RI College Gaige Hall Renovation Featured in Providence Business News

April 1st, 2020

See a photo profile of LLB’s renovation project on Gaige Hall at Rhode Island College in the Fresh Design column of the March 27 issue of Providence Business News.

Worcester DCU Center Renovations

March 5th, 2020

LLB worked with the City of Worcester under an On-Call Services contract to complete renovations to the DCU Center. The DCU Center, located in Downtown Worcester, hosts a large variety of events, from trade shows to concerts. It also features an arena for hockey and other sporting events. Completed renovations include upgrades to the hockey board systems, ice deck seals, and painting.

Five LLB Projects Receive AIA RI Design Awards

December 13th, 2019


LLB Architects received five awards at AIA Rhode Island’s 2019 Design Awards. Franklin Public Library won a Merit Award for its sensitive renovation and addition. Two projects at Rhode Island College, Craig-Lee Hall and Gaige Hall, both received Citation Awards for significant renovations. A new Squash & Education Center building on Moses Brown School’s campus received a Citation Award. A creative renovation to a historic library which created the Weston Art & Innovation Center received a Citation Award. The five projects all demonstrate a custom approach to designing spaces to best fit the needs of the users and the surrounding community.

The Franklin Public Library, established in 1790 with a donation from Benjamin Franklin, is widely considered to be the nation’s first public library. LLB Architects received a Merit Award for designing a 6,000 sf addition and restoring and renovating the existing 22,000 sf structure. The design provided an opportunity to create a dramatic and significantly modern addition, which LLB tucked behind the historic building in order not to distract from the original architecture. The addition increases the capacity of the general stacks, provides much-needed meeting and community rooms, enlarges the size of the children’s room, and creates a young adult room. The AIA Rhode Island jury praised how “the large-scale corner openings give the light a volumetric quality inside the building while the texture and color of the terra cotta addition contrasts the granite of the original structure.”

Both Rhode Island College’s Craig-Lee Hall and Gaige Hall were honored with Citation Awards by AIA Rhode Island for ambitious renovations. One of the first buildings constructed on the campus, Craig-Lee was overdue for renovation. A key goal was to modernize and integrate Craig-Lee Hall into the campus and transform the relationship between it and Gaige Hall, since both are prominent buildings that face the main quad. A new addition facing the end of the quad repositions the building on campus. On the ground level, a large student lounge engages with the newly landscaped edge of the quad and invites students into the building. AIA Rhode Island jury members commented, “the façade and therefore the quad, appear to be successfully activated by the additional student lounges at the end of each corridor and at the ground floor, providing daylight and views deep into the building.”

Gaige Hall was built in 1966 and faced a series of infrastructure issues that affected the learning environment, including lack of natural light and poor acoustics. LLB Architects undertook a total reorganization of departments and classrooms, creating integrated collaborative zones throughout the building. A small addition made a large impact by replacing the two-story center section with a three-story connector that features a double height multi-purpose room as well as study lounges that benefit from a fully glazed facade. AIA Rhode Island jury commented, “the full renovation of the Hall addresses the layout in a manner that creates more open, light-filled spaces that encourage a sense of community by providing areas for gathering, group study, and casual meetings.”

LLB received a Citation Award for a new building added to the Moses Brown School campus which serves both the school community and SquashBusters, a sports-based after school youth enrichment program. The main challenge was to site and design a wide footprint building on a tight site that needed to be respectful of its surroundings. LLB created an open viewing area between the 12 squash courts which serves as the heart of this building. It was oriented so that it visually and symbolically connects the two communities that it serves: the school and the larger community. The AIA Rhode Island jury remarked, “the site-ing of the building was clever, with the shifting of the grid. With this shift, the use of the intersecting geometries allowed for keeping the overall footprint as compact as possible, while providing a generous interior open space.”

