The San Francisco State University (SFSU) Marcus Hall includes all of the Broadcast and Electronic Communication Arts (BECA) program, College of Liberal & Creative Arts (LCA) offices, and interdisciplinary lecture spaces. The project is conceived as a flexible learning and production environment for teaching electronic media capture, editing, and broadcast. The design consists of a four-story bar-oriented north-south. The ground floor houses highly controlled environments and acoustically sensitive spaces dedicated to specialized content creation. The upper three floors are comprised predominantly of classrooms and offices.
The envelope consists of architectural cast-in-place concrete, insulated metal wall panels, and a low-energy aluminum curtainwall. These systems have been strategically shaped to efficiently mitigate the marine micro-climate specific to the ocean-facing SFSU campus area. The architectural cast-in-place concrete provides mass for the acoustical isolation of studio spaces as well as primary lateral resistance for the structural system. The material durability also aids against wear due to loading and high student traffic at the ground floor level.
The goal of the project was to offer a flexible, transparent and universally accessible building for students. The building encourages community engagement by “featuring” the BECA program through visual connections to the public exterior. Windows are located along the public circulation spaces within the building that look into the TV Studio and Audio Recording room that showcases the BECA program. As the building also includes multidisciplinary classrooms, this is a great opportunity for the BECA department to engage the larger SFSU community.
This is a building which combines the rigor of a very carefully edited esthetic vocabulary, with issues of sustainability, issues of clarity, of use, and scale within its neighborhood. It is clearly a building that was constructed carefully—probably due to the care that the architect brought to the entire process. A complete statement about what good architecture can and should be: limited, careful, edited, restrained, but an elegant and complete solution to a problem.