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Shulman + Associates | Design · Architecture Interior Urban
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SMACE
HASIS
UNSA
L
OT
SELECTED
WORK:
RETAIL
+
SELECTED
WORK:
RETAIL
521 Lincoln Road/ Crocs
Belvetro Gallery
Banana Republic Lincoln Road
601 Washington Avenue
1036 Lincoln Rd/ Ann Taylor Loft
910 Lincoln Road/ AllSaints
852 Collins Avenue David’s Cafe + Marketplace
Chrysler Bldg/ BCBG Maxazaria 701 Lincoln Road/ Forever 21
433 Lincoln Road
Chrysler Bldg/ Apple Store12th + Collins Retail
Fitz’s Bike Shop
French Connection UK
Katherine Fleming Pop-Up Shop
600 Collins Bldg
Mead Bldg/ Victoria’s Secret
667 Lincoln Rd/ Pizza Rustica
Ulta Lincoln Road
The Vitrine at Collins Avenue
Art Windows at Walgreens
Lincoln Theatre/ H&M
The Sterling BldgNunally Bldg/ Lucky Jeans
Steve Madden Lincoln Road
Victoria’s Secret Collins Ave
Swarovski Crystal Lincoln Rd
6
S+A is committed to the creation of site specifi c designs based on multidisciplinary research, the exploration of ideas and the fostering of strong relationships.
We synthesize the distinct circumstances of each project into designs that are relevant and transformative. We see the city, landscape, culture, and building program as laboratories for our contemporary design practice.
Allan Shulman founded Miami-based Shulman + Associates in 1996. His work is widely published, and has been honored with 58 design awards. Shulman is also an author, editor, lecturer, curator and associate professor at the University of Miami School of Architecture.
THE FIRM
PROJECTS
HOTELS
12th and Collins Hotel
Angler’s Resort + Spa
Aqua Hotel
Browns Hotel
Casa Casuarina/ Versace
Collins Plaza Hotel
Crescent Hotel
Dorchester Hotel
Empire Hotel
Fairwind Hotel
Governor Hotel
Greenview Hotel
Greystone Hotel
Hotel Indigo
Indian Creek Hotel
Lily Hotel
Look Inn/ 418 Meridian
Ocean Gate Hotel
Ocean Way Hotel
Palms Hotel
Pink Sands Resort
Plaza Hotel MB
Rainbow Hotel
RioMar Beach House Motel
Ritz Carlton Dilido
Rivage Hotel
Sagamore Hotel
Savoy-Arlington Hotel
Sea Spray Hotel
Soho Beach House
South Seas Hotel
Tides Hotel Terrace
Vagabond Motel
Windamar Beach Gardens
HOMES
Aqua Townhouses
Bay Harbor Townhouses
Bayside Homes
Belvedere House
Benson House
Berberian House
Blanchet House
Colee Hammock House
deAgostini House
Duncan Lee House
Island Drive Apartment
Key Biscayne House
Krasnoff House
Lallemande House
Levin House
Little Haiti Houses
Little River Houses
Lorax House
Mashrabiya House
Miami Shores House
Morningside House
North Bay Road House
Ocean Club Apartment
Origami House
Palm Bay Tower Apartment
Pine Tree Drive House
Royal Palm House
Rubell Collection House
Sunset Island House
Valentine Garcia House
Zamboli House
HOUSING
1020 Pennsylvania Avenue
2200 Collins Campanile
22nd and Park Housing
304-312 Ocean Drive
32 Lofts
354 Washington Avenue
5850 Biscayne Boulevard
6747 Collins Tower study
7207 Bay Drive
744 Lincoln/ Chrysler Tower
Casa Casuarina Residences
Nautilus Apartments
Palm Bay Studios
Savoy Beach Club
RETAIL
433 Lincoln Road Bldg
530 Lincoln Road Bldg
601 Washington Avenue
633 Lincoln Road Bldg
723 North Lincoln Lane
852 Collins Avenue
AllSaints Spitalfields/ 910
Lincoln Road
Ann Taylor Lincoln Road
Apple Store Lincoln Road
ArtCenter South Florida
Lincoln Road
Banana Republic Lincoln Rd
BCBG Lincoln Road
Belvetro Lincoln Road
Crocs Lincoln Road
David’s Cafe + Market