LLB received a Citation Award for the Weston Art & Innovation Center, a creative conversion of a historic library into an active maker space for the Weston Public Library. The building combines restored historic areas with modern interventions such as the elevator, successfully joining the old and new. The elevator is centrally located at the heart of the building and acts as a hub of activity. Instead of trying to disguise this utilitarian feature, innovative materials allow the elevator to become a modern piece of art within the space, which also serves as a blank canvas. Users of the space can draw on the glass with dry erase markers to create an evolving gallery of art and ideas. AIA Rhode Island jury noted that, “the historic entry hall and reading room were wonderfully restored to their original state, while working from only two historic photos available of the space.”

Photograph by Warren Jagger

Putnam Municipal Building

December 3rd, 2019

The Putnam Municipal Building project consists of three separate entities: the town hall, the public library and the Aspinock Historical Society of Putnam.

LLB worked with each department of the town hall, the library director and the municipal historian to create a building program and schematic design of a well-compacted building. The group favored a reserved two-story building to mitigate excess costs and create greater efficiency. LLB designed a 40,000 square foot building that creates a sense of place and civic pride while connecting the three entities in one building. The building is accessible from both the parking lot and the Town’s green.

US Coast Guard Academy Strength and Conditioning Center Announced

November 18th, 2019

LLB Principals Christian Ladds and Kathleen Bartels, joined colleagues Matt Dempsey and Paul Caton of Site Specific and Jon Metcalf of Metcalf Facilities Group at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy Football Game for a half time ceremony announcement of the Emlen Tunnel Strength & Conditioning Center. Watch the flyover video of the new center created by LLB’s designers.

Pictured in photo from left to right: Christian Ladds, Kathleen Bartels, Matt Dempsey, Paul Caton, John Metcalf.

Three of LLB Architects’ Projects Win Rhode Island Monthly Design Awards

October 25th, 2019

Bethany Burns and Enno Fritsch at Rhode Island Monthly Design Awards

LLB Architects has been awarded three 2019 Rhode Island Monthly Design Awards. The Children’s Library at the Cranston Public Library’s Central Branch won Silver in the Commercial Interior Design category. Rhode Island College’s Gaige Hall won Silver in the Commercial Renovation/New Construction category. Lincoln School’s STEAM Hub won Bronze in the Commercial Renovation/New Construction category. Three very different projects, they all demonstrate LLB Architects’ creative approach to renovating existing spaces to incorporate natural light, connect community and foster collaboration.

The Children’s Room at the Cranston Public Library Central Branch was a well-used space by the community, but in need of a renovation after 30 years of active use. LLB Architects worked closely with library staff to develop a plan to revitalize the space and create age appropriate zones. The lively and colorful design features iconic images to inspire children’s imagination. Custom-designed light fixtures feature black and white silhouettes of real-world objects on the sides and colorful, fantasy world images on the bottoms. A hexagon sitting wall provides an intimate and cozy seating for reading. Rhode Island Monthly’s panel of judges commented on the positive feeling of the space and appreciated how the design created “restful spaces among the chaos.”

Lincoln School’s STEAM Hub for Girls created more than 4,000 sq. ft. of additional instruction space for interdisciplinary teaching and learning, along with an art gallery for students and visiting artists. The project transformed existing traditional science classrooms into flexible spaces for group collaboration and project-based learning, while making the facilities more sustainable and resilient. The signature façade features a dramatic glass curtainwall facing the west and 20 vertical fins, or sun shades, spaced in such a way as to create rolling shade as the sun moves. Rhode Island Monthly’s panel of judges commented on the transformation of “classroom spaces into open, airy spaces for learning” and applauded the creation of flexible workspaces.

Rhode Island College’s Gaige Hall was built in 1966 and faced a series of infrastructure issues that affected the learning environment, including lack of natural light and poor acoustics. LLB Architects undertook a total reorganization of departments and classrooms, creating integrated collaborative zones throughout the building. A small addition made a large impact by replacing the two-story center section with a three-story connector that features a double height multi-purpose room as well as study lounges that benefit from a fully glazed facade. Rhode Island Monthly’s panel of judges commented that the renovation “brought the building to a new level” and admired the successful design concept based on simple materials with “windows, walls, ceilings and floors done in the right proportion.”

