Project Details
- Project Name
- Exelon Gymnasium
- Architect
- Wheeler Kearns Architects
- Project Types
- Sports
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 12,400 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2011
- Shared by
- Beth Garneata
- Team
- Larry Kearns, Principal
- Consultants
-
Architect of Record: Wheeler Kearns Architects,Structural Engineer: Thornton Tomasetti
- Certifications & Designations
- LEED Gold
- Project Status
- Built
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
Built on a vacant lot in a Chicago neighborhood struggling with the effects of poverty and crime, the Exelon Gymnasium is changing the daily lives of the 590 students of the Rowe Clark Math and Science Academy campus of the Noble Network of Charter Schools. In addition to providing students with the network’s first high-school regulation basketball and volleyball courts, the space hosts monthly “Town Hall” assemblies which celebrate student leadership and academic achievement. A single set of telescoping bleachers occupy one side, rather than a typical gymnasium where visitors and home teams sit on opposite sides of the court. In basketball mode, the bleachers partially extend to the sideline to seat 400 visitors. In “Town Hall” assembly mode, the bleachers extend over the court to seat all 590 students along with guests. A 22-foot side projection screen drops along the opposite wall to create a de facto stage for video, music, and spoken word performances. A typical school day requires no artificial lighting in the main space. The ceiling over the court, comprised of twenty-four coffers crowned by a skylight, fills the gymnasium with natural light. The light reflective coffers, fabricated with Tectum panels, amplify the daylight, absorb sound, and conceal the mechanical systems and audio speakers. Each skylight has aerogel insulation that diffuses light and prevents shadows on the court. Full-scale mockups were created to test the coffer angles, the reflectivity of the panels, sightlines, and sound absorption. The infill project replaces a series of orphaned lots teeming with debris and foundations of buildings demolished long ago with a community asset that will be a source of pride for generations. While the building provides a critical component of student life for Rowe Clark Math & Science Academy, it also completes the urban fabric of the entire city block, which had been piecemeal for decades.