FORWARD JUSTICE CENTER FOR EQUALITY
FORWARD JUSTICE
PUBLIC
PROGRAM ELEMENT COMMUNITY + PUBLIC SPACE Lobby Information Desk Group Services Flexible + Interactive Exhibit Flexible Gathering + Event Space Co Working Space Cafe + Seating Catering Kitchen Educational Activity Space Open Common Space Joint Services Space RESOURCE LIBRARY Linear Book Stacks Reading Area + Group Tables Computer Stations Library Staff Offices Copier + Pritner Station MEETING + PRIVATE SPACE Classroom + Seminar (15 people) Classroom + Seminar (30 people) Soundproof Conference Room Meditation Room ADMINISTRATIVE SPACE Director’s Office Administrative Offices Professional Staff Offices Volunteer Offices Kitchenette Copy Room Office Storage RESIDENTIAL SPACES Short Term Studio Apartments
QUANTITY
NET SF
TOTAL NSF
1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 1
800 80 600 2000 2400 200 500 175 800 300 600
800 80 600 2000 2400 600 500 175 800 300 600
1 1 4 5 1
600 2100 60 10 100
600 2100 240 50 100
2 1 2 1
300 600 200 100
600 600 400 100
1 1 10 1 1 1 1
120 100 100 400 175 100 300
120 100 1000 400 175 100 300
2
800
4000
TOTAL GSF
28,946
PROGRAM ELEMENT EXTERIOR SPACE Seating Space + Rooftop Patio Assembly + Gathering Space Podium + Speaker Platform City Bike Parking Pay it Forward Cafe
QUANTITY
NET SF
TOTAL NSF
1 1 1 1 1
749 3122 50 80 200
749 3122 50 80 200
TOTAL EXTERIOR GSF
3,871
PERSON ST
PERSON ST
PERSON ST
STATE CAPITOL BUILDING
BLA C
119 FAYETTEVILLE ST Founded in 1867, Alfred Williams was a popular bookstore and stationary shop south of the Capitol Building that also published books.
INESS DISTR S U B ICTS ED N W O K ROYAL THEATRE
E MORGAN ST
ALFRED WILLIAMS + CO
POPE’S PRACTICE
218 FAYETTEVILLE ST Founded in 1899 when James Boylan and J. Burrell Pearce partnered to open a dry good store. It became one of the many fashonable department stores downtown.
E HARGETT ST
BOYLAN - PEARCE DEPT STORE
HISTORIC BLACK MAIN STREET DENTAL BUILDING
LIGHTNER ARCADE
E MARTIN ST
CENTURY POST OFFICE
119 E Hargett St The Royal Theater opened about 1920 in this building on East Hargett Street, in the heart of Raleigh’s African-American business district. At the time, it was the only movie theater in Raleigh that offered full service to the black community.
SITE
122 E Hargett St E. Hargett St. emerged as the city’s business center of the African-American community — Raleigh’s ‘Black Main Street’ . Calvin E. Lightner built the only hotel in Raleigh which catered to African-American travelers. A barbershop, drugstore and a newspaper also occupied the first floor.
YARBOROUGH HOTEL
HISTORIC BUISNESS DISTRICTS 0’
250’
500’
1000’
HUDSON - BELK DEPT STORE
CITY MARKET 305 S Blount St S BLOUNT ST
S WILMINGTON ST
FAYETTEVILLE ST
S SAULISBURY ST
E DAVIE ST
S BLOUNT ST
316 FAYETTEVILLE ST Opened in 1852 by Edward Yarborough on Fayetteville Street opposite the Wake County Courthouse, the Yarborough House emerged during the antebellum years as one of Raleigh’s finest hotels. During the Civil War, in 1862, the Yarborough House offered refuge for Confederate President Jefferson Davis’ family. In 1865 the hotel gave shelter to refugees fleeing Union troops.On July 3, 1928, the hotel was destoryed in a fire.
Throughout its history, even early on when most other parts of Raleigh were subject to Jim Crow laws and racial segregation, City Market was always heavily integrated. In the 1910s, 20s, and 30s, it served as a natural meeting point between the historic “Black Man Street” to the north on Hargett Street and the upper class white congregation one block to the northeast. Weekends always consisted of large gatherings and picnics among farmers, friends and families at City Market and Moore Square, known collectively as “The Grove.” Both black and white merchants kept booths in the market.
BLACK OW NED R ESID ENT IAL DIS TR
1870 - BLOUNT ST North Blount Street was Raleigh's most fashionable neighborhood between the Civil War and World War I. North Blount Street's reputation as Raleigh's finest neighborhood solidified in 1883 when the state decided to build the Executive Mansion on Blount Street.
