About the author  ⁄ Andrew Salber, S.E.

Andrew Salber is Senior Engineer with Forell | Elsesser Engineers in San Francisco (a.salber@forell.com).

New Life for the Berkeley Art Museum Building

The Berkeley Art Museum (BAM) building was completed in 1970 and is an architecturally significant reinforced concrete building located on the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) campus. Originally designed by Architect Mario Ciampi, it is one of the most impressive examples of Brutalist architecture in the San Francisco Bay Area and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. As a result of seismic deficiencies exposed by the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and subsequent studies that indicated the cost of a complete seismic retrofit would be similar to a full rebuild, the museum relocated to a new building in 2014, and the BAM building was left unoccupied. In 2016, the California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences (QB3) began a project to reuse the building as a full-service life sciences incubator. As a textbook example of successful adaptive reuse, the transformation of this landmark building incorporated a seismic retrofit into a complicated space, preserved the historic exposed concrete structure, replaced virtually all M/E/P/Fire systems, roofing, and skylights, and improved the building’s accessibility.

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The Art Deco-inspired Clinical Sciences Building (CSB), located on the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Parnassus Heights Campus, originally served as the school of dentistry when it opened in 1932. In the 80 years since, CSB has been in continuous service, providing much-needed clinical, office, academic, and research space for the campus. Unfortunately, being approximately 5 miles from the San Andreas Fault, the building is expected to experience significant earthquake ground shaking, which it was not originally designed to withstand. To reduce this risk, UCSF recently completed a seismic rehabilitation of CSB to extend the life of this vital building for at least another 80 years.

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STRUCTURE magazine