DBB Renovation + Reuse 2022

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Firm Profile and Philosophy

Davis Brody Bond is among the nation’s leading design firms. Known for innovative solutions to complex design challenges, our work encompasses academic, cultural, research, technology, healthcare and housing commissions. We have been honored by more than 200 major design awards including the American Institute of Architects Firm Award, the highest honor given to an architectural practice as well as the Presidential Award for Design Excellence. The firm’s practice includes a wide range of project types. Recent commissions include such diverse projects as Columbia University’s Northwest Corner Buildimng and Manhattanville Complex; the New Portico Gallery at the Frick Collection; the Adult Emergency Department at New ork-Presbyterian; new United States Embassy compounds in in Mexico City and Jakarta, Indonesia; Vanderbilt University Medical Research Building IV; Princeton

New York-Presbyterian New PublicDepartment Library Adult York Emergency South Court New York, NY


University’s Neuroscience and Psychology Complex; and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture. We are the Design Architect for the National September 11 Museum and the Associate Architect for the National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center. Our experience in the design of healthcare and medical research facilities is a significant part of our portfolio. This includes projects for such clients as the Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian, Queens Hospital Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Princeton University, New York Presbyterian Hospital, Mount Sinai NYU Health, Memorial Sloan-Kettering, Columbia University Medical Center and Harvard Medical School. Providing efficient, flexible and comfortable spaces for those who work or stay in our buildings is of

DAVIS BRODY BOND RENOVATION + REUSE 2022

prime concern and we work closely with laboratory and medical staff to meet these needs. Resources and Services Headquartered in New York and with offices in Washington, DC, Davis Brody Bond is led by five partners: Steven M. Davis, FAIA, William H. Paxson, AIA, Christopher K. Grabé, FAIA, Carl F. Krebs, FAIA, and David K. Williams, AIA. They direct an experienced senior staff of architects and designers with project management and technical expertise. The team which supports them includes technical specialists, CAD technicians, graphic designers, model makers, and administrative staff. Davis Brody Bond provides comprehensive design services that include: Urban Design; Architecture; Master Planning; Interior Design and Workplace Planning; Historic Preservation; Programming and Planning.

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NY Public Library Bartos Forum (before)

NY Public Library Bartos Forum (after)

NY Public Library Gottesman Gallery (before)

NY Public Library Gottesman Gallery (after)

NY Public Library Map Division (before)

NY Public Library Map Division (after)

Restoration & Reuse: Design Approach

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Restoration, renovation and adaptive reuse projects have been a key part of Davis Brody Bond’s practice for over 30 years. We have an extensive portfolio of work that sustains the best features of existing buildings while exploring opportunities for dynamic transformation. Our goal is to preserve important features and to articulate new construction and interventions as distinctive and modern. We believe in sympathetic and honest contemporary design, not poor imitation of an unattainable past.


The Frick Collection Portico Gallery (before) The Frick Collection Portioo Gallery (before)

The Frick Collection Portico Gallery (after)

Columbia University Audubon Ballroom (before)

Columbia University Audubon Ballroom (after) Columbia University Audubon Ballroom (after)

Thurgood Marshall US Courthouse (before)

Thurgood Marshall US Courthouse (after)

We are experienced in the demanding technical aspects of renovation, restoration and adaptive reuse. Older buildings require special attention and creative strategies to incorporate modern building systems that were never envisioned when they were built. The often idiosyncratic nature of historical construction requires knowledgeable flexibility, not rigid guidelines. In these situations, we enjoy close collaboration with lighting designers, historic preservation consultants, structural, mechanical and electrical engineers.

DAVIS BRODY BOND RENOVATION + REUSE 2022

We have preserved, restored, and renovated buildings of significance for corporate, cultural, and academic clients. This work has involved both older landmark buildings and significant structures designed in the 1950s and 1960s. We view a building’s historic and architectural character as a fundamental strength. We believe that effective reuse is not only a great design opportunity but also, by extending the life of an existing structure, a socially and environmentally responsible endeavor.

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Irish Arts Center New York, NY

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The Irish Arts Center (IAC) is an arts and cultural organization dedicated to promoting the vibrant image of Ireland and Irish America through performance, exhibition and education. Founded in 1972, the IAC offers its audiences a window into Irish culture through live performances, film, visual arts presentations and classes in Irish language, history, music and dance. The Center provides a dynamic platform for Ireland’s top emerging and established artists.


