flexiblefullpage -
billboard - default
interstitial1 - interstitial
catfish1 - bottom
Currently Reading

Corporate modernist buildings increasingly popular fodder for adaptive reuse projects

Adaptive Reuse

Corporate modernist buildings increasingly popular fodder for adaptive reuse projects

Suburban office and retail complexes are targets for reimagined development


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | February 4, 2024
Image by Klaus Aires Alves from Pixabay
Image by Klaus Aires Alves from Pixabay

Beginning in the 1970s adaptive reuse projects transformed 19th and early 20th Century buildings into distinctive retail destinations. Increasingly, developers of adaptive reuse projects are targeting outmoded corporate buildings of the 1950s to 1980s.

The first wave of adaptive reuse projects focused on brick structures with long rows of identical windows paralleling a pier, a river, or a rail line. Modernist buildings, often boxy structures composed of concrete exteriors, present a far different aesthetic for designers.

Adaptive reuse brings new life to modernist buildings

A report by Bloomberg on the latest adaptive reuse trend includes a description of a Houston project that transformed a 550,000-sf former postal facility into a combination event space, food hall, and coworking complex. 

The project cut large holes in the roof for skylights. Other modernist building reformations cut giant holes in existing structures to bring in more daylight or create larger interior spaces. There were no outcries from historical preservationists over the drastic reconfigurations.

Despite the challenges, including the need to undo single-use zoning at many sites, the reimagining of the modernist era’s “hundreds of millions of square feet of outdated office parks, shopping malls, factories, distribution centers and their associated parking lots” is necessary for environmental reasons, the report says. Otherwise, millions of pounds of embodied carbon would be released back into the environment by demolishing them.

Related Stories

Coronavirus | May 18, 2020

Will empty hotels provide an answer for affordable housing shortage?

A Los Angeles-based startup sees the Midwest as most fertile for adaptive reuse.

Adaptive Reuse | Jun 11, 2019

The power and possibility of adaptive reuse

Building reuse generally offers greater environmental savings than demolition or new construction.

Adaptive Reuse | Jul 9, 2018

Work, park, live: Inside Cincinnati’s parking garage turned lifestyle hotel

The Summit hotel and conference center is a converted parking garage that was once a factory.

Office Buildings | Jun 6, 2018

Final Cut: Jupiter Entertainment’s new production studio in New York combines office and editing spaces

The project team completed this full-floor renovation in four months.

Adaptive Reuse | Jun 4, 2018

Pop-up retail market on Chicago’s Randolph Street will be made of repurposed shipping containers

Related Midwest will open the market at 725 W. Randolph St. later this week.

Adaptive Reuse | May 7, 2018

A decade after it debuted, Beijing’s 798 Arts District is still a work in progress

China’s third-most-popular tourist attraction remains a magnet for creative tenants.

Adaptive Reuse | Apr 26, 2018

Edison Lofts building is New Jersey’s largest non-waterfront adaptive reuse project

Minno & Wasko Architects & Planners designed the building.

boombox1 - default
boombox2 -
native1 -

More In Category

MFPRO+ Special Reports

Top 10 trends in affordable housing

Among affordable housing developers today, there’s one commonality tying projects together: uncertainty. AEC firms share their latest insights and philosophies on the future of affordable housing in BD+C's 2023 Multifamily Annual Report.




halfpage1 -

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021