Capital Improvements Project

Guild Hall’s renewed exterior, July 2023. Photo: Joe Brondo for Guild Hall

GUILD HALL ANNOUNCES DETAILS OF FACILITY-WIDE CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS PROJECT & CAMPAIGN TO BRING 1930s-ERA BUILDING INTO THE FUTURE

THE VISION

Guild Hall has served four generations and introduced audiences to the most storied artists and performers of our time. Now as we approach our centennial, we have embarked on a state-of-the-art renovation to match the caliber of our artistry for twenty-first-century audiences. Our facility-wide Capital Improvements Project & Campaign includes top-of-the-line physical and technological enhancements to better deliver our mission as an artist-driven, interdisciplinary institution. These comprehensive enhancements will see the structural and technological upgrade of Guild Hall’s grounds and near-century-old building — encompassing its museum, theater, education center, and administrative offices.

John Drew Theater side aisle view. Architect’s rendering—technical systems omitted for clarity. © Guild Hall & Peter Pennoyer Architects, 2022
Gallery. © Guild Hall & Peter Pennoyer Architects, 2022
Rendering of The Boots Lamb Learning Center. © Peter Pennoyer Architects

Improved flexibility and accessibility will meet the needs of Guild Hall’s diverse community of visual and performing artists, students, staff, and expanding seasonal and year-round community. Construction began in summer 2022, and the galleries, grounds, classroom and offices reopened in July 2023. The completion of the John Drew Theater expected by July 2024.

The $29 million Capital Improvements Project & Campaign includes dedicated capabilities for advancing the institution’s cutting-edge arts program and its vital reserve fund, to deepen and sustain Guild Hall’s excellence in interdisciplinary programming, thought leadership, education, and community engagement on the East End for current and future generations.

As of November 2023, we have reached 70% of our $29 million goal, thanks to the generosity and support of our Board of Trustees and supporters like you.

CONTACTS

Contributions
Kristin Eberstadt, Chief Philanthropy Officer / keberstadt@guildhall.org / 631-324-0806 x13

General Information and Press Inquiries
Amy Steinhaus Kirwin, Chief Creative Officer / akirwin@guildhall.org / 631-324-0806 x24

THE TEAM

Among the star design team engaged in realizing the collaborative project are: leaders in the renovation and preservation of historic buildings Peter Pennoyer Architects, celebrated theatrical consultants Apeiro Design, and renowned New York-based Hollander Design | Landscape Architects.

Premier East End general contractor Ray Harden, co-owner of Ben Krupinski Builder, is leading project construction. Jon Maass and Pamela Torres are serving as owner representatives.

The design, construction, and advisory team also includes Akustiks, Conceptual Lighting, Arrowstreet, 2×4, Altieri Sebor Wieber, Gilsanz Murray Steficek, Leonard Ackerman, Esq., and Twomey Latham Shea Kelley Dubin & Quartararo, LLP. Original Guild Garden Furniture designed by Evan Desmond Yee.


PETER PENNOYER ARCHITECTS (PPA) is a 50-person firm of architects, interior designers, and related professionals based in Manhattan. Principal Peter Pennoyer is an expert on historical buildings and a regular on the AD 100 List. Founded in 1990, PPA is recognized as a leader in new construction, renovation, and historic preservation for residential, commercial, and institutional commissions across the United States and abroad. Their work is characterized by sophisticated detail, high quality craftsmanship, and a nimble balance between comfort, beauty, modernity, and continuity with the past.

Founded in 1972, APEIRO DESIGN (formerly Auerbach Pollock Friedlander) is a globally-recognized theatre design and audio-video consulting firm with an extensive portfolio of award-winning projects. The firm’s holistic approach to design lends itself to a wide range of projects that includes performing arts educational facilities, opera houses, professional repertory theaters, concert halls, museums and planetariums as well as popular entertainment venues in theme parks, casinos, cruise ships and night clubs. Their expertise is provided as part of a collaborative process with the larger design team. Apeiro designs for a diverse audience with a diverse team of staff and owners. They have completed projects throughout the world and are adept at creating inclusive and culturally sensitive solutions. Their audience is the world, and we ensure that everyone feels welcome.