For most of its existence the IAC has operated out of a converted three story tenement building, whose ground floor was formerly a garage which became a small theater. The proposed expansion will provide for an adjacent new building on Eleventh Avenue which will connect to the original facility, creating a center with two venues, as well as associated support, classroom and rehearsal space. The new facility will provide spaces for collaboration among the creative disciplines of music, theater, dance, film, comedy, literature and the visual arts. The new facility is built upon the site of a former garage, which is part of the history of the neighborhood. Though not a historic landmark, the community felt strongly about retaining the original two story brick façade as a link to the neighborhood’s past. The main façade is being preserved as a feature of the new building.

DAVIS BRODY BOND RENOVATION + REUSE 2022

Because of funding from the Irish government, Davis Brody Bond has also collaborated with Ireland’s Office of Public Works (OPW) on the design of the new building. The 25,000 sf infill building and renovation of the historic IAC will include a 199-seat flexible theater and associated theater support facilities; a rehearsal studio classroom; a multipurpose classroom; exhibit areas; a café; and the restored 99-seat historic theater. Because of a significant amount of city funding, including the city’s grant of the property for the project, there were extensive approvals and consultations with the community board and city agencies. When completed, the new Irish Arts Center will add to New York City’s rich cultural institutions by creating a premiere arts facility that expresses the talent, energy, tradition and hospitality of Irish and Irish-American culture.

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Irish Arts Center New York, NY


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Irish Arts Center New York, NY

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The Frick Collection Master Plan & New Portico Gallery New York, NY As the first expansion of The Frick Collection in thirtyfive years, the Portico Gallery displays one of the museum’s most significant pieces of sculpture as well as a developing collection in the decorative arts. The design approach for the new gallery carefully maintains and preserves the original character and feel of the loggia as an outdoor space. The design incorporates the structure’s most important features, such as the colonnade, bluestone floor and exterior limestone walls and bas reliefs. New architectural details relate to the vocabulary of the original mansion and to John Russell Pope’s later addition of 1935. The original exterior features and finishes have been cleaned and restored; the floor replaced with carefully matched bluestone in the original pattern.

To minimize the architectural impact of the new glazing, fourteen foot high, self-supporting structural glass panels extend along the south facing colonnade resulting in minimal interference and attachment to the historic fabric. These large glass panels visually open the space to the Fifth Avenue Garden and for the first time afford the visitor the opportunity to experience the garden from the loggia. Portico Gallery Selected Awards • Friends of the Upper East Side Historic Districts 2012 Transformation Award • AIA New York Chapter Design Awards


The Frick Collection New Portico Gallery

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Embassy of South Africa Washington, DC

The rehabilitation of the Embassy of South Africa involved the adaptive reuse of two historically significant adjoining structures located on Embassy Row: the Ambassador’s Residence (1936) and the Chancery (1963). We were initially commissioned to conduct a feasibility study evaluating the efficiency of the complex and determine if it could be modified to meet current and future programmatic needs of the Embassy. Following the acceptance of the study’s recommendations, we developed a design that respected the original buildings while expressing the “transparency, equality and modernity” to which the new South African government aspired. The primary objective of the project focused on the creation of a new, welcoming environment for embassy staff and visitors alike. The original embassy buildings, designed in a Dutch Baroque style, lacked public spaces to open the chancery in support of the Embassy’s outreach mission. The project sought to expand the Embassy’s public areas, improve its circulation and security, and create a new image for the complex that symbolized the “New South Africa.” With some chancery functions operating out of the Embassy’s separate Van Ness location roughly two miles away, the Embassy created additional office spaces, consolidating key embassy personnel into one central complex. The design solution captured the exterior space between the two existing structures, creating a two-story lobby atrium as a central event space and point of entry for staff and visitors, and increasing the overall size of the embassy including an expansion of the Ambassador’s Residence. Newly vacated space in the residence, as well as the more efficient interior planning which results from the renovation effort, provides additional office space for the personnel currently located at the Van Ness offices.

