Harlem School of the Arts Readies for $9.5-Million Revitalization

The 55-year-old Harlem School of the Arts (HSA) at the Herb Alpert Center, in New York, announced the start of a major construction project that will significantly transform the 37,000-square-foot facility. Work on what is being called, The Renaissance Project, will take a full year to complete and is scheduled to begin in August.

This renovation project is the most ambitious undertaking by the organization since the building was constructed. Legendary musician, philanthropist and celebrated artist Herb Alpert and his wife, Grammy Award-winning vocalist and author, Lani Hall Alpert are generously funding the full project cost of $9.5-million through the Herb Alpert Foundation.

Harlem School of the Arts

The Harlem School of the Arts, was founded by Dorothy Maynor in 1964 with 20 students in the basement of St. James Presbyterian Church. At the time, the neighborhood had few cultural resources for its residents. Almost five decades later, the school occupies a spacious building with specialized spaces for arts education, which includes 3 dance studios, several music practice rooms, dedicated visual art studios, a state-of-the-art media lab, and one of the few Black Box theaters in New York City. HSA touches the lives of approximately 3,000 young people annually through programs provided at the facility and in New York City schools, and reaches thousands more through a growing variety of public programs for people of all ages.

The community today is being revitalized, and Eric Pryor, president of HSA believes that The Renaissance Project is key to the organization’s continued trajectory of growth. "The building should be seen as a space that invites people in,” he says. “It has always been an oasis on the inside, but that has not generally been known. The community needs to see who we are and know that we are committed to providing cultural programming for everyone. “

Herb and Lani Alpert have been an essential part of the organization's rejuvenation since 2010, when they, along with several others, responded with an influx of much-needed capital when financial struggles forced its closure. Since then, the couple has maintained their interest and connection to the organization and its mission to provide all children access to quality arts education, world-class training, and exposure to the arts across multiple disciplines.

“As artists, we know how important it is for children to have opportunities that allow them to immerse themselves in music, art, dance, and theater,” says Mr. Alpert. “Throughout the past eight years, Lani and I have stayed very involved, and with great pride watched HSA grow stronger, expand its programs and once again become a pillar for art and culture within this growing population it serves.”

Herb, a recognized and highly respected visual artist with a body of work including paintings and sculptures that have been exhibited in galleries across the country and around the world, has taken a personal interest in the HSA project and remains involved in every aspect – a measure of how significant an impact he believes this will have on the future of HSA, the students and the community.

An impressive project team has been brought in to collaborate on the modernization of the award-winning HSA building, originally designed by German-born, modernist architect Ulrich Franzen, back in the 1970s. The first order of business will center on replacing the “Brutalist style” brick exterior, with a swath of clear glass to open up a panoramic view of the facility. Next the interior main public/gallery space will be retrofitted and transformed into a light-filled, high-tech, state of the art performance room – carefully calibrated, incorporating both cutting edge architectural and acoustical design worthy of the school’s emphasis and focus on quality arts education and world-class training.

In addition to creating a warm, safe, welcoming, performance-ready cultural center, the new construction will make imminent necessary improvements to the building’s core such as a new roof and replacement of windows throughout, to make it more energy efficient. As well, the current café and lounge will undergo a thorough makeover, as will the organization’s signature
courtyard garden and waterfall.

This important transformation of the building is in line with the organization’s vision of becoming a premier cultural destination that engages community participation, attracts audiences from everywhere, and maintains its commitment to its mission of grooming the next generation of creative thinkers, innovative leaders and artists. It also allows the organization to expand its programming and optimize its space for a wider array of events.

The Renaissance Project will be led by Imrey Studio LLC – a respected New York-based, woman-owned design studio founded by Celia Imrey. Imrey has worked on a long list of high-profile architectural projects involving new construction, space renovation and new façade, including work on the Louvre-Lens, Rubin Museum, and the New York Public Library. The architect of record, Eric Daniels brings over 30-years of experience in architecture and interior design, with a focus on high-end residential and commercial projects. Architect and acoustician John Storyk will provide architectural and acoustical consultation and planning on the project. John is a founding partner and director of design at Walters Storyk Design Group (WSDG), and is known as a leader in his field. He is credited with designing over “3500 world-class audio/video production facilities, including studios, radio stations, video suites, entertainment clubs and theaters,” among them, the famed Jimmy Hendrix’s Electric Lady Studios.

The overall Project Management is being provided by Seamus Henchy and Associates, who have been providing their services to many of New York City’s pre-eminent arts and educational organizations for the past 35 years. Among them – Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, The Juilliard School, School of American Ballet, Ballet Hispanico, New Jersey Performing Arts Center, MoMA , The Brooklyn Museum , and The New York Botanical Garden.

The architectural changes rendered by the design team, in conjunction with Herb Alpert’s artistic vision, incorporate three critical features – beauty, transparency, and an air of modernity. “I believe that all kids should be able to express their creative energy at an early age. At Harlem School of the Arts, children can explore multi-disciplinary art forms, and the buzz of activity is enviable,” says Herb. “Lani and I have seen the product of these students’ hard work, passion, and commitment to the arts, and observed the way it moves out into the community. These talented young people bring family and friends who are delighted to see the creativity that is generated by the students who attend HSA. A beautifully designed building, bursting with imaginative, happy children, can only be a win-win attraction and a reflection of this vibrant community.”

The entire corridor beginning at the southwest corner of 145th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue, and moving down to the organization’s main building, is currently undergoing a boom of new construction. Two charter schools, one near completion, and the other—in the early planning stages, will take their place alongside HSA on this expanded block. The addition of these new facilities and the renovation work to begin at HSA will bring an influx of new foot traffic and will surely have a transformative effect on the entire community.

Before the Alpert’s decision to fully fund The Renaissance Project, the Harlem School of the Arts had already been the beneficiary of approximately 7.5 million dollars of the $180 million distributed by the Herb Alpert Foundation, in support of a variety of arts education programs. That figure has now jumped to $17 million gifted to the Harlem School of the Arts through the Foundation.

The philanthropic generosity of Herb and Lani Alpert serves as a catalyst, encouraging other donors to contribute directly to organizations who have arts and STEAM programs at the heart of their mission. Their generous gift enables the awesome task of shaping and empowering future generations of creative thought leaders.

Featured

  • Avantis Education Wins Educators Pick Best of STEM 2024 Award for ClassVR

    K–12 virtual reality technology solutions company Avantis Education recently announced that it has received an Educators Pick Best of STEM 2024 Award, according to a news release. For the second consecutive year, Avantis’ ClassVR product won the category of “Trailblazer: Immersive Reality (AR/VR).”

  • Adelphi University Launches $100M Fundraising Campaign

    Adelphi University in Garden City, N.Y., recently launched The Momentum Campaign: Extraordinary Impact, a $100-million fundraising initiative, at a gala on campus, according to a news release. The campaign is set to last through 2027 and fund six strategic priorities to improve success on campus.

  • Minneapolis Public Schools Continues Work on New Construction, Renovation Projects

    Minneapolis Public Schools in Minneapolis, Minn., is working with integrated construction management firm Kraus-Anderson on renovations to North High School that include a new Career & Technical Education (CTE) Center, according to a news release. The three major components of the project are new academic and athletic spaces, a new central student commons, and a North CTE Center.

  • UMass Amherst to Build New School of Public Health & Health Services HUB

    The University of Massachusetts Amherst in Amherst, Mass., recently began construction on a new home for the School of Public Health & Health Services (SPHHS), whose current academic spaces are currently scattered around campus, according to a news release.

Digital Edition