Higher Education

Monroe

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Monroe Multifamily
San Diego, CA

Monroe is a LEED Platinum, eight-story multifamily community located at the corner of Polk Avenue and Illinois Street in San Diego’s North Park neighborhood. Completed in 2025, the 135,477-square-foot project includes 137 apartments—11 of which are affordable—and 107 covered, automated parking spaces provided through a mechanized stacked parking system that maximizes efficiency on a tight urban site.

The building is designed as a 5-over-3 podium structure that fits comfortably within a neighborhood of primarily lower-scale buildings while introducing a contemporary residential presence. Two simple but connected design elements meet at the corner, where a fully glazed amenity space is framed by projecting concrete that forms a continuous balcony and creates an active street edge. Material contrasts help define the building’s character. The south façade features smooth white plaster that reflects daylight and keeps the massing light, while the east façade uses textured fiber-cement panels and a regular pattern of openings and balconies to add depth and rhythm. Together, these elements create a clear, cohesive identity that complements the surrounding context.

Amenities are organized across three levels to support daily living and resident interaction. The ground-floor leasing area includes an interior stair that leads directly to the second-floor amenity level, which opens to a central courtyard and includes a two-story fitness center. Additional shared spaces are located on the eighth floor, including an amenity lounge and rooftop terrace with landscaped areas, lounge seating, fire pits, barbecues, co-working space, and views of downtown San Diego and the bay. By combining high-performance sustainability, efficient parking solutions, and well-planned amenities, The Monroe delivers practical, comfortable urban housing that supports both residents and the surrounding neighborhood.

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Energy Innovation Building, CSU Bakersfield

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Energy Innovation Building, California State University, Bakersfield

Bakersfield, CA

The 44,450 SF Energy Innovation Building will be the central hub of research, experimentation, and collaboration on the future of energy in the San Joaquin Valley. The project will include research and teaching laboratories, a Capstone Design Laboratory, private/open offices, a flex-design event space, the Extended Education Global Outreach center, and an outdoor interactive space. The Energy Innovation Building will be tightly connected to its context, meeting the needs and desires of the talented and ambitious student body. Architecturally, it will seamlessly integrate with the existing campus, respecting its setting while representing a new era of energy and innovation at CSU Bakersfield. Environmentally, it will harmonize with the outdoors and the natural landscape, embodying sustainability design principles that align with the commitment to a greener, more resilient future. Communally, the design will be characterized by a welcoming spirit, creating a space where learning is not just a hidden pursuit but a visible and shared endeavor. In every aspect, this project will harness the potential of collaborative and inclusive design in order to move the region, and nation, forward with renewable energy research. With the Energy Innovation Building, CSU Bakersfield will be able to increase and promote robust industry partnerships, attract funding, facilitate faculty and student research, and engage the community. The Energy Innovation Building will solidify CSUB’s pivotal role in the future of energy solutions in the Valley and beyond.

Learn more on the CSU Bakersfield website.

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Autodesk Technology Engagement Center, CSUN

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Autodesk Technology Engagement Center

California State University, Northridge

Northridge, CA

The Autodesk Technology Engagement Center, which includes the Global HSI Equity Innovation Hub, focuses on closing equity gaps in STEM degree pathways and inspiring historically underrepresented minorities in STEM to pursue high-demand careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.

This 34,000 GSF project is powered by cutting-edge technology to advance collaboration and interdisciplinary design and research, including labs for engineering, prototype creation, pre-manufacture, and iterative design. Flexible space for interdisciplinary teams to collaborate, innovate, and incubate is included. The project also includes a campus and community maker-space as well as student showcase space to inspire student curiosity and creativity.

To propel student success, the Equity Innovation Hub includes a next generation student success center, student study and collaboration space, and a P-14 outreach discovery lab.  CSUN will use these spaces to  engage middle, high school, and community college students as well as families, to include a whole family outreach approach.