FCUK Lincoln Road
Forever 21/ 701 Lincoln Rd
Fritz’s Lincoln Road
H&M/ The Lincoln Theatre
JugoFresh Continuum
JugoFresh Santona Corner
JugoFresh Wynwood Walls
Katherine Fleming Popup
Lucky Jeans Lincoln Road
Peek-A-Boo Building
9
Savoy Torino Retail
Sterling Building
Steve Madden Store
Swarovski Lincoln Road
The Vitrine/ 909 Collins Ave
Ulta Everwear/ 337 Lincoln
Victoria’s Secret Collins
Avenue
Victoria’s Secret Mead Bldg
Walgreens Mid-Beach
Walgreens South Beach
INSTITUTIONAL + CULTURAL
Area Entertainment Center
ArtCenter South Florida /
Art Tower
ArtCenter South Florida /
Art Windows
ArtCenter South Florida /
Galleries 800 & 924
ArtCenter South Florida /
New Headquarters
ArtCenter South Florida /
Nunnally Building
Bakehouse Art Complex
Bath Club
Chapel Venerable Bede
La Gorce Country Club
Miami Ad School
Miami Center for
Architecture + Design
Miami Women’s Club
Rubell Family Collection +
Residence
The Light Box
Woburn Library Competition
WORKSPACES
50eggs Headquarters and
Test Kitchen
AIA Work Space
Baumann Cosmetic & Re-
search Institute
Columbus Networks
Davis Motel Redevelopment
Goldforest Office and Resi-
dence
Gollin + Harris (formerly
Nixon Group)
Jupiter Films
Koniver Stern Offices
People for the American
Way Offices
Police Building at 2915
Biscayne
Rosen + Baker Advertising
Solkoff Offices
Techno Marine / Salud.com
The Atrium Building at 4500
Biscayne
HISTORIC PRESERVATION
12th and Collins
337 Lincoln Road/ Ulta
Everwear
354 Washington Avenue
521 Lincoln Road
745 Collins Avenue
852 Collins Avenue
910 Lincoln Road/ AllSaints
Spitalfieds
Ann Taylor Loft
Apple Store Lincoln Road
Bath Club
BCBG Lincoln Road
Browns Hotel
Casa Casuarina
Chase Building
Crescent Hotel
David’s Cafe
Empire Hotel
FCUK Lincoln Road
Fritz’s Skate + Bike
Governor’s Hotel
Greystone Hotel + Spa
James Manor Apts
Little River houses
Look Inn/ 418 Meridian
Peek-a-Boo Building
Ritz-Carlon/ Dilido
Rivage Hotel
Sagamore Hotel
Savoy Arlington
Sea Spray Hotel
Soho Beach House
Steve Madden
Swarovski Lincoln Road
The Angler’s Resort + Spa
The Lincoln Theatre/ H&M
The Vitrine at 909 Collins
Vagabond Motel
Victoria’s Secret
Woolworth Building
URBAN DESIGN
12th and Collins
A Vision for Biscayne Blvd
Biscayne Plaza Mall
Biscayne Shores
Colee Hammock Neighborhood
Improvements + Master Plan
Dixie Bend
Edgewater District Study
Hollywood North Beach Mas-
ter Plan + Community Code
Little River Houses
North Beach Park Redevel-
opment Study
North Beach Village
Pink Sands
Sawgrass Mills Town Center
Study
South Pointe Landswap Study
Zschornewitz
INTERIORS
2915 Biscayne
Baumann Cosmetic & Re-
search Institute
Belvetro Gallery
Buenos Aires Offices
Fairwind Hotel
Floridian Condominium
Greystone Hotel
Hotel Indigo
Jupiter Films
North Bay Road House 1
North Bay Road House 2
Palms Hotel Spa
Police Building
Rivage Hotel
Rosen + Baker Advertising
Silverspot Cinemas
South Pointe Apartment
AWARDS2014 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Baumann Cosmetic + Research Institute
2014 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
North Beach Village Tactical Revitalization
2014 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Miami Center for Architecture & Design
2014 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Opa-Locka Airport Hangar 102 Restoration
2014 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Billboard Building