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Embassy of South Africa Washington, DC

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Embassy of South Africa Washington, DC


Thurgood Marshall US Courthouse US General Services Administration New York, NY

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Davis Brody Bond, in association with Beyer Blinder Belle, were the architects responsible for restoring the Thurgood Marshall Federal Courthouse, a 31-story, 661,000 sf granite tower, to its original grandeur. This included the restoration of its granite façades and striking gold pyramidal roof and upgrading its infrastructure without compromising its historic and aesthetic integrity. Program Function The project began with Davis Brody Bond’s initial effort to define the critical issues unique to this project. We first outlined the needs of the US General Services Administration (the client) and the needs of the US Courts (the tenant). We worked with representatives from both groups to decide on how limited space and budget resources could be allocated to provide the maximum in both functional and technical requirements. DAVIS BRODY BOND RENOVATION + REUSE 2022

We looked for operational implications, program, and adjacency relationships to maximize efficiency, while also reducing energy consumption, and/or providing ease of maintenance. In our approach to these decisions, we made key distinctions related to the architecture and its use to maximize flexibility with an infrastructure that would support conversion to new functions over time. Our goal was to balance the preservation of Cass Gilbert’s strong historic design features with the need for a high performing courthouse.

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Project Scope Upgrades to the infrastructure included replacement of all MEP, fire protection, security, and building systems. When the project started, the building was in a serious state of disrepair, both on the interior and exterior. Pieces of the granite covering the concrete-encased steel structure were cracked, mortar joints had failed and there was significant water penetration. The roof’s terra cotta tiles were damaged. On the interior, the elegant finishes, including wood paneling, decorative plaster, and marble, had been damaged or removed during earlier renovations. Offices were crammed into corridors sacrificing daylight that had originally come through courtyard facing windows. Because of the constraints of the historic fabric, solutions to meeting modern HVAC and infrastructure needs had to be flexible and creative. One of the more unique interventions took place in the double-story library. It had an original ceiling with plaster beams painted to look like wood. Diffusers and air return vents would have compromised this feature so ventilation was made to come through the floor from the level below.

All interior renovations and exterior renovation efforts were designed in accordance with the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards of Rehabilitation. Cass Gilbert’s architecture has now been restored to its original intent yet the building is a modern and efficiently functioning center for justice. Selected Awards and Publications • 2014 Chairman’s Award, The New York Landmarks Conservancy • 2014 Honor Award for Architecture, US GSA • Architectural Record, “Order in the Court,” Joann Gonchar, February 2014

Sustainability in a Historic Structure Installation of new building systems projects a significant energy savings of 15 percent compared to standard new construction. These savings were achieved without major modifications to the building envelope’s thermal properties. In addition to the energy savings, the building water system was overhauled. On the top of the six-story base, the courthouse has a 21,000 sf green roof which retains stormwater. The building also uses several conservation measures that are calculated to save approximately 25% of the potable water used by a conventional building. In addition to sensor controlled low-flow plumbing fixtures, the building also has a 10,000 gallon rainwater-retention tank. The water collected there makes up for evaporated or water lost in other processes.

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Columbia University School of the Arts Planning Study New York, NY

The School of the Arts at Columbia University is an artistic and intellectual “laboratory” in which students work, experiment, and learn under the guidance of outstanding professors acclaimed in their fields of practice. The School offers graduate programs in Film, Visual Arts, Theatre and Writing and takes advantage of the extensive resources of the University and the city. To support the arts at Columbia, the University and School engaged Davis Brody Bond to prepare a study and program analysis to identify space requirements and facilities (new and renovated), that would allow the school to meet current shortfalls in space, consolidate far flung outposts and reduce its reliance on rented venues.

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In addition to the School’s educational programs, the study also looked at the relocation and expansion of the Wallach Gallery, the University’s fine arts gallery, and renovations to the Miller Theatre which offers public programs in music, theater and dance. The team was asked to develop options for the school which were cost effective and would work within the typologies of several historic existing buildings. The goal was to create a collaborative and interdisciplinary environment for the arts by addressing the shortfalls developing versatile and visible performance venues.

DAVIS BRODY BOND RENOVATION + REUSE 2022

The proposed plan for the arts includes development of a new building, titled the “Lantern” which contains flexible performance space, screening rooms for film, and rehearsal space. To support this program, two existing buildings on the south side of 125th Street are to be renovated for workshops, instructional studios, individual studios, classroom and rehearsal spaces. The plan creates a critical mass of art production facilities in close proximity and allows the School to decant from its smallest and most remote facilities. With strategic renovations at the historic Morningside campus, the School will create a second major node which will support the administrative and faculty offices, as well as the writing program.

