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Home » Finegold Alexander Architects Opens Lowell Justice Center to the Public

Finegold Alexander Architects Opens Lowell Justice Center to the Public

June 25, 2020
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LOWELL, MA — Finegold Alexander Architects announces that The Lowell Justice Center, a new $146-million courthouse facility located in Lowell, Massachusetts, is complete and recently became operational. The 265,000-square-foot facility now houses the operations of the Superior, District, Housing, Juvenile and Probate, and Family Courts. It also contains office space for court staff, a Court Service Center, Law Library, the Registry of Deeds, Office of the District Attorney, and a Grand Jury Room, with a total of 17 courtrooms and associated detainee holding cells.

The courts and services offices were formerly located in outdated and dysfunctional buildings in Lowell and Cambridge. The new consolidated center is expected to receive a LEED-Platinum certification. Located on a 3.2-acre site at the Northern edge of the Hamilton Canal District within the Lowell National Historic Park, the 21st century modern courthouse is the cornerstone of Lowell's Hamilton Canal District development master plan. The nine-story building solves the design criteria of the modern courthouse, some recognized nationally, some particular to Massachusetts.

“The justice center is designed to create a welcoming and calming environment, featuring generous natural daylight, warm finishes, and public art that reflects the diverse history and culture of Lowell,” said Moe Finegold, FAIA, Principal in Charge for Finegold Alexander Architects.

About the Design

The two-story entrance lobby is designed as an arrival space to this judicial center that can accommodate waiting lines of more than 100 at any time. The entire entry wall to this space contains a work of art in glass. It features symbols of justice, recalls the historic “mill girls,” and Lowell's new industries. Quotations and words about the value of justice are in four languages representing the different origins of the citizens of Lowell. The interior walls of the public circulation areas are covered with ceramic tiles, designed and selected to reflect Lowell's textile history. In five earth tones, arranged in running bond, they evoke the bolts of cloth produced in the mills as well as the dynamic action of the looms themselves.

There is an abundance of natural light in the entry hall, the public stairwells, the exterior wall of all public circulation, and all 17 courtrooms. These spaces have direct light from the side or interior courtrooms have borrowed light from a deep transom behind the judges. These are expressed on the exterior as a group of punched windows in the granite walls or in the deep indentations on the building's facade. The private spaces behind the courtrooms, including the judge's chambers, the jury deliberation rooms, and the transaction areas also have abundant natural light. Selected materials on the exterior together with the glazing, create an environment which is light and bright.

The designers opted for a rational stacking of the courts departments and their 17 courtrooms to facilitate wayfinding. The most active, arraignment and district, are on the lower floors, two and three; the juvenile is on four; the probate and family and housing courts are on five and six. The superior court is on seven. Judicial chambers are grouped into suites and are located close to courtrooms or are no more than a floor away. Transaction areas for the clerk magistrate and probation functions are similarly grouped and easily identifiable at the mid-point between pairs of courtrooms.

Each courtroom is designed to hold jury trials and to have access to detainees, either directly adjacent to the courtrooms or in the basement holding area. That area is designed to provide sight and sound separation between men and women and between juvenile male and females. Non court functions, the District Attorney suite, the register of deeds, jury pool, and the public assistance area for pro-se defendants are all located on the first floor just beyond the security checkpoint.

The center is designed in orientation to the site, in many special landscaping features, glazing, highly insulated walls, and sophisticated mechanical and lighting systems to be a most energy efficient courthouse, which soon after verification, will be awarded LEED Platinum designation, the first courthouse to achieve this designation in Massachusetts. The building contains a chilled beam HVAC system, photo-voltaic panels, and a building envelope. Building systems and controls among many design features were specified to achieve performance targets 40 percent better than code.

Universal Accessibility

The center is universally accessible: the commuter rail station and local bus depot are a short walk away; a new parking facility by Lowell is being constructed to provide access for those arriving by car; bike racks are on site as well as immediately adjacent handicapped parking spaces; and secure parking for judges and senior staff as well as secure access for detainees through the sallyport are also provided. Sloped walks traversing a 25-foot change in grade across the site lead to an entrance plaza without any steps. This universally accessible concept continues within the entire building with circulation space, multiple elevators, accessible raised judge's benches, abundant wheelchair spaces in courtrooms, audio and visual technology, and glazed stairwells at each end of the public galleries to encourage walking while enhancing wellness.
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