S T IC
1910 - CAMERON PARK Cameron Park developed at the same time as Glenwood-Brooklyn and Boylan Heights suburbs. While those two developments attracted a cross-section of the white middle-class by offering houses of varying sizes and prices, Cameron Park exclusively sought the upper-middle class. The resulting population included a number of local business owners and leaders as well as other professionals, including professors, lawyers, and government officials.
HISTORIC SUBDIVISIONS 0
.25 M
0.5 M
1907 - BOYLAN HIGHTS When real estate firms began developing old plantation lands just beyond the city limits in response to the early twentieth century housing shortage, the hundred-acre wooded portion of William Montford Boylan's estate offered a good location. It was just west of downtown and the hilly terrain lent itself to a picturesque, curvilinear street plan. Parcels went on sale in 1907 and all were sold by 1915. A large parcel reserved from the sale provided space for a neighborhood park in the middle of the development. The neighborhood was the ideal middle-class residential development of the early twentieth century.
SITE
1891 - IDLEWILD - HUNGRY NECK Idlewild Avenue is the center of Idlewild, an early area of African American home ownership. The Raleigh Land and Improvement Company subdivided Idlewild in 1891.
1865 - EAST RALEIGH - SOUTH PARK East Raleigh-South Park is Raleigh's largest historic African American neighborhood. It is a collection of African American neighborhoods that developed from just after the Civil War through the first decades of the twentieth century. The thirty-block area lies east and south of downtown Raleigh and is predominantly residential with working-class and middle-class housing stock, churches, and small grocery stores.
PERSON STREET
314
312
310
308
MARTIN STREET
SITE PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
PERSON STREET
314
312
PROGRAM
PROGRAM CIRCULATION GATHER
310
308
MARTIN STREET
SITE PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
PERSON STREET
314
312
310
308
MARTIN STREET
SITE PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
PERSON STREET
314
312
310
308
MARTIN STREET
SITE PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
7
8 4 8
2 5 9 3
1 COURTYARD 2 EVENT SPACE 3 ENTRY 4 INFO / LOBBY 5 EXHIBIT 6 CAFE 7 MECH 8 RESTROOM 9 ELEVATOR 10 STORAGE 11 HOUSING
10
1
11
6
11
GROUND FLOOR PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
GROUND FLOOR PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
15
7
14 8
13
12 9
12 13 14 15 16 17
WAITING LOUNGE VIEWING PORCH OPEN OFFICES ADMIN OFFICES FJC LIBRARY EXTERIOR PATIO
16
17
SECOND FLOOR PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
21 18
18
19
7
20
8
9 22 18 19 20 21 22 23
SMALL GROUP ROOM FLEXIBLE SEMINAR ROOM FIXED SEMINAR ROOM CONFERENCE ROOMS JOINT SERVICES CO WORKING SPACE
23
THIRD FLOOR PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
PERSON STREET
0’
8’
16’
32’
PERSON STREET
0’
8’
16’
32’
MARTIN STREET 0’
8’
16’
32’
MARTIN STREET 0’
8’
16’
32’
WHITE CORRUGATED PERFORATED METAL SCREEN
ALTERNATING METALLIC VERTICAL SIDING
BENDHEIM LUMIFRIT CURTAIN WALL
IRON ORE VERTICAL FIBER CEMENT SIDING BENDHEIM TINTED COOLGLASS
ORANGE PERFORATED METAL SCREEN
ENTRY VIEW
ENTRY VIEW
FORWARD JUSTICE VIEW
STRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