The project is uniquely designed with equity as a core design principle. AC Martin led a series of design workshops, meeting with university leadership, an interdisciplinary faculty and staff collaborative group, and a student focus group, to ensure the project design would achieve its goals to:

  • Be welcoming and approachable to students and the community.
  • Highlight & inspire interest in STEM professions, education, real-world applications & technology.
  • Ensure diverse representation of historically underrepresented minorities.
  • Create flexible spaces & adaptable design.

The Autodesk Technology Engagement Center provides a new, modern, state-of-the-art facility, creating a new identity for the College and University at a prominent campus location. Additional site improvements include outdoor gathering space, seating areas, and hands-on STEM activity areas.

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Dymally Institute at CSU Dominguez Hills

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Mervyn M. Dymally African American Political & Economic Institute at California State University, Dominguez Hills
Carson, CA

The new 8,000 SF Mervyn M. Dymally African American Political & Economic Institute (MDAAPEI) building at California State University, Dominguez Hills, will embody progress, purpose, and vision, marking the start of a new era of growth and expanding the Institute’s significance.

Once confined to a 450 SF space in the campus library, where the Executive Director worked from a converted janitor’s closet, the Institute has consistently documented and celebrated African American leadership in politics, business, and public policy. Despite space constraints, MDAAPEI has empowered students and the community through training, leadership programs, and cultural events that highlight the African Diaspora. The 8,000 SF AC Martin-designed facility will be built on a vacant site near the College of Continuing & Professional Education. The building will include administrative offices, a reading center for rare works, and ample space for community engagement on critical issues. The Institute will house a digital archive, oral histories, a research space, and a 2,000-volume library open to scholars statewide. Signature events, including the Aging Symposium, the Distinguished Speaker Series, and the African American Leadership Summit, will now have a dedicated home, amplifying the Institute’s impact. AC Martin was also tasked with developing a conceptual furniture plan to guide future furnishings, ensuring every detail aligns with the Institute’s goals. Thoughtfully designed interiors will honor the Institute’s mission and inspire visitors, reaffirming MDAAPEI’s commitment to empowering future generations, preserving vital histories

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Orthotics & Prosthetics Education Center, CSU Dominguez Hills

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Orthotics & Prosthetics Education Center, CSU Dominguez Hills

Carson, CA

The Orthotics and Prosthetics Department is currently located off-campus in a 12,000 SF Los Alamitos office park, approximately 16 miles away from the CSUDH main campus in Carson. To address this issue, AC Martin designed a new 5,000 GSF Orthotics and Prosthetics Education Center to be built adjacent to the existing College of Continuing and Professional Education (CCPE) building. The new education center will house a mechatronics lab, student lab, a maker space, clinical space, and shared resources for storage and deliverables. The O+P program will utilize existing classroom space in the CCPE building for lecture courses. CSUDH extensively studied how to bring the O+P program to the main campus, including scenarios for renovations, new construction, and nearby property purchases. However, the construction of a new O+P facility on campus yielded the most long-term operational savings as well as most closely meeting the needs of the program.

Bringing the O+P program back to the main campus provides many advantages, including closer connection to the College of Health and Human Development, College of Continuing and Professional Education, and University services and resources.

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Student Housing Phase III, CSUN

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Student Housing Phase III, California State University, Northridge

Northridge, CA

Based on the success of Phase I and II student housing, CSUN hired AC Martin for Phase III, including 200 beds and a major renovation of the main outdoor dining courtyard for campus housing residents. The project also includes a large study lounge, classroom, two multi-purpose rooms for programmed events, a large eat-in communal kitchen, a mail/package room for all on-campus students, and the Housing Facilities offices. Phases I and II are a 4-minute walk from Phase III. Phase III is directly adjacent to CSUN’s 1990’s dining hall. Our project upgraded and renovated the dining courtyard and connects it to the Phase III student housing courtyard. This area will be the new social HUB for freshmen with a large, shaded trellis enclosing the two courtyards and creating student life event spaces. The communal kitchen was doubled in size allowing for larger student groups to cook together. Phase III also has the package/mail room for all on-campus housing to draw students to this new social HUB. Phase III completed construction in August of 2025.

