor stair, is an important icon for the Center and a beacon
within the surrounding neighborhood. The interior is colored bright
orange.

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan

Photo © Iwan Baan
The materials used by Maltzan are classic California, stucco,
concrete, paint, and glass, connected by a landscape of palm trees,
native plants and rocks.
"The materials are just as humble as those found on the street,
it's how you use them that counts."
Michael Maltzan
As is also true for the larger city, the way that students relate
to each other and their surroundings at Inner-City Arts actually
creates the campus. It is not simply that many individuals have
gathered - it is the way those individuals interact. The entire
campus is intended to create that sense of responsibility and
interaction. Particularly with the expansion, the campus also has
an important role in relation to the rest of the city.
Maltzan collaborated with landscape architect Nancy Goslee Power
and the graphic-design firm Ph.D on all three phases. The team
offered their services pro-bono in what has become a 15-year
collaboration.

Model photo courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Aerial Model

Drawing courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Site Plan

Drawing courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Site Plan

Drawing courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture

Rendering courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Performing Arts Building
Section

Rendering courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Library/Resource Center
Section

Rendering courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Tower Section

Rendering courtesy Michael Maltzan
Architecture
Building Wireframes
Facts about Inner-City Arts
Total area:
36,782 ft2
Architect:
Michael Maltzan Architecture, Inc.
Design Principal:
Michael T. Maltzan, FAIA
Project Director:
Tim Williams
Project Manager:
Stacy Nakano
Design Team:
Kurt Sattler
Krista Scheib
Jeff Soler
Project Team:
Owen Tang
Terence Cheng
Yvonne Lau
Michael McDonald
David Freeland
Brad Groff
Landscape:
Nancy Goslee Power and Associates
Graphics:
Ph.D
Photographed by Iwan Baan
Client:
Inner-City Arts
Last updated: December 14, 2012
See also
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ExhibitionsFrank Gehry: At Work
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TravelHotels: Hôtel Americano
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