I’ve long been fascinated by how and why such things emerge onto our landscape, so I thought I’d look these particular pieces up..
And that curiosity led to the research Challenges for you:
1. When were these buildings constructed? Are they, in fact, from the era of Streamline Moderne?
Since I knew they were at 37.728161, -122.451303, I first checked my map and found that these buildings are at the Orfalea Family Center on the campus of CCSF (City College of San Francisco). That’s easy. But when were they built?
I wanted a bit of background, and so my first search was for:
[ Orfalea Family Center CCSF ]
which led to a bunch of deadends (information about the center, maps of their location, etc.). But it ALSO led me to an interesting article in The Guardsman about “Child Care Buildings Shouldn’t Be Rusting” at the Orfalea Center.
Before I read to much farther, I first did the obvious search about The Guardsman–what kind of publication is that? A couple clicks on their website led me to find out that it’s the newspaper for CCSF. They the newspaper publication for City College of San Francisco. Since the college has over 100,000 students, they’re a pretty good size newspaper!
In that article, there’s a line about the buildings being “less than six years old…” THAT surprised me. I thought they were Moderne, and given how rusty and generally beat-up they look, it didn’t seem possible that they could be from 2008, yet that’s what the article claimed.
Regular Reader Paola R found a Google Book, City College of San Francisco, with some images of the Center when it was new. Her query (in Books) was for [ Oralea Family Center San Francisco] and shows us that the place looked like this when new:
2. What’s the controversy around these buildings?
You can get a sense for the controversy from the article above. Buildings constructed in 2008 shouldn’t be falling apart. As a consequence, there’s an active investigation going on (still, apparently) about who’s at fault. The architects? The builders? What’s going on?
The Guardsman article mentions a company, Project Frog, that Regular Reader Remijj looked up with the query, [ Project Frog ], leading to their home page, and an article in Forbes that tells us they started as a business in 2006, which would have made this one of their very first projects. Project Frog specializes in “snap together” or Ikea-style “flat pack” buildings that are built elsewhere, then “snapped together” on the project site.
That gives them a construction advantage, but something seems to have gone wrong in the Orfalea Center. To see how bad it’s gotten, I just did a quick query [ Project Frog lawsuit CCSF ], hoping I’d find something, and I did. In their May 14, 2015 edition, The Guardsman reports on the lawsuit that’s been filed against the Indiana-based construction contractors Hunt Construction Group, and will go to trial, in June 2016.
Interesting factoid picked up along the way: I also did a quick Wikipedia search for:
[ Orfalea ]
because I’d never heard of such a name before, and was just curious. I discovered that Paul Orfalea (Arabic: بول أورفاليا), was nicknamed “Kinko” because of his curly red hair, and founded the copy-chain Kinko’s when he was a student at UC Santa Barbara. Ah.. THAT’s where the money comes from!
3. As I kept walking in this neighborhood, near this building cluster I accidentally discovered a mural by a very famous muralist. (Seeing it was one of those shocking moments: That’s HERE?? You’re kidding!) What is the name of the nearby mural? Who painted it? And how far is it from these buildings?
As we saw above, the book about CCSF tells us about a mural of Peter VandenBerge that’s at the center. Fascinating, as I didn’t know it was there.
So when I did my search, I focused on using CCSF as a search term, figuring that it would be the obvious entity that could hold a world-famous mural. My search was:
[ CCSF mural ]
And the first hit is for the Pan American Unity Mural by Diego Rivera. The web page is by the college, so it’s probably reliable.
The mural is at 50 Phelan Avenue, and housed in the Rivera Theatre on campus. Looking at the map, you can see it’s about 200 feet from the Child Center to the theatre.
4. Extra credit: If you figure out the mural, you’ll find this one easy… Very near the mural is a sculpture that is a reduction (in scale) of a VERY large sculpture that once appeared on Treasure Island. What’s the name of that sculpture (and hence, of the smaller version) near the mural?
To find the nearby sculpture, I did a very simple query that links the two concepts together: