LANTERN
Jason Keen

LANTERN

OMA as Architects

LANTERN, A MIXED-USE COMMUNITY ARTS HUB DESIGNED BY OMA/JASON LONG FOR LIBRARY STREET COLLECTIVE OPENS IN DETROIT

LANTERN is an adaptive reuse of a former commercial bakery and warehouse to create a new headquarters for two local non-profits, and a vibrant mix of galleries, artist studios, gathering spaces, and community-serving retail.

LANTERN, OMA’s first project in Detroit, is now open to the public in Little Village, a neighborhood-wide initiative of Library Street Collective (LSC) co-founders Anthony & JJ Curis. Led by OMA Partner Jason Long, the former commercial bakery and warehouse built in the 1900s has been converted into a mixed-use art hub and public space.

photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen
photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen

Led by OMA Partner Jason Long, the 22,300-square-foot complex serves as a new home for two local arts non-profits, Signal-Return and PASC (Progressive Arts Studio Collective). It also includes around 5,300 square feet of artist studios, gallery, and 4,000 square feet of creative retail—all centered around a 2,000-square-foot outdoor courtyard that will serve as an accessible community space.

"We are thrilled to see LANTERN open its doors and join the Little Village programming. Working with OMA and our partners, we've created a space that not only supports local businesses, artists, and non-profits, but also fosters inclusivity, education, and accessibility in the arts. We look forward to seeing LANTERN's impact on the neighborhood and beyond,” said Anthony and JJ Curis, LSC Founders.

photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen
photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen

“We are excited to start seeing the LANTERN come to life. In the renovation, we tried to work both with and against the former bakery’s solidity to make its transformation feel simultaneously familiar and mysterious. The result is a building that welcomes and emits light and creativity,” said Jason Long, OMA Partner.

OMA’s approach takes advantage of the building’s current state of disrepair, transforming an area missing both its roof and an end wall into a courtyard at the heart of the building. Defined as the primary entry with multiple frontages for all tenants, the courtyard becomes a public gateway and an activity condenser. Signal-Return and PASC’s diverse programs—art education, production, and gallery—are organized across the existing tripartite site to maximize points of access and potentials for community interface. Production zones and artist studios create an active and inviting face to Amity Street, galleries line the courtyard to reinforce a public heart for the building, and neighborhood-serving functions orchestrated on the opposite side of the courtyard consolidate the most public amenities along Kercheval Avenue.

photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen
photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen

Across the North Building, existing bricked or boarded-up doors and windows opened strategically. Operable windows inserted at the studios to allow for ventilation, extruded windows at galleries become art vitrines, and former loading entries create large openings at production spaces offer indoor-outdoor potentials. In contrast, the South Building posed a solid expanse of concrete masonry (CMU). Rather than imposing a new composition of windows, 1,353 holes are drilled into the blank walls and filled with cylindrical glass blocks. This monolithic field of tiny punctures subtly reveals light and movement within and transforms the building into a glowing lantern at night.

photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen
photo_credit Jason Keen
Jason Keen

LIBRARY STREET COLLECTIVE

Since its inception in 2012, Library Street Collective has presented artists and programming that connects Detroit to the international arts community while maintaining crucial support to the local creative renaissance of the city. The gallery’s influence extends beyond its brick-and-mortar location into the city’s public, private and heritage spaces. A crucial aspect of Library Street Collective’s efforts involves raising awareness and funds for nonprofits and other worthy causes, particularly those based in Detroit.

The gallery has rapidly evolved to include exhibitions, collaborations, and partnerships with major museums. Large- scale public projects are an essential aspect of the gallery’s programming that bring experiential contemporary art to the Detroit community; currently underway is an ambitious public arts campus in the East Village neighborhood of Detroit with plans to designate the area as the city’s next cultural district. At the heart of the plan is the Shepherd, a one hundred ten-year-old Romanesque-style church that will be transformed into a cultural arts center with multi-faceted programming focused on exhibitions, public projects, and performance. The arts and culture campus will not only blur the lines between commercial gallery, institution, and community arts center, but it will also spark new opportunities for collaboration with galleries, museums, and arts organizations, both locally and abroad.

photo_credit John D'Angelo
John D'Angelo
Caption

Team:

Client: Library Street Collective / Anthony & JJ Curis

Partner-in-Charge: Jason Long

Associate: Chris Yoon

Project Architect: Samuel Biroscak

Team: Yiyao Wang, Cameron Fullmer, Mariana Curti

Executive Architect: Metro Cad Group

Structure: Wiss, Janney, Elstner

Associates, Inc.

MEP: EAM Engineers, Inc.

General Contractor: CIR Group

Arts Nonprofits: Signal-Return Press, Progressive Art Studio Collective (PASC)

Upper-Level Studios: Paul Verdell, Akea Brionne, Davariz Broaden (Artist Studios), Assemble Sound

Ground Floor Retail: Cøllect Beer Bar, Coup D’Etat, Café Franco

Photographer: Jason Keen, John D'Angelo

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