2014 FLORIDA TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD
Miami Center for Architecture & Design
2014 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Miami Center for Architecture & Design
2014 BETTER BEACH AWARDS
Soho Beach House
2013 AIA MIAMI AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Baumann Cosmetic + Research Institute
2013 AIA MIAMI AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Columbus Networks US Headquarters
2013 AIA MIAMI SPECIAL RECOGNITION FOR PRESERVATION
Opa-Locka Airport Hangar 102
2013 AIA MIAMI UNBUILT DESIGN AWARD
North Beach Village Tactical Revitalization
2013 AIA FLORIDA AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
Lincoln Theatre/H&M
2013 BLLA LIFESTYLE HOTEL OF THE YEAR
Soho Beach House
2013 FLORIDA TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD
Lincoln Theatre/H&M
2013 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Lincoln Theatre/H&M
2012 AIA FLORIDA MERIT AWARD
Soho Beach House
2012 FLORIDA TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD
Soho Beach House
2011 AIA MIAMI ARCHITECT OF THE YEAR
Allan T. Shulman
2011 AIA FLORIDA HONOR AWARD
Bungalow 354
2011 AIA FLORIDA HONOR AWARD
600 Collins/ Peek-A-Boo Building
2011 FLORIDA TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD
Opa-Locka Airport Hangar 102
2011 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
David’s Cafe + Marketplace
2011 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Opa-Locka Airport Hangar 102
2011 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Soho Beach House
2011 FINALIST, ULI VISION AWARD
Soho Beach House
2010 AIA MIAMI EXCELLENCE IN ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Belvedere House
2010 AIA FLORIDA HONOR AWARD
22nd and Park
2009 AIA MIAMI EXCELLENCE IN ARCHITECTURE AWARD
Rubell Family Collection + Residence
2009 AIA MIAMI HONOR AWARD
418 Meridian/ The LookInn
11
2009 AIA MIAMI HONOR AWARD
Soho Beach House
2009 AIA Florida Merit Award
The Angler’s Boutique Resort & Spa
2009 FINALIST, ULI VISION AWARD
Browns Hotel
2008 AIA MIAMI UNBUILT DESIGN AWARD
Fairwind Hotel
2008 AIA MIAMI UNBUILT DESIGN AWARD
The Sea Spray at 304-312 Ocean Drive
2008 MIAMI DESIGN PRESERVATION LEAGUE AWARD
The Angler’s Boutique Resort & Spa
2008 AIA FLORIDA MERIT AWARD
The Vitrine at 909 Collins Avenue
2008 FLORIDA TRUST FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD
The Chrysler Building/ Apple Store
2008 HOTELWORLD GLOBAL HOSPITALITY DESIGN AWARD
The Angler’s Boutique Resort & Spa
2007 AIA MIAMI FIRM OF THE YEAR
Shulman + Associates
2007 AIA FLORIDA HONOR AWARD
Soho Beach House
2007 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Sunset Island House
2007 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
The Angler’s Boutique Resort & Spa
2007 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
The Chrysler Building/ Apple Store
2007 MIAMI DESIGN PRESERVATION LEAGUE DESIGN AWARD
The Chrysler Building/ Apple Store
2006 AIA MIAMI AWARD OF MERIT
Bungalow 354
2006 AIA FLORIDA HONOR AWARD
Fairwind Hotel
2005 AIA MIAMI AWARD OF EXCELLENCE
The Savoy-Arlington Hotel
2005 AIA FLORIDA MERIT AWARD OF EXCELLENCE Browns
Hotel
2005 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Browns Hotel
2004 MIAMI DESIGN PRESERVATION LEAGUE AWARD
Browns Hotel
2003 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
1026-1036 Lincoln Road Building
2002 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
