Mold is the biggest issue with the building. Mold does not go away!!! As with the SOPO Fire House at Cash Corner. It needed to be demolished to take care of the mold and the HVAC issues. I think both buildings were built in the 70's.
Unlike the other buildings you argue that don't need $20 million for basic repairs, the original design of the law building has inherent flaws that contribute to the continued rapid degradation of the structure. There is extensive water damage to the building. Also the nature of the structure is not conducive to making internal changes needed to accommodate class sizes and other needed spaces. The place never should have been built as it was.Basic repairs for $20 million? Why don't other buildings that are 50 years old, including all the turn of the 20th century buildings in the Old Port, in need of $20 million in basic repairs? They simply want new state-of-the-art in EVERYTHING. Cape Elizabeth is going to build some new school buildings, for $127 million. The high-tech Passivehaus Friends school in Yarmouth was built a few years ago for $4 million (Kaplan Thompson). Ask a school system what it needs for money to build something, and they will get the quote that is ten times higher. Always. The Law School building isn't any worse than any other building on the USM campus, and those are doing just fine.
The nature of this structure is a fortress made of cement and steel. Leaking water is avoided by using sufficient materials in the roofing and windows (I can build a tree house that doesn't leak). Frank Lloyd Wright's houses are infamous for leaking. It's because he prioritized aesthetics over materials quality. He had his exterior masonry formed from the sand on site, to be truly organic, but the quality of this recipe for that masonry was often not up to par. It's why the Freeman house in L.A. is slowly disintegrating (air pollution). Also, the nature of the 1972 built law school building being conducive to making internal changes for the year 2022 is a bit of a stretch. The majority of Maine's housing stock is not conducive to living in 2022.Unlike the other buildings you argue that don't need $20 million for basic repairs, the original design of the law building has inherent flaws that contribute to the continued rapid degradation of the structure. There is extensive water damage to the building. Also the nature of the structure is not conducive to making internal changes needed to accommodate class sizes and other needed spaces. The place never should have been built as it was.
It does, and not that I am fond of it, but the law building is classroom space that they will need. It looks like it's coming down and so it will change this skyline. I think that once the new dorms and student center are done, the interest in attending this campus will increase dramatically. I attended this campus for one year a while back and loved its location. I still think a good power wash on the exterior with a cosmetic fix of its crown is all it needs. I don't buy the claim that it has dangerous mold within. I think it's an excuse to tear it down because of the embarrassing anti-accolade of being voted by a prestigious arch magazine as one of the ugliest university buildings in the country. Yes, it is ugly, but so is the library. I think if you look for mold, you find it. Many buildings leak, or can depending on the intensity and direction of rainfall. I also think because it's in the brutalism style of arch, another reason to get rid of it. A group is or was trying to do that with Boston City Hall, which is also in the brutalism style. They want a softer, kinder kind of building. The immediate fix is a near one-hundred mill spend for a complete redesign of the plaza. Gov loves to spend money.USM has its own separate skyline now, not too shabby!
Today, they are adding a two-story high mechanical room to the rooftop of the residential portion, so now, de facto, ten stories high. That will help for this part of town.USM has its own separate skyline now, not too shabby!
Oakhurst whipped cream in the silver can is the best!
Agreed about dairy milk though....I am an almond milk guy.