• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Barba + Wheelock Architects

Barba + Wheelock Architects

Architects

  • Who We Are
    • About the Firm
    • Our Team
  • What We Do
    • What We Do
    • Our Approach
  • What We’ve Done
  • Awards & Press
    • Awards
    • In the News
  • Contact
- Mechanics Hall

Condition Assessment

Mechanics Hall

AdditionsCondition AssessmentHistoric PreservationHistoric Structures ReportMaster Planning

November 23, 2022 by

The Maine Charitable Mechanic Association (MCMA) formed in 1815 as a fellowship for Portland’s blacksmiths, coopers, carpenters, draftsmen, architects and more and in 1857 constructed Mechanics’ Hall on Congress Street. The building was designed by T.J. Sparrow, Esq. in the Italianate style with a rusticated granite façade, stores at the street level, a library, classrooms, and a dining hall. The building was used intensively by the City and State during the Civil War, housing soldiers departing and returning from battle. In 1890 a John Calvin Stevens designed ballroom was added as a third level.

Barba + Wheelock was hired by the organization to prepare a Historic Structure Report and master plan funded by a matching grant from the Maine Historic Preservation Commission. The purpose of the report is to gather historical information, document existing conditions, and identify appropriate recommendations and costs for full rehabilitation of this highly significant property for the City of Portland and the State of Maine.

For Mechanics’ Hall, their (B+W) engineering and architecture team worked with the Construction Manager to develop a practical approach to replacing and restoring the massive roof and clerestory monitor.

I highly recommend the architects and engineers at Barba + Wheelock as one of the few A/E firms that can guide historic properties, additions, and restorations with such excellence and aplomb.

– Paul Stevens, Trustee and Building Committee Chair

The building is currently not handicap accessible and its second means of egress is an exterior fire escape. The master plan design calls for a new stair/elevator tower addition in the alley to the rear of the building. A new accessible entry is to be added along Casco Street, leading to a new first floor corridor linking the new entry to an elevator lobby, the two first floor stores and to the existing front entry. This design provides an added benefit of connecting to the fourth floor timber framed attic without penetrating the roof of the existing building and allowing for public use of this spectacular space. It also greatly improves egress capacity for assembly use.

The MCMA intends to use the report to spearhead a fundraising effort for the full rehabilitation. Bringing the building up to modern standards will support its mission of providing the creative maker community with a place to gather and exchange ideas and practical knowledge.

Since completion of the HSR, B+W has undertaken numerous projects for Mechanics’ Hall, including:

  • Roof repair and replacement.
  • Stair addition designs – multiple options were explored including off-site steel fabrication to allow for a low cost solution that could be craned in, and then covered with simple covering, averting foundation issues and tight working conditions.
  • Creating ADA access from Casco Street by changing a window opening into a door, and review with Portland Historic Preservation Commission.
  • Code analysis for floor separation between uses, and negotiation with SFM and CEO to increase egress safety while retaining the majority of historic character of the entrance stair hall.
  • Simple kitchen design for potluck and some catering with a review of new openings to the Ballroom with MHPC.
  • National Register reclassification.
- Mechanics Hall
AdditionsCondition AssessmentHistoric PreservationHistoric Structures ReportMaster Planning

Cumberland Club

Adaptive ReuseCondition AssessmentContextual DesignHistoric PreservationMaster Planning

October 28, 2022 by

Located in downtown Portland, the Cumberland Club occupies the historic, Federal-style Stephan McLellan Mansion.  Built in 1802, the building has received at least six major campaigns of additions, including renovation designed by John Calvin Stevens.

B+W’s involvement with the Cumberland Club began with a master plan to study conditions, accessibility and expansion needs to all three stories for the 130-year old social club.  Steeped in history, the Club was also looking to update its staid image with a new gathering space central to the operations:  a bar that was traditional in style, complementary to the Maine Room and yet, innovative enough to set a tone to revitalize membership.

In the master plan, B+W established that the bar’s location would be adjacent to the Maine Room, in what once was a dining terrace with French doors.  Later additions and remodeling had enclosed the space and hidden its character.  The new bar transforms the once-tired interior into a comfortable, wood-lined extension of its adjacent room.  A key challenge overcome in the planning was the design of the back bar, which integrated a sophisticated set of kitchen/bar equipment in a limited amount of space.

For the Cumberland Club brownstone main entry restoration, their embedded knowledge of the project details led them to serve as de facto construction managers, orchestrating a diverse group of construction specialists in achieving a unified project. They shepherded the project through the Historic Preservation Commission with unanimous approval.

– Paul Stevens, Cumberland Club, Building Committee, Club President

Two different species of wood were selected for the striped floor for their inherent characteristics to allow for a one-step process of clear finish. The granite countertop picked up the tonal quality of the room in a permanent and utilitarian surface. The German-made glass is transparent enough to allow views out from the room to a hint of the green landscape beyond, but translucent to disguise the identity of nearby diners.  The leading pattern is modeled on the historic windows in the Maine Room.   Daylight filters in through the glass wall illuminating the bottles; concealed specialty lighting augments the natural light and provides a sparkle.  Scope also included furnishings and fabric selection.

The Bar’s name honors Maine native, former Governor, Civil War general and Club member, Joshua Chamberlain.

- Cumberland Club
Adaptive ReuseCondition AssessmentContextual DesignHistoric PreservationMaster Planning
  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2

Footer

  • Instagram
  • Facebook

Copyright © 2025 · Barba + Wheelock • site by iKnow Web Design