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The sculptural component of Spec consists of a dropped ceiling arched to form a long, semi-circular barrel vault. Its hulking dimensions measure 10 feet in height, 20 feet in width and 72 feet in length making Spec a corridor-like room within a room that comfortably accommodates upwards of 80 people. Between the hundreds of foil-backed ceiling tiles, many yards of conduit, aluminum lighting canisters and an elaborate network of galvanized steel wire, Spec's exterior--fully visible in the round--resembles a space station. Spec's interior--accessible from both the east and west end--is a cool white tiled tunnel, a work of Robert Rymanesque formalism cum corporate sobriety. This relatively hushed environment is replete with recessed lighting and speakers running its entire length. As a sculptural volume, Spec creates tunnel vision. Perspective becomes an architectural axis of fate, one whose history extends from the Roman arch to the United Airlines Terminal all via the Quonset Hut, which, as humble Midwesterners, SIMPARCH cites as formal inspiration. With even more a wink and nod they also cite the Native American longhouse to which they pay homage through communal seating in the form of a 72-foot, wooden bench that bisects the space and doubles as the world's longest subwoofer.
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