{"id":251258,"date":"2025-03-17T15:14:50","date_gmt":"2025-03-17T19:14:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=canvasflow&p=251258"},"modified":"2025-03-17T17:27:39","modified_gmt":"2025-03-17T21:27:39","slug":"macquarie-group-philadelphia-by-rapt-studio","status":"publish","type":"id_project","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/macquarie-group-philadelphia-by-rapt-studio\/","title":{"rendered":"Rapt Studio Crafts A Bold Modernist Office With Artistic Flair"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
March 17, 2025<\/p>\n\n\n
Words: <\/span>Joseph Giovannini<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n Photography: <\/span>Eric Laignel<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n Many architects and designers involve first-time clients in projects to educate them about the process and other basics. But when multidisciplinary practice Rapt Studio<\/a> was hired by Macquarie Group\u2014a global financial services firm with substantial investments in real estate development\u2014to renovate its new office in a landmarked 1964 Philadelphia building by the distinguished Italian-American architect Pietro Belluschi, designer and client were already on the same page.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Both Rapt and Macquarie have a portfolio of office projects in which design informality and can-do spirit relax traditional workplace protocol to trigger \u201cspatial connectivity,\u201d as Macquarie global design director Andrew Burdick puts it. \u201cThe client already wanted to take advantage of the building to create face-to-face collisions between people,\u201d notes Kumar Atre, head of design research at Rapt. \u201cWe did too.\u201d Indeed, the studio\u2019s CEO and chief creative officer David Gallulo could be quoting the client when he says, \u201cWe wanted to respect the existing space and also really connect people,\u201d summarizing their shared intentions. Recently inducted into the Interior Design<\/em> Hall of Fame<\/a>, Gallulo is\u00a0well-versed in connecting and connections, with Rapt, ranking 98th on our top 100 Giants list<\/a>, having completed projects for such high-profile clients as Tinder, Dropbox, and VF Corporation.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n This project entailed renovating the ground-floor lobby, top three floors, and roof terrace of the nine-story structure\u2014145,000 square feet in all. Both parties agreed that achieving the interactive office landscape they envisioned required a kind of collaboration with Belluschi across architectural generations, drawing from the character of his building: an International Style slab with a sculpted concrete frame and sleek glass-and-aluminum facades sheathed in sunscreens made of Plexiglas, a material invented by the Rohm and Haas Company, whose headquarters it originally was.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Belluschi, one of the country\u2019s foremost mid-century modernists, had designed a beautiful shell: 39,000-square-foot, open-plan floor plates beneath coffered concrete ceilings. But before the recent renovation, the existing interior build-out imposed a hierarchical office layout, isolating executive staff in perimeter offices around a central secretarial pool. Floors were stratified in a pancaked stack, and dropped ceilings further generalized the already bland universal space. Respecting Belluschi\u2019s shell, Rapt aimed at creating a more contiguous, collaborative environment with specific programs and zones mapped horizontally and vertically throughout the three floors\u2014essentially socializing the interior in a transformed office paradigm. <\/p>\n\n\n\n \u201cWe had to translate the language of the historic building into a series of spaces that were never there, while making them feel original,\u201d Arte explains. The Rapt team was, in a sense, \u201crestoring\u201d the building to what it might have been had Belluschi designed it today, extending his architectural vocabulary into an office vernacular that is less hierarchical but more civic and egalitarian\u2014an appropriate goal for a building in the heart of historic Philadelphia.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Right from the lobby, Rapt introduces these themes and intensions, riffing off the bones and wit of Belluschi\u2019s envelope. He had established a strict grid of chamfered concrete columns, their capitals flaring into wide angular canopies that turn the ceiling into a field of dramatically folded plates. Several large cruciform chandeliers\u2014composed of countless Plexiglas icicles and, like the building, listed\u2014extend along the length of the volume. Mirroring the spatial theatrics, Rapt has inserted a series of custom wall installations between the columns\u2014vertical rows of leather-and-felt straps, twisted to echo the angled concrete around them. Also custom, generously scaled furnishings, including a concierge desk, benches, banquettes, and planters, anchor the space, while commissioned video art playing on large screens adds color