The Mead Building
2001 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Crescent Hotel
2001 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
James Manor
2001 MIAMI DESIGN PRESERVATION LEAGUE AWARD
Crescent Hotel
2001 DADE HERITAGE TRUST AWARD
Chase Federal Bank Building/ Banana Republic
2001 MIAMI DESIGN PRESERVATION LEAGUE AWARD
Chase Federal Bank Building/ Banana Republic
1999 CHICAGO ATHENAEUM MERIT AWARD
Valdez Residence
1999 AIA MIAMI AWARD OF MERIT
Area Entertainment Center Collaboration with Jean-François Lejeune
RETAIL: H&M, SWATCH
MIAMI BEACH
THE LINCOLN THEATRE/ H&M
In 2007, the New World Sym-phony, the City of Miami Beach and Miami-Dade County agreed upon a public/private partnership to develop a new state-of-the-art performance facility just behind the sym-phony’s quarters in the Lin-coln Th eatre on Lincoln Road. Designed by Frank Gehry, the new facility was a key element in the City Center Redevelop-ment Project, a joint venture to inject new vitality into Miami Beach’s 17th Street Corridor. New World Symphony Center opened in September 2011. An important fi nancial and civic component of that project was the redevelopment of this storied theater for commercial use. Th e theater’s restoration and adaptive use was designed by S+A to provide state-of-the-art retail facilities; it was also designed to propagate the building’s history as a public space and as a theater, and ac-knowledge its cultural position on Lincoln Road.
Th e restoration and adaptive use of a 1936 cinema/theater
for retail use carefully balances commercial, public and his-toric identities of the building to create a new hybrid image and identity. S+A designed the building to be a visible land-mark and gateway to Lincoln Road from the Convention Cen-ter district. Among the many theaters along Lincoln Road and on Miami Beach, this proj-ect, completed in 2012, repre-sents the only adaptive use of a theater space that maintained its identity as a theater.
An important element of S+A’s design is the transformation of the theater volume, which accommodates the retail use while retaining its theatricality. Th e theatre fl oor is newly con-nected with its tiered mezza-nine, and the original scalloped ceiling has been restored. Th e transformation of the theater volume is also visible on the outside, where a blank concrete wall in the rear of the building was peeled away to unveil an enlivened, glowing glass facade that showcases the interior and its merchandise. Th is use of
creative tectonics re-energized the formerly barren alley and presents a strong counterpoint to the Symphony complex.
“Th is is one of the fi rst exam-ples of the very successful ad-aptation of a historical movie theater into a major retail fa-cility,” said William Cary, as-sistant director of the Miami Beach Planning Department. “It utilizes many of the origi-nal design features for modern merchandising purposes. It likely will be published in archi-tectural journals as a prime ex-ample of how to make a histori-cal building work for modern purposes.“ (Viglucci, Andres. “Lincoln Th eatre’s retail con-version a dazzling Deco drama in Miami Beach,” Miami Herald, September 12, 2012.)
2013 AIA Florida Honor Award
2013 Florida Trust for Historic Preservation Award
2013 Dade Heritage Trust Award
Exploded axonometric of Lincoln Road-fronting building and theater volume, showing an earlier scheme.
