A social services agency that serves more than 50,000 people annually throughout San Diego County is building a $33.9 million project in Chula Vista that will serve as its new headquarters and expand the services it offers. Designed by Tucker Sadler Architects, based in downtown San Diego, the 61,000-square-foot building at 318 Fourth Ave. will allow SBCS, formerly South Bay Community Services, to consolidate offices that are now spread throughout South County.“I’ve got people stashed all over the place here in South Bay,” said Kathyrn Lembo, CEO of SBCS. “This building will enable us to serve at least an additional 10,000 people a year.”Founded in 1971 as a drop-in center for teens struggling with substance abuse, SBCS has grown to have a staff of nearly 500 offering an array of social services. For nearly a decade, SBCS has used what had been a 6,000-square-foot Chula Vista house at 430 F St. as its headquarters, but the building has been so crammed that some of its staff must work out of garages, Lembo said when the new building is finished in May 2025, about 300 to 350 of the 500-person SBCS staff will move in with the rest stationed elsewhere in the county.
The new four-story building will have a steel and glass façade that allows sunlight to flood the interior, a dramatic change for some workers who’ve been working in windowless rooms, Lembo said. Tucker Sadler CEO Greg Mueller said that the design of the new building is meant to reflect the mission of SBCS, which “is about changing people’s lives, not just for the moment, but setting them up for their future and to give a positive outlook.” “The challenge was to put everything that South Bay Communities does so well into a design,” Mueller said. As people approach the building, Muller said the design is mean to instill a sense of hope “to subliminally let them know that this is where to go to get help, and this is where they can change their live entirely.”
Rather than a flat surface forming the front exterior walls, the floors are angled, shifting on a different plane from each other, and they point toward the building entrance at its center – a design element to symbolize how people’s lives shift with the services they receive inside, Mueller said.“It’s showing the movement within a person’s life and changes that can occur,” Mueller said. The blue tinted glass that makes up most of the exterior walls is both transparent and reflective, “in a way that allows a person to feel that there’s transparency in what’s happening, that what they’re receiving is something that is good for them and not something that is being pushed on them,” Mueller said, “to give the individual who’s going there the feeling of pride and that they are going to be getting assistance that’s going to help them change their life.”The glass walls and doors on the ground floor will have lighter tinting than the upper levels so people can see what’s happening inside as they approach the building.
“It gives them that warmth that they need to make that step to make a difference in their life,” Mueller said the building site is on what has become almost a civic campus with the Chula Vista police station and the city library as neighbors.
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