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CUNY Baruch College Master Plan and Field Buiding New York, NY Baruch College has evolved as one of CUNY’s most selective campuses and has undergone a major transformation over the past 20 years. The foundation of its physical expansion and consolidation is Davis Brody Bond’s original master plan. Davis Brody Bond continued its work for Baruch College with the initial implementation of the Newman Library & Technology Center and with the current and most recent implementation of the Field Building at 17 Lex. MASTER PLAN From its inception Baruch College suffered from inadequate facilities and insufficient space. It recognized the need to provide its staff, faculty and students with a central campus to foster a collegiate environment and to create the sense of a cohesive student body which consisted of primarily commuting students. To achieve this, Davis Brody Bond developed a complex urban master plan which reviewed Baruch’s campus and proposed alternatives for expansion in the vicinity of its location. A projected space program of 855,415 net assignable square feet was proposed. As many of Baruch’s facilities were scattered around a five-block area, the goal was to bring all the remote sites into a more concentrated area. The master plan identified properties to acquire, rehabilitate and demolish. The master plan organized Baruch College into two complexes: a new site to the north of 24th Street called the North Campus and a group of buildings the college owned to the south of 23rd Street on the pre-existing South Campus. The purchase of the North Campus buildings enabled the College to bring all departments within one city block of each other. The North Campus was composed of two buildings. Following the completion of the master plan, Davis Brody Bond began its implementation with the design of the Newman Library and Technology Center. A second building of the North Campus was programmed as mixed-use tower to house departmental, classroom and conference space. The implementation of the master plan successfully established the sense of a coherent campus which Baruch was previously lacking.

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2 9 MECHANICAL MECHANICAL

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FIELD BUILDING

NEWMAN LIBRARY + TECHNOLOGY BUILDING The Newman Library & Technology Center was the first building implemented following the completion of the master plan. To create the new library, we completely renovated an 1894 industrial building designed in Italian Renaissance style. The original facade was restored, leaving the structural columns as part of the new exterior. The building is divided into nine floors and includes, in addition to the library, a conference center, a computing and technology center, a media center, and the offices of enrollment. A grand staircase in the two-story entrance lobby leads to the main floor of the library which is organized around a five-story skylit atrium created from an existing lightwell. Recognizing the need to create a complete academic environment, we established the design goals which identified the need for an academic commons, a place where faculty, students and staff could interact. Once this was established, the team began the creative adaptive reuse of the interior with a thoughtful restoration of the exterior. The visual openness of the library and its organization around the central atrium has made the library easy to use, visually clear, and an exciting place to be without compromising function. FIELD BUILDING AT 17 LEX Davis Brody Bond has designed a comprehensive infrastructure upgrade and phased renovation for the Field Building at 17 Lexington Avenue in Manhattan. Built for the college in 1929, the building was sorely deficient in mechanical infrastructure and vertical transportation. A major focus of the renovation was to provide teaching laboratories and associated classrooms for the natural sciences. Responding to a recent update of the College’s Master Plan, we programmed the building to provide lecture halls, classrooms, teaching and research laboratories, performing arts venues, student life facilities, as well as departmental and administrative offices. An infill addition will transform the front façade and allow for additional program space and improved circulation. An addition to the rear of the building will add vertical circulation and improved mechanical services. The key challenge of the project is to overhaul the building’s cores, major systems and exterior envelope while the Field Building remains operational. Project goals include re-activating the College’s South Campus, obtaining LEED Silver certification and reworking the building to provide full ADA access.