and energy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n More Plexiglas diffuses ceiling light in the elevators leading to reception on the ninth floor, where a sequence of spaces unfolds\u2014Guggenheim Museum\u2013style, from the top down\u2014via a rectangular atrium stairwell breaking through the three-story pancake to connect all levels. Each landing opens onto a large public area that acts like the anchor tenant in a shopping mall, a magnet that draws people in a progression of vertical connectivity. The company canteen is located on the eighth floor, beneath the reception and guest relations concourse on the ninth, with a training hub on the seventh. Theses public zones are balanced by office space\u2014mostly open, but some private\u2014and meeting rooms of various sizes. <\/p>\n\n\n\n But the atrium is the heart of the project, one that beats with excitement because of the energetic irregularity with which the stair angles its way through the otherwise staidly orthogonal architecture. Belluschi\u2019s grid is disciplined and his geometry Euclidean, but Rapt\u2019s meandering stair walks on the wild side, bringing the \u201960\u2019s building into the 21st century. Each landing meets the floor plate at a slightly different level and angle, so walking up and down the stairs, Burdick notes, \u201cisn\u2019t a chore\u201d but a discovery. The angularity surprises the space with an informality that encourages social encounter, introducing people to one another. It helps that the staircase is tall, dark, and handsome. Deep-bronze, coated-steel balustrades give it a graphic profile, which is complemented by a backdrop wall of vertical wood slats, echoing the warmth and dynamism of the installations in the lobby far below.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Belluschi\u2019s beautifully finished coffered concrete ceilings, with their sense of rhythm and substance, inspire lighting as striking as the lobby\u2019s glamorous chandeliers. A regimented array of dronelike custom fixtures beams light into each recess with an intensity that seems to dematerialize the concrete while casting a soft glow back into the transformed interiors below\u2014perfectly encapsulating the project\u2019s spirit of collaboration across time and space. <\/p>\n\n\n\n RAPT STUDIO:<\/strong> SAM FARHANG; CAITLIN SWAIM; ESIN EKINCIOGLU; SCOTT MCMANUS; LAURA PACHECO PE\u00d1A. L2PARTRIDGE:<\/strong> ARCHITECT OF RECORD. TILLOTSON DESIGN ASSOCIATES:<\/strong> LIGHTING CONSULTANT. FUTURE GREEN STUDIO:<\/strong> LANDSCAPE CONSULTANT. ARCHITECTURAL CASEWORK:<\/strong> MILLWORK. CENTRAL METALS:<\/strong> CUSTOM STAIRS. PMDI SIGNS:<\/strong> CUSTOM SIGNAGE. BALA CONSULTING ENGINEERS:<\/strong> STRUCTURAL ENGINEER, MEP. STRUCTURE TONE:<\/strong> GENERAL CONTRACTOR.<\/p>\n\n\n\n FROM FRONT<\/strong> ERIK BRUCE: CUSTOM INSTALLATION (LOBBY). BRICK IT:<\/strong> FLOOR TILE. CAESARSTONE:<\/strong> QUARTZ SURFACE. BERNHARDT DESIGN:<\/strong> LOUNGE CHAIRS. WALTER KNOLL:<\/strong> STOOLS. GLOBAL LEATHER:<\/strong> INSTALLATION LEATHER. MAHARAM:<\/strong> INSTALLATION FABRIC, UPHOLSTERY FABRIC, UPHOLSTERY LEATHER (LOBBY), CURTAIN FABRIC (WORKPLACE). LAPALMA:<\/strong> WINDOW COUNTER SYSTEM (TRAINING). GRAND RAPIDS CHAIR:<\/strong> SIDE CHAIRS. AUDO COPENHAGEN:<\/strong> PEDESTAL TABLES. JAMIE STERN FURNITURE, CARPET, LEATHER & FABRIC:<\/strong> CUSTOM BENCHES (TRAINING), CUSTOM BANQUETTES (CANTEEN). DESIGNTEX:<\/strong> WALLCOVERING (TRAINING, CANTEEN). HAY:<\/strong> BARSTOOLS (TRAINING), LOW COFFEE TABLES, STOOLS (WORKPLACE). ANDREU WORLD:<\/strong> ROUND TABLES (CANTEEN). EQUITONE:<\/strong> RIDGED WALL PANELS. EGE CARPETS:<\/strong> CARPETING. MUUTO:<\/strong> LARGE TABLE, SIDE CHAIRS (CANTEEN), MODULAR SOFA (WORKPLACE). ARPER:<\/strong> ARMCHAIR (RECEPTION). ARNOLD CONTRACT:<\/strong> CUSTOM RECEPTION COUNTER. KNOLL:<\/strong> WIRE SIDE TABLE (RECEPTION), LARGE TABLE, OTTOMANS (WORKPLACE). ENCORE SEATING:<\/strong> LOUNGE CHAIRS (WORKPLACE). AXIS LIGHTING:<\/strong> LINEAR PENDANT FIXTURES. MURAFLEX:<\/strong> GLASS PARTITIONING. INTERFACE:<\/strong> CARPET TILES. TEXAA:<\/strong> MESH CEILING (ROOF-DECK STAIR). TECHNICAL GLASS PRODUCTS:<\/strong> CHANNEL GLASS. THROUGHOUT LUKAS LIGHTING:<\/strong> CUSTOM COFFER FIXTURES. DINOFLEX:<\/strong> STAIR RUBBER FLOORING. MCNICHOLS:<\/strong> PERFORATED METAL PANELS. BENJAMIN MOORE & CO.:<\/strong> PAINT.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\nRapt Studio Crafts A Bold Modernist Office With Artistic Flair<\/h1>\n\n\n
Rapt Studio Breathes New Life Into Macquarie Group’s Office<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Tour Around This Sleek Glass-And-Aluminum Office In Philadelphia<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
Cruciform Chandeliers Brighten This Workplace Design\u00a0<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
Step Inside This Modernist Office by Rapt Studio<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
This Striking Sculptural Staircase Takes The Stage<\/h3>\n\n\n\n
PROJECT TEAM<\/h6><\/div>\n\n\n\n
PRODUCT SOURCES<\/h6><\/div>\n\n\n\n