Architecture is where the past converges with the present. In adaptive reuse, designers balance history with new spaces, materials and amenities for modern life. Architectural drawings give us a glimpse into this process. Through section drawings, we can begin to see how existing structures and new interventions coexist. Showing the balance between preservation and reinvention, these drawings highlight the diverse approaches to repositioning architecture for the future.
The best illustrations tell powerful stories of how we experience design. In section drawings, architects can understand how light, structure, and scale shape how people move through rooms and gather. Today, adaptive reuse projects are rising as the understanding of embodied energy grows. The following projects showcase section drawings of adaptive reuse projects at various scales. Together, they represent a dialogue between history and innovation.
Moynihan Train Hall
By Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), New York City, New York
Popular Choice Winner, 10th Annual A+Awards, Transportation Infrastructure
SOM’s Moynihan Train Hall marks a monumental civic endeavor that expands the Pennsylvania Station complex into the James A. Farley Post Office Building across Eighth Avenue. The project aimed to rejuvenate the environment that countless commuters endured for decades. The design team’s approach focused on introducing natural light to the concourses and increasing the total concourse space by fifty percent. Additionally, the project sought to restore the grandeur lost with the demolition of the original Penn Station half a century ago.
Quay Quarter Tower
By 3XN, Sydney, Australia
Challenging the norms of a conventional high-rise structure, the design embraces a novel approach, transforming the building into a vertical village that fosters a strong sense of community. This forty-nine-story tower deviates from the uniformity often associated with traditional skyscrapers, opting for an arrangement of five stacked and shifting volumes. Each volume is strategically positioned around an atrium that opens towards the iconic Sydney Harbor in the north. Within these atria lie informal social spaces.
T653 – Stone Barn Passive House
By CO Adaptive, New York, United States
Coal Drops Yard
By Heatherwick Studio, London, United Kingdom
2019 A+Award for both Jury and Popular Choice
The solution with the existing roof geometry involved the creation of ‘kissing’ roofs that form a distinctive upper story. As seen in section, the original structures hold their identity while also transforming over the length of the buildings. The project encompassed a broader restoration initiative for the historical structures on-site that prioritized the enhancement and adaptation of existing buildings. The design retained rich textures, such as graffiti and historical signage, preserving the unique character of Coal Drops Yard and paying homage to its industrial heritage.
High Line
By James Corner Field Operations, New York, NY, United States
2015 Popular Choice A+Award
This collaborative design involves James Corner Field Operations as the Project Lead, along with contributions from Diller Scofidio + Renfro and Piet Oudolf. Drawing inspiration from the postindustrial ruins of the rail, where nature reclaimed a once essential urban infrastructure, the new park interprets its historical legacy. Illustrated in the section drawing, the access points are meticulously crafted experiences, deliberately prolonging the transition from the bustling city streets to the serene and otherworldly landscape above.
E131 – Timber Adaptive Reuse Theater
By CO Adaptive, Brooklyn, New York, United States
Central to the endeavor was a commitment to foster innovative uses for the space, all the while minimizing demolition waste and honoring the historical significance of the site. The section drawing vividly captures many of the project’s core concepts. By repurposing materials extracted during the demolition process to craft distinctive architectural features, the project not only breathes new life into discarded elements but also significantly reduces the use of virgin materials.
Danish National Maritime Museum
By BIG – Bjarke Ingels Group, Helsingør, Denmark
2014 A+ Jury Choice Award
As seen in section, the design reimagines museum architecture within the dry dock. As architect Bjarke Ingels explained, “By wrapping the old dock with the museum program we simultaneously preserve the heritage structure while transforming it to a courtyard bringing daylight and air in to the heart of the submerged museum. Leaving the dock as an urban abyss provides the museum with an interior façade facing the void and at the same time offers the citizens of Helsingør a new public space sunken 16 ft below the level of the sea.”
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