New York Public Library McGraw Rotunda

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New York Public Library Center for the Humanities Master Plan and Phased Completion New York, NY Davis Brody Bond has served as the architect for the twodecade restoration, adaptive reuse, and expansion of the New York Public Library, one of the world’s pre-eminent repositories of knowledge. Designed by the Carrère and Hastings and completed in 1911, this landmark structure occupies an important place in the life of the city. In 1982, the Library’s flagship 42nd Street building had reached a critical point. The 1911 landmark was showing its age and space was woefully short. Offices and storage had taken over grand public rooms. Mechanical systems and were inadequate. New information technologies beckoned, but the means to implement them was unclear. Davis Brody Bond addressed these issues with a multi-phase master plan that returned the building’s grand spaces to the public, optimized support areas, and created state-of-the-art environmental and information retrieval systems. Following a comprehensive evaluation of space needs, an epic series of renovation projects brought the library into the 21st century while reinforcing its historic integrity. Major completed projects include: • The Rose Main Reading Room, one of NYC’s greatest interiors, has been painstakingly restored, with digital services integrated into the historic architecture. • The Celeste Bartos Forum, originally the Circulating Library, has been transformed from a storage facility into a space for conferences, lectures, and recitals. Its extensive ornament and remarkable skylight have been restored to their original appearance. • The Map Division, which houses collections from the 1500s, has been returned to pristine condition with careful restoration of historic woodwork, ceilings, and metal finishes. Extensive environmental controls have been almost invisibly integrated. • A two-level 3.5 million volume stack expansion has been constructed under Bryant Park.

Selected Awards • AIA Honor Award 2003, 2002, 1997, 1994, 1986 • AIA New York Chapter Distinguished Architecture Award, 1998, 1987, 1985 • Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design, American Architecture Award, 2003, 1999 • AIA / American Library Assoc. Award of Excellence for Library Architecture, 2003, 1999, 1989 South Court South Court is the only major addition ever made to the New York Public Library’s venerable Fifth Avenue flagship, and a quantum leap forward for its public education and administrative facilities. In an open courtyard that originally served as an entrance for horse carriages, Davis Brody Bond inserted an elegant and contemporary seven-story building-ina-building. South Court houses an electronic teaching center, an orientation theater, an auditorium, administrative offices, and a staff lounge on the glass-walled top floor. As an addition to Carrère and Hastings’ landmark building, the project could not be visible from the street, so Davis Brody Bond excavated two additional levels to provide the needed space for program elements. Further, South Court stands almost completely free of the original structure, only lightly touching its facades. The upper floors are set back from the existing marble walls of the courtyard, revealing these façades to the public for the first time. In this gap, natural light pours down to the ground level of the addition. The original foundation walls are exposed at the bottom of a glass staircase descending to a new auditorium. South Court Selected Awards • AIA Honor Award • AIA NY Chapter, Interior Architecture Awards • Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design, American Architecture Award


New York Public Library Rose Main Reading Room

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New York Public Library vignettes and details


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NY Public Library South Court

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NY Public Library South Court


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Renovation and Reuse: Design Legacy

1. United Brotherhood of Carpenters & Joiners Headquarters, New York, NY The renovation of this ten-story 1920s loft building included the restoration of the brick façade, reorganization of circulation and service cores, structural alterations, and replacement of MEP systems. The renovated building provides staff with 70,000 sf of upgraded office space, conference rooms, computer areas, employee training rooms, a cafeteria, an executive dining room and four courtyards. 2. Wildlife Conservation Society The Bronx Zoo / Old Bird House, Bronx, NY This adaptive reuse project for the Bronx Zoo is part of a master plan for five 1895 Beaux Arts buildings designed as animal exhibition spaces. Damaged cast-stone and terracotta façade elements were replaced to return the exterior to its original appearance. To optimize the interior for administrative use, a second floor was inserted. Many of the original interior elements were retained and the exposed steel trusses were sandblasted and repainted. New office partitions are topped with glass privacy walls so the trusses’ full spans can be appreciated. 3. U.S. Department of State Embassy Façade Renovations and Upgrades Davis Brody Bond is currently on its third five-year contract with the US Department of State Bureau of Overseas Building Operations (OBO) to renovate and upgrade embassies throughout the world. Many US foreign posts occupy historically significant structures with significant regulatory controls and approval processes. DBB has worked on renovations of culturally significant post-war Embassies by Eero Saarinen (Oslo), Ralph Rapson (Stockholm) and Walter Gropius (Athens) which have required a creative approach to preserve their original character. Work has included upgrades for fire and life safety, blast hardening, seismic upgrades and anti-terrorism design, perimeter security upgrades, and introduction of new MEP systems to meet current codes. 8. Brooklyn Botanic Garden Steinhardt Conservatory, Brooklyn, NY The Brooklyn Botanic Garden, designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, is among the borough’s most treasured institutions. Its picturesque and finely scaled greenhouse core was preserved and strengthened by Davis Brody Bond’s master plan for revitalized historic buildings and new spaces to exhibit the Garden’s world-famous collections. The rebuilt Palm House retains the architectural features of the original conservatory while upgrading the glazing systems and incorporating mechanical shades and feature lighting.