1 1/4” INSULATED FOLDING DOOR per NanaWall (argon filled) (M) EXPANSION JOINT - FOUNDATION WALL + PAVER (M)
4” CONCRETE PAVERS (L) 6” MIN SAND (L) SOIL (P) RIGID INSULATION (L) WATERPROOFING MEMBRANE (L)
TYPICAL CONCRETE FOOTING (P)
FOUNDATION DETAIL 0”
4”
8”
16”
GYP WRAPPED COLUMN BEYOND (P) 8” ALUMINUM ENCASED STEEL PLATE STRUCTURAL LOUVER (P) 6” ALUMINUM CURTAIN WALL MULLION (P) 1 1/4” INSULATED CURTAIN WALL ASSEMBLY (argon filled) (M) 4” STEEL TUBE SCREEN STRUCTURAL SYSTEM (L) 1/8” DOUBLE FOLDED PERFORATED METAL IN 1/2” FRAME (M)
1/8” WLEDED + BOLTED BENT STEEL PLATE (P) SCREEN STRUCTURAL CONNECTION - ENCASED IN ALUMINUM MULLION (L) 1/4” BENT STEEL PLATE - WELDED TO BEAM (P) KICKER WELDED TO BENT PLATE + BEAM (P) MINERAL WOOL INSULATION (L) WATERPROOF MEMBRANE (M) 1 1/4” INSULATED SPANDREL GLASS (M) 5/8” GYP BOARD (M) VERTICAL METAL STUDS FOR GYPSUM ASSEMBLY (P) COLUMN - CONTINUES BEYOND EXTERIOR WALL (P) HORIZONTAL METAL STUDS FOR GYPSUM ASSEMBLY (P) CHANNEL CONNECTORS (L)
BENT STEEL ANGLE + EXPANSION JOINT (L) 5/8 EXT GYP BOARD (M) 1 1/4” INSULATED FOLDING DOOR per NanaWall (argon filled) (M) SOFFIT DETAIL 0”
4”
8”
16”
SS COPING WITH DRIP EDGE (L)
TYP GREEN ROOF ASSEMBLY (Special Detail) (L) 5/8” GYP BOARD (M) 1/4” BENT STEEL C PLATE (P) COLUMN BEYOND + STEEL STRUCTURAL BEAM (P) HORIZONTAL METAL BRACING STUD (P) 1/4” BENT METAL STEEL PLATE (P) HORIZONTAL METAL STUDS FOR GYPSUM ASSEMBLY (P) CHANNEL CONNECTORS (L) + EXT GYP BOARD (M) SCREEN STRUCTURAL CONNECTION - ENCASED IN ALUMINUM MULLION (L) 1/8” WLEDED + BOLTED BENT STEEL PLATE (P) 8” ALUMINUM ENCASED STEEL PLATE STRUCTURAL LOUVER (P) 6” ALUMINUM CURTAIN WALL MULLION (P) 1 1/4” INSULATED CURTAIN WALL ASSEMBLY (argon filled) (M) 4” STEEL TUBE SCREEN STRUCTURAL SYSTEM (L)
1/8” DOUBLE FOLDED PERFORATED METAL IN 1/2” FRAME (M)
ROOF DETAIL 0”
4”
8”
16”
PERSON STREET
314
312
310
308
EXTRUDED ALUMINUM SKYLIGHT FRAME + SILICONE SEALANT (L)
MARTIN STREET
INSULANTED GLAZING (L) ROD + SEALANT WITH BAFFLED WEEPS (LOW + HIGH POINT) (M) SS FLASHING - SEALED TO STUD BLOCKING (M) SITE PLAN 0’
8’
16’
32’
PERFORATED ALUMINUM TRIM (M) EXTEND ROOF MEMBRANE OVER CURB (M) CURB BEYOND (L)
5/8” GYP PN MTL FRAMING (L)
SS METAL FLASHING TO GRAVEL (M) SS EDGE SUPPORT (L) GRAVEL (L)
METAL STUD + INSULATION (L)
SOIL (L) WATERPROOF MEMBRANE (L) DRAINAGE PANEL WITH WATER RETENTION CELLS (L) DRAINAGE PANEL / PROTECTION BOARD (L) ROOT BARRIER (L)
SKYLIGHT + ROOF GARDEN DETAIL 0”
3”
6”
SS COPING WITH DRIP EDGE (L)
TYP GREEN ROOF ASSEMBLY (Special Detail) (L) 5/8” GYP BOARD (M) 1/4” BENT STEEL C PLATE (P) COLUMN BEYOND + STEEL STRUCTURAL BEAM (P) HORIZONTAL METAL BRACING STUD (P) 1/4” BENT METAL STEEL PLATE (P) HORIZONTAL METAL STUDS FOR GYPSUM ASSEMBLY (P) CHANNEL CONNECTORS (L) + EXT GYP BOARD (M) SCREEN STRUCTURAL CONNECTION - ENCASED IN ALUMINUM MULLION (L) 1/8” WLEDED + BOLTED BENT STEEL PLATE (P) 8” ALUMINUM ENCASED STEEL PLATE STRUCTURAL LOUVER (P) 6” ALUMINUM CURTAIN WALL MULLION (P) 1 1/4” INSULATED CURTAIN WALL ASSEMBLY (argon filled) (M) 4” STEEL TUBE SCREEN STRUCTURAL SYSTEM (L)
1/8” DOUBLE FOLDED PERFORATED METAL IN 1/2” FRAME (M)
ROOF DETAIL 0”
4”
8”
16”
National Center for Civil and Human Rights HOK + The Freelon Group (Now part of Perkins+Will) Atlanta, GA 2014
Flyrite Screen Marlon Blackwell Austin, TX 2017
Durham Main Library Vines Architecture Durham NC
PROGRAM
PROGRAM CIRCULATION GATHER