Project Details
- Project Name
- Monroe Place Apartment
- Location
-
3200 Pioneer Ave. S.E.
IA
- Architect
- ASK Studio
- Client/Owner
- Four Oaks, Affordable Housing Network, Inc.
- Project Types
- Multifamily
- Project Scope
- Preservation/Restoration
- Size
- 27,741 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2018
- Shared by
- Renae Benson
- Team
-
Patrick Denahey, Architect
Brent Schipper, Architect
- Consultants
-
Other: Integrated Studio Cameron Campbell,Other: AKAY Consulting, Alexa McDowell
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $2,445,733
- Style
- Historic
Project Description
School bells were swapped for doorbells.
And the use of daylight was found to be a universal.
The redevelopment of the 1961 Monroe Elementary School into a 19-unit affordable housing apartment building is a model for preserving an underutilized structure, giving it a new lease on life while helping to solve an affordable housing shortage. As the first school building in Cedar Rapids to be converted into housing, Monroe Place was designed with the surrounding neighborhoods and families in mind. This project consisted of redesigning classrooms into two, three, and four-bedroom apartment units within the existing footprint of the building and without subdivision of the historic spaces.
The project serves as an example of success in building repurposing of a historic Cedar Rapids elementary school. The school is awash in color with an original mural and ceramic tile, in many hues, lining the building’s corridors. Original wood doors, hallway tile and cubbies were still in excellent condition. Classroom chalkboards still line the walls of the apartment units. The windows with their alternating light configurations remained intact throughout the building. The two-story ceiling height of the gymnasium, boiler room and cafeteria allowed unique loft units to be constructed in those spaces. Even the 1960’s fire truck constructed of steel pipe was being used on the playground.
The project is an example of how carefully considering light in an original design helps a building to maintain worth, even beyond the original program.
This cherished historic school is now an affordable housing option—Monroe Place is making a difference to a community and serving as an example to many others. Light filled corridors, shared light and the illumination of dynamic colors are valued for generations.