5-6. CUNY Baruch College, Library and Technology Center, New York, NY This project realizes a key component of Davis Brody Bond’s master plan for this urban campus. We completely renovated an 1894 Italian Renaissance style loft building restoring the original Pompeian brick, terra cotta, and limestone facade but stripping the interior to its structure. The reimagined spaces inside the new 330,000 sf, nine-story library include a grand staircase in the two-story entrance lobby leading up to the main floor, which is organized around a five-story skylit atrium created from an existing lightwell. 7. Columbia University, Havemeyer Hall Renovation & Addition, New York, NY Faced with plans to construct a costly new chemistry facility, Columbia commissioned Davis Brody Bond to investigate strategic renovations that could meet the same goal. The result was the transformation of two landmark McKim, Mead & White buildings into sophisticated quarters for modern scientific research, augmented by a small but effective new addition. The 120,000 sf renovation provides state-of-theart labs and expanded teaching space; the new 30,000 sf extension houses teaching and graduate research labs, The site of the deferred science building was filled in 2011 by a major new facility designed by Davis Brody Bond in association with Rafael Moneo. 8. Columbia University Medical Center Audubon Ballroom Restoration, New York, NY Columbia commissioned Davis Brody Bond to develop a master plan for the Audubon Research and Technology Park adjacent to the Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center. The site includes the Audubon Ballroom, which was built in 1912 and is notable as the site of Malcolm X’s assassination and an important example of polychrome terra cotta ornament. The existing Broadway façade was restored, and the renovated Ballroom now incorporates the Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial & Education Center, also designed by Davis Brody Bond. 9. University of Maryland Medical Biotechnology Center, Baltimore, MD This six-story 206,000 sf complex combines two completely renovated warehouses. The new complex maintains the original warehouses’ structure, but every other component has been redesigned. MEP systems are totally new, and wood floors have been replaced with concrete deck throughout. DBB carefully analyzed the spatial constraints imposed by the varying column bays to identify a suitable zone for flexible laboratory layouts. A new skylit atrium was created by removing portions of floor slab at each level. 45


Selected Clients CIVIC/CULTURAL • American Museum of Natural History New York, NY • Birmingham Civil Rights Institute Birmingham, AL • Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn, NY • District of Columbia Public Library Washington, DC • The Federal Reserve Bank of New York, New York, NY • The Frick Collection, New York, NY • Ghana National Construction Corporation, Bolgatanga, Ghana • Governors Island Governors Island, NY • Harvard Club of New York City New York, NY • Human Rights in ChinaNew York, NY • Irish Arts Center, New York, NY • The Library of Congress Architect of the Capitol Culpeper, VA • Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts New York, New York • Lower Manhattan Cultural Council New York, NY • Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial and Education Center New York, NY • Martin Luther King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change Memorial & Library, Atlanta, GA • The Museum of Modern Art New York, NY • National Great Blacks in Wax Museum Baltimore, MD • National Mall Trust, Washington, DC • National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World Trade Center Foundation New York, NY • New York Public Library, New York, NY • The Perelman Center for the Performing Arts at the World Trade Center New York, NY • The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, New York, NY • Queens Borough Public Library Queens, NY • RECenter, East Hampton, New York • Republic of South Africa Embassy to the United States Washington, DC • Smithsonian Institution Washington, DC • U.S. Department of State 1970 World Exposition Osaka, Japan • U.S. Department of the Interior

National Park Service Various Locations • U.S. Department of State Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations (OBO) Worldwide Locations • U.S. General Services Administration New York, NY & Bowie, MD • Wildlife Conservation Society Bronx Zoo, Bronx, NY

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Davis Brody Bond, LLP Architects and Planners

80 M Street, SE Suite 100 Washington, DC 20003 tel (202) 684 7560 dc@davisbrody.com

Architecture Master Planning Urban Design Planning + Programming Historic Renovation Adaptive Reuse Sustainable Design Interior Design