Their principals and staff have backgrounds in programming, planning and architectural design as well as hands-on experience in theatre production design, technology, media arts, sound, video and communication, technical management, and scenography. This depth of experience enables Apeiro to provide comprehensive, innovative design and superior technical solutions that respond to the needs of the end-user while providing the architect with the flexibility to develop their vision. The firm can provide services in initial planning and programming, theatre space design, specification of all theatrical and audio-video systems as well as construction administration services.

During initial project phases, they engage with the users, operations staff and management to understand their aspirations and concerns and develop solutions that are economically feasible and operationally beneficial. They take the same approach with audience so that they can create spaces that educate, entertain, are patron friendly for various demographics and form lasting positive memories.


HOLLANDER DESIGN | LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS is a New York-based firm known for designing estates and gardens around the world. Principal Edmund Hollander is recognized for finely crafted landscapes from the Hamptons to Hong Kong. The firm has recently completed the new award-winning additions to The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC, as well as the Winter Visual Arts Center at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, PA. The firm’s talent comprises 25 landscape architects, environmental planners, and horticulturists working across three offices in New York City, Sag Harbor, and Chicago. The firm’s approach to a site’s natural ecology, its architectural ecology, and its human ecology — meaning the ways in which people will use the property — creates places of enduring beauty that respect and connect with the surrounding environment.

   

Stratton Schellinger and Ray Harden became owners of BEN KRUPINSKI BUILDER (BKB) in 2018 having worked with the firm for 31 years and 16 years respectively. With a track record for hands-on project management, the long-time associates have been instrumental in growing BKB into the region’s premier builder and general contractor. Priding themselves on achieving the finest results, they share a mutual passion for delivering consistent excellence to each client and every scope of the project.

JON MAASS is an architect, builder, and maker of things. Jon received degrees from the University of Michigan and the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York, where he was amongst the first recipients of the Menschel Fellowship. His history of designing and building structures informs and supports his work as an owner’s representative, helping numerous cultural institutions realize new mission-driven projects and restore important cultural touchstones. His work is process driven, emphasizing proper planning at the project’s outset and relentless pursuit of its stated goals. Past clients include the Toledo Museum of Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., the Morgan Library and Museum in New York, the Gustav Stickley Museum at Craftsman Farms, Smith College in Northampton, MA, and the Museum of Nebraska Art.

PAMELA TORRES has a master’s degree in Advanced Building Technology from SUNY Buffalo New York and holds a Bachelor of Science in architecture from the University of the Philippines. She is an architect who worked on a wide range of projects with architecture and design firms in New York, Miami, Boston, Shanghai, and San Francisco before transitioning to owner’s representation and project management. Notable experience includes the SANAA-designed Grace Farms community place in New Canaan, Connecticut, and the exterior restoration of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.

THE PLAN

Create an environment that is welcoming to the community and maintains Guild Hall’s place as the preeminent cultural institution on the East End. To help decrease energy consumption, the Capital Improvement Project also includes optimizing our HVAC system to enhance control, airflow, and energy efficiency throughout the museum, theater, and operational spaces. The priority placed on optimal visibility, improved access, and efficiency will be done without detracting from the character of the historic structure.

Bring the theater’s functionality up to contemporary performance needs while maintaining key elements of its historic design. This includes, for instance, the restoration of the stage’s scalloped proscenium frame, part of the theater’s original design by Aymar Embury II and only recently uncovered during structural exploration. The theater’s much-beloved circus-tent ceiling motif and iconic balloon chandelier will remain; non-original elements including moldings and wallcovering will be updated to more closely reflect the theater’s elegant 1930s design.

The flow of the theater will also be restored by the removal of non-original doors at the entrance to the theater corridor. In a nod to Embury’s original architecture, columns will be reintroduced in the lobby, recreating the graceful procession from the entrance arcade of the building, through the house of the theater. Space previously taken up by boxes and the technical control booth at the rear of the theater will be repurposed to allow for easy and fully accessible circulation. The plan will implement a new seating arrangement that captures prime orchestra seats, adds greater row-to-row depth, offers broader and more comfortable seating, and enhances sightlines through an increased floor rake.

