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Rendering of a multistory building filled with large rectangular windows surrounded by trees and lush landscaping
San Quentin Rehabilitation Center

The Future of Justice

Project Location

San Quentin, CA

Area

80,500 GSF

California Model

The beginning of California's system-wide change

Features

Rooftop outdoor learning areas, media center, and library

Designing justice facilities comes with a responsibility to advance a progressive and rehabilitative approach to custody. Our team鈥檚 design for the San Quentin Rehabilitation Center fulfills this responsibility by expanding rehabilitation services, re-entry programs, education and job training, and holistic officer training.

SQRC is the first instantiation of a system-wide change referred to as the California Model, a series of reforms based on evidence-backed best practices for caring for those in custody. The environment people are exposed to while incarcerated is often inherently traumatizing, but we believe the built environment should foster healing and rehabilitation.

SQRC’s new construction project encompasses three buildings with a combined area of 80,520 GSF. Inside, you’ll find a media center, classrooms, a coding and technology area, a library, and communal spaces for the incarcerated. The campus is grounded in trauma-informed and learning-environment best practices. The design thoughtfully integrates ample natural light and access to nature through landscape architecture.
The design-build project is being implemented by our team along with Schmidt Hammer Lassen, and McCarthy Building Companies.

The Principles of Rehabilitation

Time spent in custody should be time spent rehabilitating. Creating a space that nurtures transformation, however, is a design feat predicated on an understanding of how the built environment shapes human behavior.



01
A Sense of Agency

Owning Your Experience

Cultivating a sense of agency is foundational for successful reentry. Previously, there were very few spaces outside of an office or classroom space for gathering; but our design introduces more flexibility and freedom of movement between spaces. These 鈥渢hird spaces鈥 in between classrooms 鈥 both within the building and outside of it 鈥 allow a person to feel a sense of ownership over their experience. The demolition of San Quentin鈥檚 south wall enables people in custody to explore and engage in life-enhancing programs. The campus-style layout lets people choose their own pathway to the caf茅, library, media center, and more. A central set of stairs in each building promotes freedom of movement and enhances health through physical activity, earning the design an 鈥渁ctive design鈥 credit through LEED, which aims to improve building users鈥 health through physical activity.

02
Normative Environments

Creating Restorative Connections

Our design softens the imposing monolith of San Quentin with a campus-style layout. Creating three connected buildings 鈥 instead of a single, large building 鈥 channels a healing and restorative connection to the outdoors. This connection threads through the buildings with earth tone palettes inspired by nature and the environment. Connection to nature creates a non-institutional ambiance, but how the spaces are used is just as important. The caf茅, for instance, can be used by both staff and people in custody to foster a normative and communal environment. The media center provides training opportunities relevant to the current job market, including audiovisual production and a coding program. In the past, people in custody could request specific books, but not browse a selection to decide what they wanted to read. The normative library model in the new center creates a more humane setting and prepares individuals for re-entry.

03
Privacy and Dignity

Making Life Humane

Our in-house acoustical engineers worked to ensure acoustical privacy in spaces. Individuals can gather at the top of the stairs or at the end of the hallway for quiet conversation, fostering a sense of normalcy and dignity within the facility.

The Big Idea

Leading Justice Reform

Exterior of Yavapai County Criminal Justice Center. Natural materials, floor to ceiling windows, building entrance

press

How Design Can Help Decarcerate the U.S.

June 26, 2024

"We need to design spaces that can decarcerate America," write Principals and Justice+Civic Planning Leaders Lori Coppenrath and Marayca Lopez, ICPA.

Read More

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