Steven M. Davis FAIA

One New York Plaza Suite 4200 New York, NY 10004 tel (212) 633 4700 www.davisbrodybond.com Business Development & Press Inquiries: Julie Hewitt newbusiness@davisbrody.com

ACADEMIC • Brown University, Providence, RI • Chesapeake College, Wye Mills, MD • The City University of New York Baruch College, New York, NY • Central Connecticut State Univ. New Britain, CT • Columbia University Morningside Heights Campus, Manhattanville Campus, & Medical Center New York, New York • Cornell University, Ithaca, New York • Dillard University, New Orleans, LA • Harvard University Medical School Boston, MA • Lincoln Ctr. for the Performing Arts Juilliard School of Music & The School of American Ballet New York, NY • Massachusetts Inst. of Technology Cambridge, MA • Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, NY • New York University, New York, NY • New York University Polytechnic Institute, Brooklyn, NY • Northwestern University Chicago & Evanston, IL • Princeton University, Princeton, NJ • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy, NY • Rockefeller University, New York, NY • Rutgers University New Brunswick & Newark, NJ • Sarah Lawrence College Bronxville, NY • State University of New York Binghampton, Buffalo & Amherst, NY • Stony Brook University StonyBrook, NY • University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT • University of Maryland Biotechnology Inst., Baltimore, MD • University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA • Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA • University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI • Vanderbilt Univ. & Medical Center

Nashville, TN • Yeshiva University Cardozo Law School, New York, NY • Eagle Academy for Young Men Co-sponsored by the NYC SCA and 100 Black Men of New York, Inc. Bronx, NY • Harlem Children’s Zone Community Center & Charter School, New York, NY • New Haven Public Schools New Haven, CT • NYC School Construction Authority New York, NY • Speyer Legacy School, New York, NY SCIENCE + TECHNOLOGY • ARCO Chemical Company Newton Square, PA • Brown University, Providence, RI • Columbia University & Columbia University Medical Center New York, NY • Cornell University & Cornell University Medical School, Ithaca, NY • Deep Underground Science and Engineering Laboratory (DUSEL) Homestake, SD • Estée Lauder Inc., Various Locations • Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA • L’Oréal, Various Locations • Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY • Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, NY • New York Structural Biology Center Cryogenic Electron Microscopy Facility, New York, NY • New York University Polytechnic Institute, Brooklyn, NY • Northwestern University Chicago & Evanston, IL • Princeton University, Princeton, NJ • Procter & Gamble Gillette Irapuato, Mexico • Rockefeller University, New York, NY • Stony Brook Uniiversity Stony Brook, NY • University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT • University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore, MD • University of Virginia Health Sciences Division, Charlottesville, VA • University of Wisconsin Health Sciences Division, Madison, WI • Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, TN • Valéo Automotive Parts Manufacturer Various Locations • Yale University, Yale/New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT

RESIDENTIAL • The Durst Organization New York, NY • Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts New York, NY • The Olnick Organization New York, NY • The Related Companies New York, NY • Solow Residential New York, NY • Strivers Gardens Realty, LLC New York, NY • Zeckendorf Development New York, NY HEALTHCARE • Beth Israel Medical Center New York, NY • Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center Hunt’s Point Primary Care Center Bronx, NY • Brookdale University Hospital Medical Center Brooklyn, NY • Columbia University Medical Center New York-Presbyterian Hospital Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital of New York New York, NY • Cornell University Medical College Ithaca, NY • Harvard University Medical School Boston, MA • Hospital for Special Surgery New York, NY • Irving Center for Clinical Research New York, NY • Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Ctr. New York, NY • Mount Sinai Medical Center New York, NY • Mount Sinai Queens, Queens, NY • Northwestern University Medical School Chicago, IL • Queens Hospital Center, Jamaica, NY • St. Barnabas Hospital Bronx, NY • St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center New York, NY • St. Vincent’s Hospital & Medical Center New York, NY • University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, VA • Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, TN • Yale University, Yale/New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT

William H. Paxson AIA Carl F. Krebs FAIA Christopher K. Grabé FAIA, LEED AP David K. Williams AIA


Yuny Irlandino ‘Glasshouse’ São Paulo, Brazil Front Cover The Veneto The Related Companies Back Cover One Sutton Place North Solow Building Company


Davis Brody Bond, LLP Architects and Planners One New York Plaza, Suite 4200 New York, NY 10004 www.davisbrody.com


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