The Pocantico Conference Center of the Rockefeller Brother's Fund
Design/Completion 1991/1995
Tarrytown, New York
The Rockefeller Brother's Fund
20,000 Square Feet
In
1979, the Rockefeller family bequeathed 84 acres of its estate to The National
Trust for Historic Preservation for use as a museum and conference center to
advance the philanthropic mission of The Rockefeller Brothers Fund. The property
includes the family house, Kykuit, built in 1909 and 1913; the Orangerie of
1908; and the Coach Barn of 1902 and 1913.
Our work involved two parts: restoring Kykuit to serve as a museum of the family's
history and provide guest rooms for conferees, and renovating the family coach
barn into a state-of-the-art international conference center with guest rooms.
The Coach Barn
Originally a three-story utility building with horse stables, an automobile
garage, workshop, and various maintenance and staff rooms, The Coach Barn is
now the international conference center of The Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
We cleared the ground floor, retaining a series of brick-vaulted spaces with
large windows and masonry walls, for construction of the conference center,
designing two conference rooms, a lecture hall, a dining room, a catering kitchen
and a flexible area adjacent to the dining room within this old fabric. We created
a new loggia opposite the entrance for use as an informal gathering place, staff
offices, bathrooms and mechanical spaces.
The first floor, housing the family's tack, carriage, and automobile collections,
was left intact as museum space open to the public. Renovation of the second
floor required major intervention that completely transformed the upper level
staff quarters into guest rooms for conferees. We transformed the hayloft into
a common room, and utilizing roof space, made an outdoor living room. To reconnect
guests with the floors below, we widened the corridors and other public spaces,
adding a new stair. The curving walls and portals enhance the clarity of the
circulation, leading conferees back to the lower levels of the Conference Center.
Kykuit
Kykuit, the family house, required major infrastructure changes to enable it
to accommodate group tours of the first floor and art gallery, and provide guest
rooms on the upper floors. Our underlying preservation goal was to replace its
heating, plumbing, life safety and electrical systems without changing the original
fabric of the 30,000 square foot house. Moreover, all changes were designed
to be reversible.
On the third and fourth floors the original staff quarters were reconfigured
and enlarged to become guest suites, continuing the scale, materials and details
of the original architecture. On the first and second floors, we concealed all
sprinkler heads in the pattern of the room moldings and rewired the original
light fixtures to provide ambient light and emergency lighting. We also installed
a new heating system, sprinkler system and fire doors.
New furniture selections parallel the spirit of the original design, while the
refurbished picture moldings, door and window trim sustain it. We chose new
nickel-plated plumbing fixtures to simulate the old, and carefully fitted fire-rated
doors, exit lights, emergency horns and lighting into the existing architecture,
leaving the historic fabric of the house apparently intact and undisturbed.
