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Student
Housing
at
College of the Atlantic
Bar Harbor, Maine

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The College of the Atlantic enjoys a well
deserved reputation for quality education,
environmentally sustainable policies and
responsible building. When they decided to move
ahead with their plan to provide more and higher
quality housing for their students, they put
together a team of professionals that are
comfortable in the arena of cost effective,
sustainable, and quality design and
construction.
Coldham & Hartman Architects from Amherst,
Massachusetts teamed up with the college’s energy and
sustainability consultant, Marc Rosenbaum, to produce a
set of construction documents for the housing cluster
that met and exceeded all expectations, both on campus,
and throughout the worldwide academic community. |
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Similarly, for the renovation and reuse of the
Deering Common building, they chose Stewart
Brecher Architects from Bar Harbor. The goal was to provide a
design that honored the architecture of the
existing, former grand “summer cottage”, while providing an
exceptionally weather tight and energy efficient
structure to house a student social space and
related offices on the second and third floors.
The views of the harbor are stunning, and the
building performs as a state of the art, energy
miserly, sustainably designed building unlike the majority of buildings in
today's
world.
PML was invited to join these two excellent teams along with E.
L. Shea, Inc, general contractor and construction
managers. Together the team produced a housing
project on time and under budget, setting levels of energy
efficiency and sustainability unsurpassed in the
academic marketplace, and presenting to the College of
the Atlantic community a beautiful addition to their
already esteemed campus.
The Deering Common project brought a unique challenge to
PML and the team. In order to meet the schedule of
opening that the college and their donors hoped for, PML
recommended that the Builder’s contract resemble the
flexibility of a design/build delivery system even
though the architect was already under contract with the
school, and E.L. Shea was to hold an independent
contract (a typical CM contract for construction only).
Due in large part to the cooperative spirit of Brecher
Architects, the honest transparency of Shea, and the
willingness on the part of the college to entertain a
hybrid delivery process fostered and managed by PML,
the team moved ahead, met schedules, and delivered
a fine facility that all team members and the college
community are proud of and thrilled to use to its
fullest potential.
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