Notably, the plan includes new technical systems throughout the theater and support spaces, including a relocated control booth in the balcony. The project’s theater consultant Apeiro Design has an extensive portfolio that includes Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Gilman Opera House and Harvey Theatre and Carnegie Hall’s Zankel Hall. APF’s plan will advance all audio-visual technologies, lighting, and acoustics for the demands of Guild Hall’s all-embracing performance types.

Enhance the museum experience for artists and patrons through state-of-the-art sound, LED lighting, and the innovative repurposing of the building’s original framing to harness the effect and maximize control of natural light — all upgraded to ensure greater sustainability and versatility. Accessibility to the galleries will be improved as Guild Hall’s front outer doors will be adjusted to meet the gallery climate control requirements and maximize energy efficiency while honoring the beloved exterior.

Also planned is the creation of Guild Hall’s first discrete, dedicated art-handling facility to support installation, packing, and temporary storage of artworks, a recommended feature as a formally accredited member of the American Alliance of Museums.

Outfit with the latest technological tools to enhance education and training in twenty-first century creative skills for local youth. The space, which will now have a dedicated entrance, will be utilized for art workshops and drop-in classes for students of various ages and experience levels, as well as by Guild Hall’s Teen Arts Council (TAC). The TAC is a paid, academic-year-long mentorship and apprenticeship program for teens to foster skills in the fields of contemporary art, nonprofit management, museum and theater practices, and community engagement.

Modernize offices to be more energy efficient with a sleek and contemporary design, plus improved airflow and natural light, to create a thriving, collaborative environment that is representative of new directions in professional work spaces.

 

Campaign Contributors

Marty and Michele Cohen 

Nancy and Howard Marks 

 
Baron Family Foundation 
Louise and Howard Phanstiel 
Tom Roush and LaVon Kellner 
 
Susie and Michael Gelman
Linda Lindenbaum

The Hilaria and Alec Baldwin Foundation
Pamela and Edward Pantzer

Toni and Seth Bernstein
Kate Capshaw and Steven Spielberg
Suzanne and John Golden
Cornelia and Ralph Heins
Barbara and Richard S. Lane
Sondra and David S. Mack
Susan and Morris Mark
Galia Meiri-Stawski and Axel Stawski
Alice Netter
The Ralph Lauren Corporate Foundation
Kathy Rayner
Sheri C. Sandler   
Laurie and Philip Sprayregen
Fern and Lenard Tessler
Kenneth L. Wyse

 
David and Treva De Leeuw
Bruce Horten and Aaron Lieber
Ellen F. Marcus
Daryl and Steven Roth
In Memory of Perdita Schaffner 

 

Jane Bayard
Mary Jane and Charles Brock
The Frankenthaler Climate Initiative of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
Susan Jacobson
Stephen Meringoff
Cheryl and Michael Minikes
Ellen E. Myers
James S. Peterson Foundation
The Estate of Enid Roth
Lisa Schultz
Schultz Family Foundation
Cindy and John Shea   
Renée and Richard Steinberg
Monica and Peter Tessler
Kathleen Walsh and Gene Bernstein 

 

Bonnie and Joel Bergstein
Mark J. Blechner and Ricardo R. Venancio
The Chemla Family
Todd and Rebecca Cohen
Lucy and Steve Cookson
The Joe & Hellen Darion Foundation
Susan and Richard A. Friedman
Jeff Gates and Mike Moran 
John Hummel & Associates 
Samuel D. Isaly
Stewart F. Lane and Bonnie Comley
Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder
Ralph E. Lerner
Jeffrey and NancyJane Loewy
Christina and Alan MacDonald
Joyce F. Menschel 
Charlotte Moss and Barry Friedberg
Saunders & Associates
Henry and Peggy Schleiff
Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc.
Linda and George Yates

 