View all the 2019 award-winning projects on RI Monthly.

LLB Architects Named an Emerging Professional Friendly Firm for 2nd Year

October 7th, 2019

AIA New England Emerging Professional Friendly Firm Award

For the second year in a row, LLB Architects has been recognized as a firm which supports Emerging Professionals by AIA New England, a regional council of the American Institute of Architects. The AIA New England Emerging Professional Friendly Firm Program aims to identify firm initiatives that promote the advancement of Emerging Professionals through professional development and personal growth opportunities. Emerging professionals are defined as those who are Associate AIA members or have become licensed architects within the past 10 years.

Hope High School Auditorium Study

September 11th, 2019

Hope High School Auditorium rendering

The Alumni Association of Hope High School invited LLB Architects to conduct a conceptual study of the school’s Auditorium and surrounding spaces to support a fundraising effort to revitalize the theater via a classical restoration with state-of-the-art technology. The program included in this conceptual study was the addition of a coat room, refreshment area and additional restrooms. Spaces adjacent to the auditorium such as the lobby, green rooms, practice rooms and dressing areas are planned to be refurbished. Additional goals include safety in the renovated vestibule to create a lock down sally port, with connection to a relocated Clerk and Principal suite. Lastly, mechanical and roof replacements were included in cost estimation.

The interior theater space is planned to receive a full renovation, with the rake of the auditorium and new balcony inserted, and adjusting the seating layout around the existing orchestra pit to ensure that each of the 840 seats has a good view of the stage. Other planned features include a new state-of-the-art A/V system, a new HVAC system, increased ADA accessibility, and new restrooms, making the theater a self-sufficient entity for public and private events. Renovations will also include restoration of the orchestra pit, interior finishes, and reconfiguration of school offices.

U.S. Coast Guard Alumni Association Strength & Conditioning Center

September 11th, 2019

Commissioned by the U.S. Coast Guard Alumni Association, LLB renovated an existing building at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy in New London, CT. The renovations reactivated an underutilized space by converting existing racquetball courts into a Strength and Conditioning Center. It used the existing space more efficiently by opening up to the adjacent corridor, and relocating existing program elements such as the equipment and fueling stations. The open concept space allows for more lifting equipment and provides training space for the football team in a single space. The new mezzanine level provides new program elements such as a warm-up area with cardio equipment, medicine ball area, and a sled track. The creation of new exterior openings allows natural light to flood the space and take advantage of the structure’s proximity to the Thames River with expansive water views. Renovations also reorient the building on the campus through the creation of a new entry sequence providing a new entry canopy, glass storefront, and a re-clad building envelope.

Rhode Island College – Craig-Lee Hall

September 9th, 2019

Craig-Lee Hall

Craig-Lee Hall

Craig-Lee Hall

Craig-Lee Hall

Craig-Lee Hall Lounge

Craig-Lee Hall Meeting Room

Craig-Lee Hall at Night Craig-Lee Hall at Night

Craig-Lee Hall was one of the first buildings erected on the Rhode Island College’s campus. It has fallen into disrepair over the years with outdated heating and cooling systems; leaky and falling ceiling tiles; accessibility problems for students with disabilities; poor acoustics and inadequate office and classroom space. The Hall needed extensive renovations to address these issues while creating spaces that align with modern teaching and learning methodologies.

The primary goal was to modernize and integrate Craig-Lee Hall into the campus and transform the relationship between it and Gaige Hall, since both are prominent buildings that face the main quad. Additional design goals include updating the program layout in order to create more open, light-filled spaces that allow for group study, student gatherings and casual meetings to take place. The building systems were modernized to contribute the goal of achieving LEED certification.

On the interior, the traditional boundaries of the cubicle were broken down and a new open student lounge is located on the first floor at the end of the quad. The layout has classrooms on one side and office spaces on the other. A “mixing” between the two sides allows for connections to be made and to foster social interaction. Finally, the former mechanical yard was transformed into a green courtyard space with a rain garden which can be seen from student lounges located on all floors.

Photography by Nat Rea