The adaptive reuse of PS 186 in West Harlem shows what can be done when imagination and determination come together.
Through the combined efforts of the Boys & Girls Club of Harlem and its development partners, an abandoned public school has been turned into an anchor institution for the Hamilton Heights neighborhood. The adaptive reuse of the 114-year-old school provides two sorely needed services: an 11,300-sf clubhouse with an after-school program and teen center, and 79 units of affordable housing in a neighborhood that is feeling the negative effects of gentrification.
PS 186 was designed by architect Charles B. J. Snyder, Superintendent of School Buildings for the NYC Board of Education from 1891 to 1923. The five-story buff-and-red-brick structure, designed in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, followed Snyder’s signature H-shaped floor plan, which formed open courtyards that brought daylight into the classrooms.
Children enter the Boys & Girls Club of Harlem at the upper courtyard on 145th Street. The decorative metal railings and gates were carefully reconstructed. Another entrance provides an ADA-compliant walkway to the residential quarters.
Completed in 1903, the school was immediately filled with the children of immigrant families.
PS 186 continued to serve the neighborhood around 145th Street and Amsterdam Avenue for another seven decades, but in 1975 the city declared it unsafe for occupancy, closed it, and transferred the site to the New York County Local Development Corporation. In 1986, the Boys & Girls Club of Harlem (BGCH) bought the property for $215,000.
There it sat for more than two decades. Weeds, even whole trees, clogged the classrooms. Wood floors turned spongy from the damp conditions. Hundreds of pigeon carcasses littered the upper floors. Homeless people squatted amid the ruins. Members of Community Board 9 and the local homeowners association called for the BGCH to take action. Some in the community demanded that the building be razed.
In 2009, the club, in partnership with Alembic Development, proposed a $79 million plan to demolish the school and build a new 200,000-sf home for the group, plus affordable housing, and community and retail space.
Word that PS 186 might be demolished brought out the preservationists, whose letter-writing campaign gained the support of the New York Landmarks Conservancy. But when the community board turned down a bid to have the school declared a landmark, the BGCH claimed that renovating the building without the attendant historic preservation tax breaks was not feasible.
Everything started to change in 2012, as rumors of a plan to reuse PS 186 began to buzz through the streets of West Harlem. In late 2013, Monadnock Construction bought the building from the Boys & Girls Club. Shortly thereafter, Dattner Architects was hired to seek a rezoning for a mixed-use redevelopment with affordable housing and a flagship location for the club. Preservation, once thought impossible, was now the seen as the enlightened path.
What made the deal financially feasible was a conditional approval from the National Park Service stating that PS 186 represented a historically significant example of early 20th-century school architecture. This made it eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places and opened the door to what would become about $20 million in historic preservation tax credits.
The development provides 79 affordable housing units on its four upper floors: 19 studios, 39 one-bedrooms, 12 two-bedrooms, and nine lofts. Monthly rents range from $508 for a subsidized studio to $2,738 for a market-rate two-bedroom. The 100,520-sf project is participating in the Enterprise Green Communities sustainability program.
To comply with the NPS ruling, the reconstruction had to adhere to the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation. This meant that the project team had to maintain Snyder’s H-shaped floor plan. Numerous character-defining interior features—ornamental staircases, high ceilings, and a decorative stage known as the principal’s platform—were also preserved.
Key elements of the Italian Renaissance exterior were restored. Based on historic photographs of the original cornice, now damaged beyond repair, the design team worked with a manufacturer to create a support system for a new glass-reinforced cornice. A niche overlooking the historic entry to the school that holds a statue of Minerva, goddess of wisdom and knowledge, also was rejuvenated.
The north and south courtyards were reclaimed. From specimens of existing material, the team reconstructed the decorative iron railings and gates. Stone stairs that had been replaced with concrete block were brought back to their virginal state. An ADA-compliant entry walkway from the street to the residence entry was installed. Two new exit doors were punched out to provide safe egress from the apartment floors (two to five).
Sound attenuation in the residential floors was also addressed. Window units and exterior glass doors were recreated from historic photographs and extant drawings of the school.
Although it took 30 years to complete, the project was applauded by the Reconstruction Awards jury as a shining example of what can be done to bestow new life on the thousands of vacant public schools that face ruin in America’s older cities. Others apparently agree. The project has also won the New York Landmarks Conservancy Lucy G. Moss Award and the Society of American Registered Architects New York Design Award.
PS 186 opened in 1903 in response to the population explosion in the Hamilton Heights section of Harlem. The school offered adult night classes and became a neighborhood institution but closed in 1975. With its recent renovation, it is back as a community hub.
Project Sumamry
Platinum Award Winner
Building Team | Dattner Architects (submitting firm, architect, interiors) Boys & Girls Club of Harlem, Alembic Community Development, and Monadnock Development (owners) DeNardis Engineering (SE) Abraham Joselow PC (MEP) Michael A. Tomlan, FAPTI (historic preservation consultant) Construction Specifications, Inc. (specifications) Lumen Architecture (lighting) AKRF (acoustics) JM Zoning (expediting) SWA (sustainability consultant) Jim Harwood Architects (ornamental masonry consultant) Monadnock Construction (GC).
Details | 111,820 sf Total cost $45.4 million. Construction time: March 2012 to October 2016. Delivery method: Design-bid-build.
See all of the 2017 Reconstruction Award winners here
Related Stories
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
Patient friendly: The University of Chicago Medicine Center for Care and Discovery adds 203 new beds
Strict infection control and life safety measures were implemented to protect patients on other floors as work proceeded.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 27, 2017
The birthplace of General Motors
The automotive giant salvages the place from which it sprang, 131 years ago.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Mama mia! What a pizzeria!: It started as a bank nearly a century ago, now it’s a pizza parlor with plenty of pizzazz
The first floor features a zinc bar and an authentic Neapolitan pizza oven.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 21, 2017
Honor Guard: San Francisco’s historic Veterans Building pays homage to those who served in World War I and other foreign wars
The Veterans Building houses the War Memorial staff, the city’s Arts Commission, the Opera’s learning center and practice/performance node, the Green Room reception venue, and the 916-seat Herbst Theatre.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 20, 2017
Eyes wide open: Students can see their new home’s building elements
The two-phase project revamped an opaque, horseshoe-shaped labyrinth of seven buildings from the ’60s and ’70s.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Gray lady no more: A facelift erases a landmark’s wrinkles, but not her heritage
The Building Team restored the granite and terra cotta façade and reclaimed more than 500 double-hung windows.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 17, 2017
Elegance personified: New life for a neglected but still imposing retail/office space
The building was in such disrepair that much of the reconstruction budget had to go toward structural, mechanical, and electrical infrastructure improvements.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 16, 2017
Back to the '20s: Coney Island gets a new eatery reminiscent of the past
This project included the restoration of the landmark Childs Restaurant.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 15, 2017
Foyer fantastique: Faded images provide the key to a historic theater's lobby restoration
The restoration relied heavily on historic photos and drawings.
Reconstruction Awards | Nov 14, 2017
Hallowed ground: A Mormon temple rises from the ashes of a fire-ravaged historic tabernacle
Parts of the tabernacle’s exterior shell were the only things that survived the blaze.