Th e theatre illustrated an interesting building type variant in Miami Beach. Th e building was comprised of two main elements: a the-atre box (windowless) and a
wrapping commercial building that related to the surround-ing streets. Th e theatre box occupied the northern portion of the lot, facing Lincoln Lane North, with access to Lincoln Road via a passageway below the marquee. Th e wrapping building was a retail and offi ce structure, known at the time as the Lincoln Medical Building.
Th e design of this project supports the activation of Lincoln Lane into a more public thoroughfare.
Original features of the Lincoln Road-facing façade were care-fully restored or reconstructed. Th e historic marquee was origi-nally clad in satin fi nished alu-minum and glass. Th e marquee metal (over a thousand pounds in weight) was stripped during World War II for use in the nation’s war eff ort, resulting in the stucco fi nish that adorned the marquee until 2011.
Historic cast stone bas reliefs were stripped and refurbished, and all decorative plaster work restored. Th e original full-height glass windows were reconstructed.
An important element of S+A’s design is the transformation of the theater volume, which accommodates the retail use while retaining its theatrical-ity. Within the existing theater space, the extant sloped seat-ing was removed and the fl oor leveled.
Th e theatre fl oor is newly connected with its tiered
mezzanine, and the re-introduction of the original scalloped ceiling has been restored. A dramatic new LED mesh wall, evoking the original movie screen, extends from the auditorium ceiling to the ground fl oor below, and serves as a multi-media screen for the retailer, suggestive of the original movie theatre screen. Th e transformation of the
theater volume is also visible on the outside, where a blank concrete wall in the rear of the building was peeled away to unveil an enlivened, glowing glass facade that showcases the interior and its merchandise. Th is use of creative tectonics re-energizes the formerly bar-ren alley and presents a strong counterpoint to the Symphony complex.
CHASE FEDERAL BANK BLDG
Th e Chase Federal Bank Building projects a monumental civic presence on Lincoln Road. Its modern classical façade of quarry keystone, aluminum and glass were matched on the interior with extensive marble and terrazzo, as well as decorative metal fi ttings. Th e bank’s signifi cant characteristics were successfully restored while converting the structure to its new use as a Banana Republic store: banking windows were converted to cash & wraps; check-writing counters became display platforms; and the vault was transformed into dressing rooms.
RETAIL: BANANA REPUBLIC
MIAMI BEACH
2001 Miami Design Preservation League Capitman Award
2000 Dade Heritage Trust Award
Th e restored bank from Lincoln Road.
Th e former vault was trans-formed into the dressing rooms.
S+A restored the historic Chrysler Building in four phas-es: BCBG Maxazaria, Apple Store, a residential tower addi-tion (unbuilt), and Swarovski Crystal.
RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
2008 Florida Trust for Historic Preservation Award
2007 Dade Heritage Trust Award
2007 Miami Design Preservation League Merit Award
CHRYSLER BLDG: APPLE STORE
Th e Chrysler Building was built in 1929 and designed by architect T. Hunter Henderson. Over time, the building’s facade was streamlined and simplifi ed, and much of the original character of the building had been lost. Before S+A’s reno-vation, the existing facade (oppo-site page, corner) was designed in 1856 by Melvin Grossman.
Left page image: historic photo of Lincoln Road looking west, c. 1931. Courtesy of Historical Mu-seum of South Florida.
S+A restored the historic Chrysler Building in four phas-es: BCBG Maxazaria, Apple Store, a residential tower addi-tion (unbuilt), and Swarovski Crystal.
RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
2008 Florida Trust for Historic Preservation Award
2007 Dade Heritage Trust Award
2007 Miami Design Preservation League Merit Award
CHRYSLER BLDG: BCBG MAXAZRIA
Th e BCBG MaxAzria portion of the Chrysler Building along Meridian Avenue.
S+A was the Design Architect for the building and Architect-of-Record for a new AllSaints Spitalfi elds store at 910 Lincoln Road. Th e original buidling, designed in 1929 by Wlater DeGarmo, had been renovated several times. Comprising two structures, one facing Lincoln Road and the other facing Lin-coln Lane, the interior front part of the existing building included an historic double-volume space. S+A restored, rehabilitated and expanded the building to accomodate its new retail tenant, and designed a rooftop addition (unbuilt).
