- all (10)
- viewpoints (3)
- projects (6)
- programs (1)
Rockwell Group
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Projects
This Food Rescue Nonprofit’s HQ Offers Beauty During a Crisis
City Harvest's Cohen Community Food Rescue Center, designed by Ennead Architects and Rockwell Group, highlights themes of reuse, reclamation, and recycling.
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Projects
Cultivating “A Certain Warmth” Inside 550 Madison, One of Manhattan’s Quirkiest Towers
Snøhetta’s garden completes a softening and repositioning of Philip Johnson’s 550 Madison, formerly the AT&T Building.
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Viewpoints
Rethinking and Planning for the New Restaurant Experience
Architecture and design firms offer both immediate solutions and long-term frameworks for restaurants operating in a COVID-19-impacted world
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Projects
The Moxy Hotel Chelsea Offers an Italian Holiday in the Heart of Manhattan
This iteration of the Moxy marks the second collaboration between Yabu Pushelberg, Rockwell Group, and Stonehill Taylor, who also worked on the brand’s outpost in Times Square.
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Projects
Nike’s House of Innovation Flagship Is a Temple to Shopping in the Digital Age
The Manhattan flagship, the first of its kind in the United States, is not only a shrine to sportswear but an homage to Nike’s unique design process—past and future.
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Projects
At Rockwell Group’s New Blue School, “the Space Is Almost the Third Teacher”
The 28,000-square-foot facility, which opened this month in Manhattan’s Financial District, is Rockwell’s second project for the Blue School.
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Projects
Rockwell Group Designs an “Urban Resort” in the Heart of Los Angeles
The Dream Hollywood Hotel and its five nightclubs and restaurants are spread across an entire city block.
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Programs
Cash with Your Coffee: The Neighborhood Bank Turns to Hospitality Design
A Q&A with the Rockwell Group on the merging of architectural space and digital experience.
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Viewpoints
7 Ways Rockwell Group Finds Creative Success
The seven ways Rockwell Group finds creative success.
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Viewpoints
Rockwell Group Blue School
Every classroom in the new Blue School has its own, brightly-colored stage—or at least, I thought they were stages. The nomenclature varied, depending on whom I asked: architect David Rockwell calls them “urban p