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So Long SCI-Arc

So Long SCI-Arc

“I hadn’t even heard about it,” Ray Kappe told us when we called him to find out about an item in Curbed the other day noting that the Santa Monica City Council had overturned a ruling by the Landmarks Commission that would have designated SCI-Arc’s original home as a historical icon worthy of preservation. Kappe, who founded the school in 1972 at a 1950s industrial building at 3030-3060 Nebraska Avenue [map], actually sided with the council in its decision, calling the building “messed up completely.” He said it used to sport “a pretty good 30s modern look. It had good character, but now it’s got dumb character.” That’s because at one point the landlord replaced the ribbon windows with generics, among other changes.

According to Curbed, “The city’s Landmarks Commission made the site a landmark in February 2008 based on its relationship with SCI-Arc and Kappe, its reflection of the neighborhood’s development, and its architectural merits, which include what the Commission’s action says is a ‘late Bauhaus, mid-century fenestration pattern.'” But now, the council has overturned that decision because, according to a staff report, “The structure is a common example of a utilitarian, vernacular industrial building that has been significantly altered. It is not unique in design or rare architecturally.”

With appeal in hand, Curbed speculates new owners NMS Properties are going to build apartments on the site, which Kappe thought was a fine idea. “The building was good and it served its purpose, but I don’t think it should stand in the way of somebody’s development,” he said. Might we suggest a certain Southern California architect educator for the job of building NMS’ new apartments?


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