Pentagram

Pentagram

Broadway Housing Communities

Identity for Broadway Housing Communities, and identity and environmental graphics for its first ground-up initiative, the Sugar Hill Project in Harlem.

The BHC identity features letterforms that appear to be painted.
Sketches of the building are used as an element of the identity.

The different drawings are used as a logo on various applications, creating a dynamic system that links the branding with the institution’s function as a school and art museum, and suggests the diversity of the development.

The Sugar Hill Children’s Museum of Art & Storytelling identity echoes the distinctive architecture.

To save wall space for the display of art, directional wayfinding for the museum appears on the floor—where kids are sure to see it.

Wayfinding appears on the floor, where kids are most likely to see it.
The wayfinding uses the system of icons.
Placing the wayfinding on the floor frees up wall space for artwork.
The floor graphics help create a playful atmosphere in the space.
Directional icons playfully point the way and interact with fixtures in the stairwell.
Directional icons in the stairwell.
A special plaque quotes a poem by Langston Hughes and marks the building’s location.
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Retrospective: Saturday Night Live

When a scruffy after-hours comedy show debuted in NBC’s Studio 8H on October 11, 1975, no one could have known that the entertainment world was about to be changed forever. Over the next half century, Saturday Night Live would launch the careers of countless global stars, create indelible catch phrases, and consolidate the reputations of musical acts from Talking Heads to Kendrick Lamar. Since 1994, Pentagram partner Emily Oberman has been the steward of SNL’s graphic image, from the show’s iconic opening titles, to books celebrating its legacy. With each project, she meets the challenge of acknowledging the franchise’s extraordinary legacy while keeping its profile fresh, surprising, and funny.
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Retrospective: Saturday Night Live

When a scruffy after-hours comedy show debuted in NBC’s Studio 8H on October 11, 1975, no one could have known that the entertainment world was about to be changed forever. Over the next half century, Saturday Night Live would launch the careers of countless global stars, create indelible catch phrases, and consolidate the reputations of musical acts from Talking Heads to Kendrick Lamar. Since 1994, Pentagram partner Emily Oberman has been the steward of SNL’s graphic image, from the show’s iconic opening titles, to books celebrating its legacy. With each project, she meets the challenge of acknowledging the franchise’s extraordinary legacy while keeping its profile fresh, surprising, and funny.