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Please note: Effective January 28, 2008, Maine College of Art will no longer occupy the Charles Q. Clapp House located at 97 Spring Street.  All mail should be directed to Maine College of Art, 522 Congress Street, Portland, Maine.  For directions, please visit Contact : Directions.  Administrative offices will be relocated to the Porteous Building.

Our campus is comprised of the following four buildings all located within a four-square-block area in the center of the city's Arts District:

The Porteous Building, 522 Congress Street

Acquired 1993
1904 Beaux-Arts design
Formerly the Porteous, Mitchell, and Braun department store
Size: 148,000 sq. ft. - 80,000 sq. ft. currently occupied

Fifth Floor: Sculpture, Ceramics, Woodshop
Fourth Floor: Painting, Printmaking, Metalsmithing & Jewelry
Third Floor: Foundation Studios, Illustration Studios, Art History Classroom, Imaging Classroom, Woodworking Studios, Self Design Major Studios
Second Floor: The Joanne Waxman Library, The Student Center, Student Affairs, Admissions, Advancement, Billing, Business Office, Continuing Studies, Dean of the College, Financial Aid, Registrar, Executive Vice President, President
First Floor: Institute of Contemporary Art, Friedman Student Gallery, June Fitzpatrick Gallery at MECA, ArtMart (art supply store)

In 1996, the Porteous Building was selected as one of only 24 projects in the country to participate in the inaugural Energy Star Showcase Building program by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In addition to preserving an historic building, MECA took an environmentally progressive approach to the Porteous Building renovation. Over 200 truckloads of debris removed from the building were recycled. Energy-efficient heating and lighting were installed to save energy and reduce pollution. Skylights were added to bring more natural light into the building.

One of the most important features of the Porteous Building is its state-of-the-art ventilation system. Custom-designed for each studio department, the ventilation system creates a healthy and safe environment for art-making for both students and faculty.

Croxton Collaborative architects of New York City served as environmental consultants to Porteous renovation architects Van Dam & Renner of Portland. Croxton designed the headquarters of the Audubon Society in Manhattan, which received national attention as a model of "green design."

For more information on the Energy Star Building program, contact the E.P.A. at www.epa.gov/buildings.

 

Baxter Building, 619 Congress Street

Acquired 1982
1888 Romanesque design
Formerly The Portland Public Library
Size: 26,900 sq. ft.

Second Floor: Two Imaging Classrooms and New Media studios
First Floor: Goodbody Auditorium, Photography Major and Foundation studios, Liberal Arts & Art History classrooms, Art Education and Graduate Program offices

Lower Level: Graphic Design and Photography Departments

 

51 Oak Street

Following a $2 million renovation and refitting, the historic Everett Hotel, located one-half block from the Porteous Building, opened in August 2005 as Maine College of Art's newest residence hall - 51 Oak Street. The fully accessible, five-level facility, designed to house 80 students in a combination of double and single units, is wired for Internet access and include a laundry, quiet study room, and residents' lounge. 51 Oak Street serves the College's first-year students and is managed by the Office of Residence Life, Student Affairs Department.

 

15 Shepley Street
These are suite-style accomodations. The 20 units house 60 students. Each suite offers a kitchen, living room, bathroom and one or two shared bedrooms.

 
 



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