Yarn Works

Yarn Works
© Gregg Shupe

YARN WORKS

The Architectural Team

ARCHITECTS
The Architectural Team

DEVELOPER
WinnDevelopment

MANUFACTURERS
ClarkDietrich, AccuCrete, Double Hung Windows, Quiet Qurl, Universal Window and Door, LLC

GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Colantonio, Inc.

PHOTOGRAPHS
Andy Ryan, Gregg Shupe

AREA
182500 ft²

YEAR
2017

LOCATION
Fitchburg, United States

CATEGORY
Loft, Adaptive Reuse, Restoration

Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan
Yarn Works
© Gregg Shupe

Text description provided by architect.

The 100+ year-old Nockege River Mill Building, formerly home to the Fitchburg Yarn Company, is situated on 7.4 acres on the banks of the Nashua River in the city of Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Its 182,500 square feet span three massive floors.

Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan
Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan

The Architectural Team’s thoughtful restoration and adaptive reuse of the historic structure into Yarn Works creates 96 oversized, modern lofts, of which 57 are market-rate and 39 affordable at different levels of area median income (AMI).

The building features more than 280, 8-foot by 10-foot windows to provide each unit with expansive views and an abundance of natural light. The unit mix comprises 29 one-bedroom, 58 two-bedroom

Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan
Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan

And nine three-bedroom apartments; amenities include a large community room with 25-foot ceiling and 17-foot-tall windows, a fitness center with yoga room, on-site bike storage and workshop, and a new grand central atrium gallery.

Renovation work on the National Register of Historic Places-listed building included removing the first floor and rebuilding it with concrete slab raised above the 100-year floodplain, as well as the repointing and repairing of the exterior brick envelope and chimney stack

Yarn Works
© Gregg Shupe
Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan

And structural reinforcement to the roof. In addition, all windows and frames were replaced with historically matched, energy-efficient reproductions. The site stands a mile from the city center, with easy access to transit and commuter rail lines.

Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan
Yarn Works
© Gregg Shupe


Yarn Works
© Gregg Shupe
Yarn Works
© Andy Ryan


Yarn Works
Site Plan
Yarn Works
Crawl Space Detail Sections