flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

In the spotlight: Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts shines a new beacon on Houston’s downtown

Building Team Awards

In the spotlight: Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts shines a new beacon on Houston’s downtown

Gold Award: Kinder High School, which can accommodate 750 9th through 12th graders, is one of only three public schools in the U.S. that offer programs for both visual and performing arts.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 13, 2019

Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, located in downtown Houston, offers six distinct areas of education and training. All photos: Peter Molick Photography

A 1.32-acre city block in downtown Houston is now home to a new five-story magnet school. The new Kinder High School replaces a two-story, 63,000-sf building in this city’s eclectic Montrose neighborhood. The original building dated back to the early 1980s but had maxed out its ability to accommodate more students or integrated technologies.

Kinder High School, which can accommodate 750 9th through 12th graders, is one of only three public schools in the U.S. that offer programs for both visual and performing arts. It has six distinct areas of education and training: vocal music, instrumental music, dance, theater, visual arts, and creative writing. The construction of the new school was funded, in part, by the city’s 2012 bond program, supplemented by a $10 million capital campaign and a $7.5 million donation from the Kinder Foundation, a long-time booster of the school, in return for the naming rights.

At one time, the master plan for this project envisioned a 200,000-sf building. But after several working sessions with end-users, the project team found programming overlaps that allowed for a rightsizing of certain spaces without sacrificing elements or functions.

Not surprisingly, a top priority for the project was the integration of audio-visual and acoustical technologies in a building with so many interspersed performance, practice, and learning spaces. For example, the high school has 16 sound isolation practice rooms. Each of the rooms throughout the school is equipped with the latest in technical theater and A/V recording features. Theaters and rehearsal rooms share tech spaces.

 

A colorful art installation, commissioned from the studio of an alumnus, runs from the second floor down to the school’s main entrance.

 

There was also the need to abate noise from a below-ground, two-level parking garage and the city’s METRORail light-rail service, which runs on two sides of the school. One solution that the Building Team came up with was to wrap a “donut” of learning centers and program spaces around the school’s 800-seat Denney Theater auditorium (named after Ruth Denney, the school’s founding director). The theater has adjustable systems of acoustic treatments to support various uses, from theatre to orchestra, choirs, or lecturers.

Denney Theater was one of the areas within the school that the project team prioritized, under budgetary constraints, to determine what quality level of wall system could be installed so that the rooms in question still worked for their users.

The design team also focused on sustainability and the conservation of resources and energy. The building is positioned on its site to optimize daylighting and minimize heating and cooling loads. A new mechanical system improves indoor air quality. Whenever possible materials from the old Montrose campus were reused.

The new high school features a fifth-floor Visual Arts Department with ceramic and sculpture works rooms that provide students with the latest technology to develop their skills. There is a 200-seat black box theater, an outdoor cafeteria on the first floor, and a dance studio with retractable partitions that allow for myriad dance instruction classes to take place simultaneously. Many of the performance spaces throughout the school are designed for multiple purposes.

 

To muffle the noise coming from the building’s underground garage and the light-rail service nearby, learning centers and other programmed spaces were wrapped around the 800-seat Denney Theater.

 

The design places a premium on transparency. Double-height volume spaces on the first and fifth floors encourage impromptu student gatherings. The first-floor space features an occupiable stairwell that  facilitates social and visual connections.

A colorful art installation—created by alumnus and sculptor Patrick Renner and his company, Flying Carpet Creative—cascades down from the top of this staircase to the school’s first-floor entrance. There are “pops” of color and environmental graphics throughout the building.

Now that it’s located only one light-rail stop from Houston’s Theater District, which itself is part the 10th-largest central business district in the country, Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, which has operated for 47 years, is even more of “a beacon of creativity” that could spur growth in the area by doubling not only as a place of learning but also as a state-of-the-art performance and arts venue for Houston’s Downtown Arts District.

 

Building Team — Submitting firm Gensler (architect, AOR), Owner Houston Independent School District, SE Cardno Haynes Whaley, MEP Shah Smith & Associates, GC McCarthy Building Companies, CM Rice & Gardner

General information — Size 168,000 sf, Construction cost $83.2 million, Construction time February 2016 to September 2018, Delivery method CM at risk

 

Return to the Building Team Awards landing page

Related Stories

Building Team Awards | Jun 11, 2019

Learning by doing: Students took an active role in the design of the Bay Area's d.tech high school

Gold Award: D.tech had been occupying temporary spaces that were hardly suited for design thinking.

Building Team Awards | Jun 10, 2019

Technology showcase: PTC's new digs combine lively workspaces with exhibits for its products and platforms

Gold Award: PTC began its fitout even as 121 Seaport was still under construction.

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2019

Fast delivery: Construction of McDonald's global headquarters was completed in under seven months

Gold Award: The building has a remarkably diverse array of spaces that include “work neighborhoods.”

Building Team Awards | Jun 7, 2019

Unifying force: A place where a million Tulsans can connect, one by one

Platinum Award: Gathering Place is a 66½-acre public park and playground serving the nearly one million residents of greater Tulsa, Okla.

Building Team Awards | May 24, 2018

Green machine: Janet Durgin Guild and Commons at Sonoma Academy

Honorable Mention: A college prep school gets an uber-green maker space and cooking lab.

Building Team Awards | May 24, 2018

Good neighbor: Wentz Science Center at North Central College

Bronze Award: A conscientious Building Team takes steps to minimize the impact of this large-scale science center project in a historic neighborhood.

Building Team Awards | May 23, 2018

13 projects earn BD+C's 2018 Building Team Awards

Iowa’s game-changing correctional institution and Chicago’s daring hotel and sports development are among 13 projects to earn honors in BD+C’s 2018 Building Team Awards.

Building Team Awards | May 23, 2018

Engineered for extremes: Talan Towers

Bronze Award: Astana’s shimmering mixed-use towers are made to stand up to the region’s harsh, long winters.

Building Team Awards | May 22, 2018

High-tech haven: The Spark at Washington State University

Silver Award: A ‘teaching in the round’ classroom highlights this innovation hub at Washington State University’s Pullman campus.

Building Team Awards | May 22, 2018

LA's game changer: Wilshire Grand Center

Silver Award: This billion-dollar mixed-use tower will alter the Los Angeles skyline in more ways.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021