Hallowell

Central Building, Maine Industrial School for Girls / Central Commons, Hallowell

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Bree LaCase, Community Housing of Maine discusses the rehab of the Central Building at the former Maine Industrial School for Girls into Central Commons, whi...

The Central Building, designed by Augusta-based architect W.G. Bunker, was built in 1917-19. Constructed of brick in the Colonial Revival style, the building was part of the Maine Industrial School for Girls complex, an organization founded in 1874 as a place where wayward girls could be safely housed and given a moral, social, and academic education. One of the later structures built for the school, it marked a movement away from the earlier model for such facilities, where the residents lived, worked, and had classes all in the same building. While Central Building included bedrooms for 16 girls, its primary purpose was for classrooms where schooling could more closely conform to State of Maine curriculum requirements than had previously been the case. It also contained the central laundry, gymnasium, and dental office.

 The building was renovated for state offices in the 1970s and those changes significantly reconfigured the interior plan, as well as dropping all the ceilings and covering over the hardwood floors. Virtually no historic fabric remained visible in the upper stories. A few areas of tin ceiling and two openings with historic door trim remained in the basement level, along with one historic door. While most original windows remained in the building, the large arched transom windows on the façade were hidden behind plywood and the windows below them replaced with inappropriate vinyl units. Prior to this rehabilitation project, the building had been vacant for several years.

 When Central Building was purchased by the Community Housing of Maine, there were many issues to address for the restoration of the site. Work began with the removal of the 1970’s alterations, which exposed historic hardwood flooring in nearly all the spaces, and a section of the original tin ceiling that had been hidden in the main entry. All original windows were restored and reinstalled, with new trim made based on the design of the few surviving pieces. Allied storm windows were also installed to improve efficiency and to preserve the structure for the future. 

 This project has returned one of the key buildings on the Maine Industrial School for Girls campus to productive use after a period of vacancy. Problematic additions and alterations from the late twentieth century were unwound to better represent the historic design of the structure. This new residential space creates 29 units of affordable senior housing, and it joins student housing and professional office tenants in the other recently rehabilitated buildings at the complex. In an area rich with history, this project, together with preservation efforts on other buildings on the campus, has helped to revive an historically and architecturally significant site that was neglected and largely vacant into a vibrant mixed-use and multi-generational community.

Project Participants

  • Bree LaCasse, Community Housing of Maine

  • Ryan Senatore, AIA LEED-AP BD+C, Ryan Senatore Architecture

  • Wright Ryan Construction Inc.

  • Jack McInerny, Atlantic Hardwoods (floor restoration)

  • Richard & Brian Bradstreet , Bradstreet Masonry

  • Jacobs Glass

  • Otis Atwell

  • Maurice Salinger, Curtis Thaxter

  • Bangor Savings Bank

  • Evernorth (NNEHIF)

  • Maine State Housing Authority

  • Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston

  • Scott Hanson, Sutherland Conservation & Consulting

Erskine Building, Maine Industrial School for Girls / Erskine Hall, Hallowell

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The Maine Industrial School for Girls was founded in 1874 as a place where girls and young women who were considered a danger to themselves or a threat to society could be safely housed and given a moral, social, and academic education. Built in 1901-02 as part of the campus, Erskine Hall accommodated 26 girls in single bedrooms, along with their teacher, matron, and housekeeper on the first and second floors, with additional rooms in the attic. The residents lived and worked in the spacious brick building and had classes onsite.

 Erskine Hall was renovated for state offices in the 1970s and then sat vacant for several decades, during which it suffered significant water infiltration through a failed integral gutter system. The water caused major structural issues with both the masonry walls and wood framing and destroyed hardwood floors, tin ceilings, plaster walls, and many of the windows. It also lost its two-story front porch. When the current owner took control of the campus building was in danger of collapse and was only saved for rehabilitation with stabilization work to the masonry and roof. At the start of the project, contractor Matt Morrill said, “it was probably one of the roughest buildings that I’ve ever dealt with.”

 After the successful rehabilitation of the Stevens Building for University of Maine Augusta student housing in 2018 (a 2019 Maine Preservation Honor Award winner), the university was interested in creating more student housing on its campus and selected Erskine Hall for the project. The university’s willingness to commit to a long-term lease for the building made the rehabilitation project feasible. Other important people and institutions for the project were Ben Murray, architect-engineer; Grand View Builders, general contractor; Chris McLoon, tax attorney; Scott Hanson and Sutherland Conservation & Consulting, historic consultant; Katahdin Trust, and Coastal Enterprises, Inc.

 The scope of work included major reconstruction of deteriorated and collapsing brick and granite walls, repair and replacement of rotted wood framing members, repair and compatible alterations to the slate and copper roof to prevent future issues with failed integral gutters, recreation of the missing two-story front porch based on historic photo documentation, installation of an elevator and fire-rated stair as required by code, reopening of the historic stairwell that had been enclosed during the 1970s, installation of new hardwood flooring and tin ceilings, and reinstallation of salvaged original wood trim elements and doors. A particularly challenging and unique issue was the removal of a robust hive of 80,000 bees from one wall of the building. This was accomplished by cutting away a section of the interior brick wall so a beekeeper could collect the bees from the wall cavity and relocate them to a new hive.

 The result of this project is that the most deteriorated and threatened historic building on the Maine Industrial School for Girls campus has been beautifully rehabilitated and returned to use, again housing students as it originally did. The Erskine Hall rehabilitation project stands out on campus, even among previous preservation campaigns to nearby buildings. Given the structure’s severely deteriorated state, its rescue was the result of heroic teamwork.

 Now beginning its first year as a residence hall, new obstacles relating to Covid-19 continue to shape its story and impact on campus, though the students who are living there are grateful for the unique and fulfilling opportunity of living in a historic home.

Project Participants

  • Matt Morrill, SC-Erskine, LLC / Grand View Builders

  • Ben Murray, A.E. Hodsdon Consulting Engineers

  • Chris McLoon, Nutter Lae

  • Coastal Enterprises Inc.

  • Katahdin Trust

  • Scott Hanson, Sutherland Conservation & Consulting