Challenge
Envisioned as a mixed-use hub linking Boston’s Fenway and Longwood Medical neighborhoods, the first part of this phased project needed to forge ground-level connections between the community and a diverse retail/restaurant program. Designers were challenged with reinventing common areas on the garage level, ground-floor lobby, and second-floor atria and lobby as well as activating the exterior realm.
Design Solutions
Breathing new life into the old space was not only more sustainable than building new, it honors the rich history of this neighborhood cornerstone. The reinvented building—now called 401 Park—repurposes underutilized spaces for today’s high-energy work/play world.
Solutions include:
• Stripping interiors to their structural bones, revealing the building’s true industrial character
• Celebrating architectural elements, such as the soaring concrete columns, to recall the original building and create a sense of scale
• Custom designing a railing with Boston-centric names/places to honor the city’s rich history within the historical context
• Creating space for the 25,000-square-foot Time Out Market food hall, featuring massive windows that open to the outdoors
• Activating two interior atria as daylit office amenity areas
• Converting a parking lot into a public park
• Introducing public art, sculpture, and vintage objets d’art inside and out—including household artifacts once available in the Sears catalogue.
Credits:
- HDLC - Lighting Designer - Daniel Toimil
- Suffolk - Vice President, Contractor Operations - Chris Gedrich
- ACT Associates LLC - Audio Visual - Mel Bucklin
- Code Red consultants - Code Consultant - Jason Hopkins
- Kalin Associates - Code Consultant - Mark Kalin
- Campbell-McCabe - Hardware Consultant - Susan Messier
- WSP Flack & Kurtz - MEP Project Manager/Vice President - Nancy Gould
- VHB - Civil Engineer Project Manager - William Nichols
- LeBlanc Jones - Senior Associate Landscape Design - Chris Regan
- McNamara Salvia - Structural Project Engineer - Isabella Carter