NW 23rd - Wynwood Arcade

PrizeHonorable Mention in Architectural Design /
Firm LocationNew York, United States
CompanyDfa
Lead ArchitectDFA - Laith Sayigh
Design TeamProject Architects: Sarah Jazmine Fugate, Jeremy Linzee Architectural Designer: Ryan Terrell Structural Design: Silman Lighting Design: Light Studio LA Landscape Design: Naturalficial
ClientEast End Capital
Project Videohttp://

For the Wynwood Arcade project in the Wynwood neighborhood of Miami, DFA was contracted to renovate an existing one story warehouse space at approximately 23,434 square feet area within a three lot parcel along NW 23rd Street in Miami, FL. The initial program for the project space was to include retail (varied in scale from small to medium size footprints), galleries (also varied in scale for varied tenants), small food style concession spaces, a restaurant, offices with support spaces including private meeting spaces, kitchenette and water closet, as well as public spaces including walk ways and connection paths, green exterior spaces, green roof for pedestrian and non pedestrian and gathering areas for the public. DFA transformed three side-by-side warehouses into a single dynamic destination for dining and shopping. Studying existing site- circulation, we determined that the long blocks of Wynwood could be better connected using diagonal desire lines cutting through our site. We proposed a series of shaded, retail-activated streets organized by these existing desire lines. The four diagonal streets meet in the central trapezoidal atrium open to the sky. A grand public stair fills one side of the atrium, acting as a hangout and providing an organic way to discover the rooftop restaurant. A large canopied seagrape tree and three smaller trees in the atrium provide shade for seating at the stair. At the Wynwood Arcades, rather than creating a neutral canvas for street art, DFA created an architecture in dialogue with art. The artist Tristan Eaton’s piece responded to DFA’s diagonal, playful facades with his own dynamic graphic intervention. In creating a diagonal plan to be imposed upon the rectilinear industrial warehouses with their precast double T-profile roofs, DFA was willfully quixotic. A building that was previously simple, efficient and industrial is dissected in its renovation and becomes unpredictable and dynamic.