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Kansas City Art Institute - Art School Studio Wing by Runnells Clark Waugh and Matsumoto Architects

Name: Kansas City Art Institute - Art School

Architect: Runnells Clark Waugh and Matsumoto Architects

Year Designed: circa 1945-46

Builder: Unknown

Year Built: circa 1948

Size: Unknown

Location: Kansas City, MO

Type: Education

Style: Modern

Status: Fair with multiple additions that obscure major parts and concepts of the original building

Photographed By: Robert McLaughlin

 

Runnells Clark Waugh and Matsumoto Architects were hired to do a master plan for a new Kansas City Art Institute Campus. At the time, Vanderslice Hall, the former August R. Meyer mansion housed the entire Art Institute just west of this building. After a master plan was done, the firm was hired to do the "Art School," the first in a series of new buildings. The site chosen was a narrow slice of land running north and south between Vanderslice Hall and Oak Street. The building consisted of classrooms, studios, workshop and exhibition spaces for students of life drawing and the commercial and industrial arts. The building was rendered in a vocabulary of red brick, limestone and corrugated asbestos cement panels. The most notable feature of the building was the limestone clad life drawing studio with its stepped limestone forms and multiple north facing clerestory windows.

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Uploaded on May 20, 2009
Taken on September 2, 2008