910 LINCOLN ROAD BLDG
RETAIL: ALLSAINTS SPITALFIELDS
MIAMI BEACH
Renderings of the proposed three-story scheme (unbuilt).
RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
Th is urban infi ll project incor-porates the restoration of two street-level corner retail build-ings with the addition of two levels. Th e building peers over the historic fabric of an urban neighborhood. Th e aerial win-dows of its top level, designed as a sort of fl oating jewel box, invite the curiosity of pass-ersby. Th e addition’s angular geometry violates the regular-ity of its surrounding district of Mediterranean Revival com-mercial storefronts, but not disrespectfully.
Th e project comprises four lay-ers:
- Old bungalow: Although ar-chitecturally unremarkable,
the 1921 bungalow was the fi rst structure on the site. Most likely moved from another site, it sat on the alley. It will be moved to a more visible loca-tion on Miami Beach.
- 1920s era Mediterranean Revival storefronts: Th e new project begins with a detailed restoration of existing com-mercial buildings, including rehabilitative stucco work and new windows.
- Vertical Retail: A new addition grows above and behind the historic façade, refraining from architectural complexity so as not to distract from the origi-nal facade. Th e block is angled and set back to conform to line-
of-sight requirements.
- Jewel Box: Th is glazed room adds a third fl oor to the project, fl oating over the recessed mass below. It faces west and south, and thrusts horizontally to-wards the intersection, playing peek-a-boo with pedestrians.
Th e design of this project ad-dresses the tremendous scale off sets between the district’s historic one-story retail build-ings and the proliferation of new fi ve-story commercial buildings to the south and north.
600 COLLINS BLDG
2011 AIA Florida Design Award
Mechanical Equipment
Rooftop Addition
Historic Building + Urban Green Terrace
New Jewel Boxes
Th e Peek-a-Boo Building is sited in a busy commercial neighborhood. As part of an eff ort to respect present historic resources, an existing bungalow on the site deemed a ‘contrib-uting structure’ to the Miami Beach Architectural District will be restored and relocated to a nearby park.
Th e somewhat irregular components of the Peek-a-Boo Building nonetheless respect the scale and texture of the neighborhood.
Th e somewhat irregular components of the Peek-a-Bo
ld h lBuilding nonetheless respectthe scale and texture of the neighborhood.
S+A designed a pop-up shop for handbag designer Katherine Fleming at the F Factory in Mi-ami’s Design District. Installed on the second fl oor of the Moore Building, the shop was open during Art Basel Miami Beach 2009.
RETAIL: POP-UP SHOP
F FACTORY @ MOORE BLDG, MIAMI
KATHERINE FLEMING POP-UP SHOP
Th is hybrid adaptive reuse proj-ect discreetly combines retail and residential, exposing and restoring an historic home in the process. Multiple urban conditions are synthesized into three components: the restored house, a new streetfront glass retail showcase and two new townhomes along the alley.
Th e historic home, built of masonry walls and wood fram-ing in 1925, sat abandoned and largely concealed by 1951 renovations. It fi nds new life through careful restoration, maintaining its Mediterranean Revival styling. New, modern additions on the west and east frontages are structured in di-rect response to their context.
A concrete butterfl y roof on masonry end walls shelters a glassy two-story entrance pa-vilion facing Collins Avenue. A glass window-wall transforms the entire frontage into a large vitrine for passersby. Like a jewel case, the new transparent walls display the historic house inside.