See Phase II Student Housing at CSU Northridge

See Phase I Student Housing at CSU Northridge

 

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Long Beach City College Student Housing

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Long Beach City College Liberal Arts Campus Student Housing

Long Beach, CA

Designed in partnership with an integrated Design-Build team, the 440-bed student housing community elevates baseline criteria through a flexible framework of performance-driven enhancements. Highlights include a welcoming campus arrival sequence, an expanded 12,000 SF courtyard, and vibrant ground-floor amenities, such as a grab-and-go market, tech commons, and multipurpose spaces, crafted to foster connection and enrich student life.

The residential program is organized into 34-person pods, each featuring a shared kitchen, lounge, and gender-inclusive restrooms to promote community, safety, and belonging. A mass timber structural system advances sustainability goals while creating warm, biophilic interiors that reduce stress and enhance well-being. Further improvements, including a pet-friendly amenity suite, re-imagined social spaces, and infrastructure optimizations, increase bed count and efficiency without expanding the building footprint. The outcome is a scalable, future-ready housing environment that reflects a deep understanding of how students live, learn, and thrive.

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Sciences and Engineering Laboratories at SDSU Imperial Valley, Brawley

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Sciences and Engineering Laboratories at SDSU Imperial Valley, Brawley

Brawley, CA

The Sciences and Engineering Laboratories at SDSU Imperial Valley, Brawley supports the burgeoning Lithium Valley and the university’s commitment to workforce development in both current and future geothermal energy sector demands through new four-year degree programs. The 36,000 square foot lab facility houses a STEM Innovation Hub, undergraduate science labs, core facilities, and collaborative spaces for public and private partners to work side by side with faculty and students in lithium research. The new building creates a sense of place and identity for the campus in Brawley, California.

The architectural vernacular embraces sustainability and resilient strategies derived from site specific climate and regional heritage. The design includes open collaboration spaces inside and sheltered outdoor spaces with a solar photovoltaic canopy to provide comfortable areas for students to hang out before, between and after classes. As one the most lab intensive SDSU facilities, incorporating flexibility and adaptability for future changes in STEM research is paramount in the design. By addressing the demands of intense science research and incorporating architectural sensibility that acknowledges the low-desert climatic environs and cultural heritage of the area, this project is a beacon of STEM learning in Brawley.

The project aims to double the enrollment of the SDSU Imperial Valley campus, delivering the future leaders of economic and employment opportunity brought by the development of the State’s Lithium Valley initiative. The project is a result of $80 million in state funding from Governor Gavin Newsom and university investments to expand STEM opportunities. 

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The Carina

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The Carina at MainPlace Mall

Santa Ana, CA

The Carina is part of an overall newly planned mixed-use community on the site of the MainPlace Santa Ana Mall. The mall's new master plan will include the addition of a food hall in "European marketplace" style, an interactive play center for children, upgrades to its movie theater, a grocery store, and two apartment communities with two new residential communities.

The Carina is slated to provide 407 highly amenitized units within a modern and timeless building that will be the new beacon of living at the MainPlace mall. Situated on the highly visible avenue of Main St, the south and east facade represent a high level of articulation using a rhythm of balconies and concrete frames as balconies. At their apex, the south and east façade come together to create a tall, elegant frame comprised of soft natural woods and tall, elegant glass while culminating in an overarching roof element which creates an overall sense of arrival.

The long sweeping east elevation is given a unique identity using slim articulated frames to accentuate key moments in the building façade, using smooth metal panels and light-colored plaster gives it a modern elegant feel. Using a mix of landscaping and curated horizontal fins to deter the visibility of the garage, creating a higher level of experience at the pedestrian level.

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Modera Argyle

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Modera Argyle

Hollywood, California

Located within the Hollywood community of the Los Angeles area, this new mixed-use development is a seven-story building with 276 residential units - 13 of which are affordable housing for ‘very low income’ households. The project includes an approximately 27,000 SF Bristol Farms grocer and 318 parking spaces.

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