Adaptive Reuse

Finding opportunity in our vacant built assets

Items Tagged ‘synagogue’

Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center

Project Name:
Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center
Location:
Seattle, Washington, USA
Completion Date:
1969
Original Use(s):
synagogue
New Use(s):
performing arts center
Project Description:

History
Designed by B. Marcus Priteca and built in 1915, the synagogue served the Orthodox Jewish congregation Chevra Bikur Cholim.[1]

(Re)Developer
The building was originally adapted as part of the Model Cities Program which was a part of President Johnson’s Great Society and War on Poverty initiatives. Running from 1966 to 1974, the program focused on improving the coordination of existing urban programs and providing additional funds for local plans. The program’s initial goals emphasized comprehensive planning, involving not just rebuilding but also rehabilitation, social service delivery, and citizen participation.[2]

Outcome
The City of Seattle purchased the center in 1971 and since then has continued the mission of the Center while updating and renovating the building (1971, 1991, 2003, 2009).[3] The Center is dedicated to celebrating, nurturing, presenting and preserving African American performing arts and cultural legacies. “Created to provide a cultural institution in Seattle’s Central Area, LHPAC has been at the core of experimental, cutting edge, traditional, and emerging art forms for more than 30 years. It has been an essential gathering place for an African American canon of work in a neighborhood that has seen numerous demographic changes over the past three decades. The Center is committed to championing a cultural and artistic voice while building powerful connections with the diverse cultures in the community. This is accomplished through the creation of dynamic performing arts experiences for all.”[4]

[1]Wikipedia
[2]Wikipedia
[3]Wikipedia
[4]Langston Hughes African American Film Festival
Images courtesy of Joe Mabel.

Nozkowski and Robins Residence

Project Name:
Nozkowski and Robins Residence
Location:
New York City, New York, USA
Completion Date:
1969
Original Use(s):
underwear factory, shower-curtain factory, neighborhood still, Chinese laundry, fabric store
New Use(s):
studio residence
Project Description:

History
This synagogue on Hester Street in New York City has seen many uses over its lifetime. Aside from its original use as a place of worship, the building has also served as an underwear factory, shower-curtain factory, the neighborhood still, a Chinese laundry, and a fabric store.

(Re)Developer
Thomas Nozkowski and Joyce Robins married in 1967 after they finished art school. Nozkowski is a painter while his wife Robins is a sculptor.

Outcome
The couple purchased the building in 1969 and undertook the adaptive reuse project with only $3,000. They had to install the electrical and water lines. The building’s simple, open plan was consistent with their work and living philosophies. Through their studies with Abstract Impressionists, they solidified their belief that it is morally important to live and work in the same place. The synagogue-turned-studio where they worked on their art (and raised their son, Casimir) is unchanged since those renovations.

Items in the photos:

  1. The skylight and windows
  2. The balcony where women sat to be separate from men during services
  3. Robin’s workspace with some of her sculptures
  4. Refinished wood floors
  5. Large geometric wood-frame couch build by Nozkowski’s father
  6. Stained-glass window
  7. Rear wall used to project movies for gatherings
  8. Open studio space[1]

[1]New York Magazine
Images courtesy of New York Magazine.