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Bay Area Metro Center / Perkins+Will


© Blake Marvin Photography

© Blake Marvin Photography



© Blake Marvin Photography

From the architect. Like a geode, the Bay Area Metro Center’s most distinctive and unexpected treasure – a soaring atrium — lies within. The monolithic building – a cavernous, 8-story concrete structure occupying an entire city block – was built as a military tank assembly plant in 1942 with low, 10’ ceilings and massive football field-sized floor plates, punctuated every 25’ by concrete columns. Its transformation into a welcoming, light-filled space that fosters unity across multiple floors was achieved by carving an atrium into the center of the building.




© Blake Marvin Photography

The new Bay Area Metro Center is a collaborative workplace that consolidates four government agencies. The goals of the consolidation is to foster teamwork, pool resources, and gain operational efficiencies. Within the atrium, terraces for informal gathering occur near large, open coffee bars. At the lower levels, a large room for commission hearings, multiple conference rooms, breakout spaces, a bike storage area, retail provide amenities for the future.




© David Wakely Photography



East-West Section



© Blake Marvin Photography

Originally designed for another era and purpose, its most remarkable feature is the reuse of the building itself. The LEED Gold-targeted rehabilitation averts the relocation of a 500,000 sf building to landfill and features recycled materials — including much of the exposed wood used for stair treads, countertops and wall finishes — from century-old wooden pilings uncovered during the demolition of the original Transbay Terminal nearby.  It leverages its unique assets–immense floor plates capable of accommodating a breathtaking new atrium, and a fixed shell that focused bold and spectacular moves inwardly. The design team created a one-of-a-kind experience for employees and visitors.




© Blake Marvin Photography

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