Pentagram

Pentagram

One M&T Plaza, Buffalo

Architectural design for a new entrance vestibule to Minoru Yamasaki's M&T Bank headquarters in downtown Buffalo, New York.

Located on the secondary elevation of the building, the vestibule leads visitors into its 35’ high vaulted lobby.
The vestibule is approached on either side by two staircases built to match the materials and details of narrower original ones.
The materials and details of the new vestibule echo those of the original vestibule, and the glass entrance portal matches its height and width.
A frameless glass portal separates the new pavilion from the white marble walls of the original building.

The materials and details of this larger vestibule draw directly however from those of the original, and its form and siting aim to enhance the original experience of entering the building from the street.

Two door lobbies lead visitors under the central skylight, past seating alcoves, to secure access controls, and the elevator lobby.
Views of the tall arched window to the elevator lobby are framed by the white conical walls of the circular rooflight.
Share: , , Email

Retrospective: Shakespeare in the Park

In 1954, impresario Joe Papp began a summer tradition of staging free outdoor performances of Shakespeare, inaugurating the Public Theater’s beloved Shakespeare in the Park festival. Pentagram partner Paula Scher, whose relationship with the Public spans four decades, has designed a new identity for the series for thirty consecutive summers. Each campaign is customized to the season’s theme, creating a highly visible graphic vocabulary for outdoor advertising, social media, and on-site signage.
(28)

Retrospective: Shakespeare in the Park

In 1954, impresario Joe Papp began a summer tradition of staging free outdoor performances of Shakespeare, inaugurating the Public Theater’s beloved Shakespeare in the Park festival. Pentagram partner Paula Scher, whose relationship with the Public spans four decades, has designed a new identity for the series for thirty consecutive summers. Each campaign is customized to the season’s theme, creating a highly visible graphic vocabulary for outdoor advertising, social media, and on-site signage.