California College of the Arts Campus Expansion

Merit Award /

2026, General Design

San Francisco, CA

At CCA’s expanded San Francisco campus, the landscape itself becomes a canvas supporting interdisciplinary creative practice

©Thomas Nideroest

Openings in the green roof reveal “maker yardsbelow-flexible outdoor classrooms and heavymaking spaces designed to promote crosspollination between disciplines. 

©Thomas Nideroest

The maker yards cut through the double ground layer to allow natural light to filter below throughout the year, reducing electricity usage.

©Marion Brenner

An integral part of the major campus expansion, the meadow landscape reflects the Bay Area art school’s culture of freewheeling creativity

©Surfacedesign, Inc. 

Trees, shrubs, and perennials border the double ground layer, buffering noise from the street level to create a quiet environment

©Marion Brenner 

The educational communal garden serves as an outdoor lab for students in the textile department to experiment with cultivated natural pigments.

©Marion Brenner 

Weathered steel planters naturally complement the California meadow-inspired planting palette. 

©Marion Brenner 

85% California native plantings form plant communities from fescue meadows to woodland thickets with trees, shrubs, and layered understory vegetation

©Surfacedesign, Inc. 

The meadow landscape on the double ground hovers above the sidewalks and rail lines of the surrounding neighborhood

©Marion Brenner 

Featuring a statement oak tree and entry grove, the campus yard bridges the existing building and the new expansion layering educational facilities, exhibition space, and an expansive green roof

©Thomas Nideroest

Wood seating slabs connect the first and second floors, lending an informal and impromptu centerpoint for students and faculty to mingle, gather, and share ideas.

©Marion Brenner

 

In the first year since the opening of the new campus, the amphitheater has already been used as a venue for final presentations by students in the fashion design department

©Thomas Nideroest

On the roof, a sweet osmanthus tree perfumes the air and fragrant perennials like giant hyssop also attract pollinators

©Marion Brenner

Reclaimed wood benches surrounded by immersive planting creating room like areas for collaboration or quiet moments of repose

©Marion Brenner

The flexible plaza accommodates large gatherings and often displays large works of art, sculptures, models, and prototypes created by CCA students.

©Jason O’Rear

Client

California College of the Arts (CCA)

Project Team

Surfacedesign, Inc., Lead Landscape Architect
Studio Gang, Architects
TEF, Associate Architect
Arup, Structural Engineer
Meyers+ Engineers, Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing, and Fire Protection
Lotus Water, Civil Engineer

 

Project Statement

California College of the Arts (CCA) is a century-old Bay Area institution that has trained creative minds worldwide. Once split between San Francisco and Oakland, its facilities are now unified on the San Francisco campus, with the main building extended and the landscape reimagined. Envisioned as a canvas, the landscape integrates reclaimed materials, native California ecology, and art. Rooftop learning areas, courtyards, maker yards, and a 1,400 sq-ft dye garden cultivate cross- disciplinary experimentation, akin to a living exhibition space. With sustainability and nature in mind, the campus extends learning beyond classroom walls, ensuring CCA’s creative imprint on the city continues as a place for learning, imagination, and connection

Project Description

Founded on the principles of the Arts and Crafts movement, California College of the Arts (CCA) has trained creative minds from around the world for over a century. Known for its holistic, hands- on approach, the institution fosters interdisciplinary dialogue across art, design, social practice, sustainability, and community engagement

Today, CCA’s facilities once split between San Francisco and Oakland—are unified within its San Francisco campus, forming a cohesive environment for art, design, and creative practice. Here, the landscape becomes a canvas for exploring the integration of reclaimed materials, native California ecology, and art

Once known for its prolific arts scene, San Francisco has evolved into a more techoriented ecosystem sparking a vision to honor CCA’s 120year legacy through the landscape and celebrate the freewheeling creativity that animated its Oakland campus

With the extension of the main academic building, the landscape redefines how the campus engages its surroundings, extending learning beyond classroom walls and reinforcing the outdoors as integral to the academic experience. New outdoor courtyards, framed by a layered double groundof maker facilities and landscapes, support crossdisciplinary learning, anchored by a monumental wood amphitheater linking the two floors

Across disciplines, students engage with the landscape as both a working environment and a canvas for creative experimentation. A 1,400 SF dye garden requested by CCAreflects the institution’s expansive approach to learning, encouraging creative thinking beyond the classroom and offering students opportunities to explore their practice through the evolving relationship between landscape, art, and ecology

Plazas, gardens, and outdoor learning areas crown the roof of the double groundpodium and reveal maker yards below. Textile students use the dye garden to grow natural pigments, test color in natural light, and display garments outdoors, while sculpture and furniture students install site- specific works throughout the campus, transforming the landscape into a living exhibition space

Sustainability and ecological design guide the landscape and planting palette, exhibiting CCA’s connection to nature within an urban context. Over 100 trees including 13 Coastal Live Oaks- anchor the campus, joined by native plantings such as Manzanita, Yarrow, Bush Monkey Flower, and Coffeeberry that support pollinators

In a region with rainy winters and dry summers, permeable concrete pavers and castinplace concrete mitigate stormwater and runoff. Daylight and natural ventilation animate plazas, courtyards, and buildings during darker months, while evergreen and deciduous shade trees provide refuge in warmer months, reducing energy use. Renewable and reclaimed materials reinforce the campus’s sustainable ethos, including reclaimed timber benches and weathering steel planters for the dye garden that add structure and texture. Together, these elements cultivate an atmosphere of experimentation and community that encourages inquiry and exchange. 

Since completion, the landscape reflects a contextual yet forwardthinking approach that celebrates CCA’s deep ties to the Bay Area arts community while offering a flexible framework for future generations. In light of CCA’s recent closure and the campus’s transition to new users, the landscape outlives its original purpose-continuing to embody the institution’s creative legacy as a place for learning, connection, and imagination. 

Ashland Zócalo
Esprit Park