Awards
Design
Award of Excellence
Commercial
Originally built between 1962 and 1964, Bell Works was designed to foster collaboration, with exterior hallways and an expansive atrium that encouraged people to get out of their offices and see/interact with fellow workers. Somerset Development is recreating Bell Labs with the same philosophy -- to bring together a wide variety of businesses and people that will commingle in an "urban-style" environment amidst suburbia, otherwise known as a “metroburb”
Somerset Development
Spanning four atriums and two-million-square-feet, the massive former Bell Laboratories was once the home to some of the most monumental technologies of the 20th century. ,As Bell Labs HQ -- and later Lucent and Alcatel-Lucent -- a total of seven Nobel Prize winners worked in the building, conceiving theories for the laser, the Big Bang theory, cellular technology, the transistor, and more. Pictured here is the building’s first atrium, which is located closest to the main entrance of the building and home to the “conversation pit.”
Somerset Development
Just one of many collaborative spaces at Bell Works, the conversation pit sits on the ground floor at the formal center of the building, meant to spur interaction. A signature element of famed architect Eero Saarinen, it has been preserved identically down to the carpet, which displays Josef Albers’ “study in a square design”.
Connie Zhou Photography
Once the largest single vacant commercial building in the United States, Bell Works was left abandoned until 2013 when Somerset Development officially acquired the property, realizing its potential to become a self-contained urban destination. Pictured here is the building’s second atrium prior to restoration.
Somerset Development
Design
Award of Excellence
Commercial