Two new townhouses were carefully inserted facing the alley and the back of a popu-lar two-story nightclub on Ocean Drive. Th e townhouses rise from a relatively small footprint, peering over the nightclub’s roof like a pair of (sound-insulated) binoculars. Inverting the traditional hier-archy of a dwelling, the living
room is perched on the fourth fl oor just below private roof decks, providing both water views and a haven from the ac-tivity in the alley below. While the glass walls of the Vitrine in-vite passers-by to look in at the historic home, the new town-houses peek over the nightclub to the ocean on the other side, extending the transparency of the display case out toward the water.
RETAIL, TOWNHOMES
MIAMI BEACH
THE VITRINE
2008 AIA Florida Honor Award
Binoculars. Twin townhouses rise four stories to capture views of the ocean beyond.
(above) “X-ray” view through the adjacent nightclub towards townhouses peering above.
1 entry plaza2 vitrine retail space3 retail space (existing struct.)
4 retail offi ce5 trash room6 shared residential elevator
7 residential entrance8 garage9 bedrooms
10 living/ dining rooms11 private terrace
new
entrance
pavilion
historic home
adapted as retail space
two new
residential
townhouses
(below) Existing home on the site, c1980s. Photo courtesy of the Miami Beach Planning Department.
LAYERSTh ree separate elements layered within the design in harmo-nious coexistance with one another.
1 display2 consumerism3 private life
Th e ArtCenter South Florida off ers artists studio workspace as well as a place to showcase their work. Since 1996, S+A has been working with the ArtCenter on diverse projects, ranging form the design of new building and new gallery areas, the restoration and retrofi t-ting of existing building, to the redesign of artist spaces, the development of a campus plan and the resolution of a series of code and engineering issues.
Th e gallery at 800 Lincoln Road was doubles in size, and retro-fi tted with a dynamic new con-fi guration with new lighting and restored terrazzo fl oors.
Shortly after completion of the
800 Lincoln Road Gallery proj-ect, the long entrance corridor at 924 Lincoln Road was trans-formed into a linear gallery with continuous glass vitrines and new lighting, while historic elements of the building were revealed and restored
RETAIL, GALLERIES: 800 BLDG, 900 BLDG
ART CENTER SOUTH FLORIDA
RETAIL: LUCKY JEANS
As the fi rst part of a compre-hensive façade restoration of Lincoln Road’s historic Nun-ally Building, designed in the early twentieth century by the Pittsburgh fi rm of Kiehnel & Elliot, the buildings’ Northwest corner was returned to its his-toric confi guration. Th e res-toration included the removal of the aluminum cladding that was a later addition, repair of the underlying carved quarry keystone façade, repair of the terrazzo plaza and reconstruc-tion of bronze-veneered store-fronts.
NUNALLY BLDG/ ARTCENTER SOUTH FLORIDA
Th e original facade of the Nunally Building
Th e Nunally facade in the 1990s, with much of its historic facade removed.
Th e fi nal built portion of the Nunally Building became a retail space for Lucky Jeans.
RETAIL: FRENCH CONNECTION UK, ANN TAYLOR LOFT
MIAMI BEACH
Designed by architect Russell R. Pancoast in 1930 for the Mead Construction Company as a four-unit structure, after decades of neglect, the building was expanded by 4,000 SF, and its facades were restored and partially reconstructed. Th e new Lincoln Lane facade rein-terprets the front facade with a series of step-in and windows that urbanize the environment while maintaining its role in servicing the building.
1026-1036 LINCOLN RD BLDG
Restoration and reconstruction of 1920s historic facade includ-ing original pillastrade facade and entrance pavilions. Victo-ria’s Secret occupies the corner of the building and the up-scale Meat Market steakhouse opened on the opposite end.