Amagansett Wines & Spirits
Arni and Peggy Amster
Natascia Ayers and Jim Ciquera
Caroline E. Bassett
Kay and Albert C. Bellas 
Bellwether Architects 
Nancy and Peter Brown
William & Christine Campbell
Ellen Chesler and Matthew Mallow
Cinque Family
James and Lisa Cohen
John and Joan D’Addario 
Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel
Florence and Richard Fabricant
Peter Frey and Carrie Shapiro
Catherine and Burt Flickinger 
Barbara F. Gibbs
Kevin, Catherine, and Tristan Griffin
Nancy and Jeffrey Halis
Alice and Stanley Harris
Kim Heirston
Elizabeth Hogbin
Phyllis Hollis
Terry and Raymond Jacobs
Ron Kaplan
Kligerman Architecture & Design 
Richard Kurtz and Trish McEvoy
A. R. Landsman Foundation
Bonnie Lautenberg
The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation 
In memory of Judith and Gus Leiber
Ninah Lynne
Susan and Peter Macgregor-Scott
Linda Macklowe
Sir Paul and Lady Nancy McCartney
Leslie Nielsen
Kathy Prounis
Lisa Rosenblum
Sheri and Jimmy Rosenfeld
Gail Robin Sarner
Fred Schmeltzer
Susan Hilary Shagrin
Jane and Barton Shallat
Adrianne and William Silver
Drs. Marjorie and David Silverman
Jeff and Audrey Spiegel
Hillary and Jeff Suchman
Arielle Tepper
Michelle Tiberio and Ann Duffey 
Barbara Tober
Pamela van Zandt
Edwina von Gal
Peter M. Wolf 
Susi and Peter Wunsch
Andrew Yuder and Kyle Glaeser

 

Anonymous
Patricia Abramson
Gary Adamek, in memory of Ruth Appelhof
Zac and Cindy Allentuck
Renée and Robert Belfer
Stanley and Roberta Bogen
Lauren Etess
Kathy & Rabbi David Gelfand   
Lori Gendelman
Joan and David Genser
Barbara Handler
John Hill
Barbara and Mel Immergut
Roberta and Paul Kozloff
Helen Kent-Nicoll & Edward Nicoll
Martin and Madge Miller
Nancy Lou Oelbaum
Kimberly L. Pressman and Nicholas G. Boulukos
Sally and Jim Rothkopf
Andrea and John Stark
Adam D. and  Marnie Tihany
Volunteers of Guild Hall
Janet and John Winter 

 

Anonymous
Anonymous
Arlene Blau
David Blue
Jennifer and Joe Brondo
Nancy Carter and Stephen Lapidus
Nancy Chemtob and Michael Kubin
David and Sheila Cornstein
Diane and William Dreher
Cheryl and Ken Endelson
Sara and Charles Fabrikant
Marjorie and Stephen Fiverson
Margaret Garrett and Bruce Wolosoff
Marsha and Richard Goldberg
Mary and Jay Goldberg
Carla Goldworm
Charles Gottesman
Nadine Grelsamer
Adrienne and Kenneth Haber
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hershaft
Barbara Hochhauser
Pat and John Hossenlopp
Arthur Indursky
Ellen Jaffe
Ruth and Steven Katz
Fran and Bob Kaufmann in memory of George Yates 
Kenneth Kay
Francine Kittredge
Richard and Phyllis Krock
Larry Leeds and Ginger Feuer
Ellen Levy
Phyllis and William Mack
Jill Marino
Joan and Ken Miller
Virginia C. Panossian
Darrel and Susan Ross
Eric and Harriet Rothfeld
Richard and Barbara Rothschild
David Rudnick
Jean S. Scharf
Amy and Robert Schlager
Patricia Schneider
Sanford Sirulnick
Robert and L. Judith Snyder
Joanne and Joseph Stein
Meryl Taradash
Pamela Torres
Dianne Wallace
Penny and John Wallerstein 

 
In-Kind 
Leonard Ackerman, Esq. 
Amagansett Wine and Spirits 
Ben Krupinski Builder 
Twomey, Latham, Shea, Kelley, Dubin & Quartararo LLP 
 
List in formation, updated 04/9/24.