Recognizing the need for a greater law
enforcement presence and the opportunity for great civic architecture, the New
York City Police Department (NYPD) and the Department of Design and
Construction (DDC) commissioned Rafael Viñoly Architects to design a station
house for Staten Island’s first new precinct
in decades, the 121st Precinct.
The design solution responds to the challenges
of a sloped site with two distinct building volumes: a two-story linear bar,
gently arcing in plan and gradually increasing in height as it approaches the
commercial district of Richmond
Avenue, and a one-story volume at the point where
the site extends outward to the south.
The second floor cantilevers ninety feet toward
Richmond Avenue
in a symbolic gesture of community engagement that defines the main entrance
and creates a visual link between the main lobby and the street.
The two building masses are distinguished by
varied heights, differing surface treatments—horizontal stainless-steel
cladding on the long bar, and gray brick on the one-story volume—and a skylight
over the interstitial space between them, which brings natural light into the
ground-floor lobby.
The long bar structure also shields the
residential neighborhood to the north from the police parking lot to the south.
Outdoor mechanical services are concealed within the building form and
integrated into an enclosure clad in the same stainless steel.
The building program includes officer and
detective work areas, administrative offices, locker rooms, holding cells and
processing, muster room, interview rooms, lounges, evidence and records
storage, vehicle fueling station, and screened parking. The building is
designed to achieve an energy cost reduction of 25%.
Sustainable design strategies include the use
of recycled asphalt pavement in driving lanes, permeable surfacing in
low-traffic parking spots and five bio-retention cells that captures the rain
that falls within the property in order to reduce the amount of water that
enters the sewer system.
The harvested water infiltrates the soil, and
once filtered of pollutants by the local plant life, is used to sustain these
same plants, all of which are native and adaptive to the local climate.
As the community face of the NYPD in Staten Island, the 121st Police Precinct Station House is
a model for sustainable design. When it achieves LEED Silver certification the
station house will be the first police facility in the city so designated under
Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s PlaNYC 2030 sustainable design initiative.
The 121st precinct will also increase police
visibility on the West and North
Shores and improve police
response times. More than 200 uniformed and civilian personnel began working in
the 121st station house.
Location: Staten
Island, New York, USA
Architect: Rafael Viñoly Architects
Costructor: Brickens Construction, Inc.
Area: 4,830 m²
Cost: $ 65,5 mil.
Year: 2013
Client: New York City Police Department (NYPD), Department of Design and Construction (DDC)
Architect: Rafael Viñoly Architects
Costructor: Brickens Construction, Inc.
Area: 4,830 m²
Cost: $ 65,5 mil.
Year: 2013
Client: New York City Police Department (NYPD), Department of Design and Construction (DDC)
















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