RETAIL: VICTORIA’S SECRET
MIAMI BEACH
MEAD BLDG
2002 Dade Heritage Trust Award
GALLERY, RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
BELVETROGALLERY
RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
530 LINCOLNROAD BLDG
RETAIL, FACADE RESTORATION
MIAMI BEACH
RITZ-CARLTON/ DILIDO RETAIL
Th e Sterling Building is an Art Deco landmark on Lin-coln Road – its streamlined breezeway sweeping from Lincoln Road toward a small patio just behind. In 2011, S+A developed a proposal for a new Patio Building behind the Sterling Building, drawing increased energy off Lincoln Road and enlarging the patio. As a reference, the project recalls an earlier patio build-ing (called the Lincoln Road Patio), considerably larger than the current space. By tracing the original patio extent, and drawing out the new addition vertically, the new project re-connects with its history while adding an important and commercially viable new layer
to the site. In contrast to the classically-conceived Sterling Building, S+A’s Patio Building comprises a series of dynamic and shifting plates that negoti-ate the complex web of exist-ing historic structures.
THE STERLINGBUILDING
RETAIL
MIAMI BEACH
92
Ciudad City
Miami Modern Metropolis
AULA 3
: Miami T
ropica
l
The Making of Miami Beach
Miami A
rchite
cture
PUBLICATIONS BY ALLAN SHULMAN
Miami Architecture: An AIA Guide, 2010
Allan Shulman, Randall Robinson Jr., & James
F. Donnelly. University Press of Florida.
Miami Modern Metropolis: Paradise and
Paradox in Midcentury
Architecture and Planning, 2009
Allan Shulman, Editor. Bass Museum and
Balcony Press.
AULA 3: Miami Tropical, 2002
Allan Shulman & Greg Castillo, Guest editors.
Tulane University.
The Making of Miami Beach 1933-1942: The
Architecture of Lawrence Murray Dixon, 2000
J.F. Lejeune & Allan Shulman. Rizzoli Press.
Ciudad City: Ocean Drive, Miami Beach, U.S.A.,
2000
Jose Gelabert-Navia, J.F. Lejeune & Allan
Shulman. Colegia Oficial de Arquitectos Vasco.
94
100 NE 38th Street
Miami, U.S.A.
T +1 305 438 0609
F +1 305 438 0170
shulman-design.com
CONTACTS + CREDIT
KEY CONTACTS
Allan T. Shulman, FAIA, LEED AP
allan@shulman-design.com
Principal
Rebecca Stanier-Shulman, Assoc. AIA
rebecca@shulman-design.com
Marketing Principal
Alyssa Kriplen, AIA
alyssa@shulman-design.com
Projects Director
Michelle Bilbao, Assoc. AIA
michelle@shulman-design.com
Director of Business Development +
Communications
Beatriz Fernandez, Assoc. AIA
beatriz@shulman-design.com
Director of Interior Design
Jason Walker
jason@shulman-design.com
Director of Graphic Design
Elizabeth Cox
liz@shulman-design.com
Operations Director
GENERAL INQUIRIES
info@shulman-design.com
ONLINE
www.shulman-design.com
IMAGE CREDITS
Lincoln Theatre/H&M: Robin Hill
Banana Republic: John Patronie
Chrysler Building/Apple Store: Robin Hill
Chrysler Building/BCBG: Robin Hill
910 Lincoln Road/AllSaints Spitalfields: pho-
tography: Robin Hill; renderings: Hikari Studio
600 Collins/ Peek-A-Boo Bldg: Hikari Studio
Katherine Fleming Pop-Up Shop: Robin Hill
The Vtirine: Hikari Studio
Art Center South Florida: John Patronie
1026-1036 Bldg/French Connection UK/
Ann Taylor Loft: John Patronie
Mead Building: Robin Hill (first spread);
John Patronie (second spread)
530 Lincoln Road: Arseni Varabyeu
Sterling Building: Arseni Varabyeu
GRAPHIC DESIGN
Jason Walker
jason@shulman-design.com
Corina Ocanto
SMACE
HASIS
UNSA
L
OT
+SMACE
HASIS
UNSA
L
OT
+
100 NE 38TH ST
SPACE 2
MIAMI, U.S.A.
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