Seismic Phase 4 of the Hammer Museum project will continue the seismic retrofit of the 16-story office tower on Wilshire Boulevard, which houses the museum on its lower five floors. The scope includes installing two steel and concrete moment frames at the building’s east and west ends, adding fiber reinforcement to concrete pilasters between the exterior windows and around the elevator shafts from the second floor to the lower basement, and integrating steel stiffening plates at existing perimeter structural steel column splices. Additionally, the seismic enhancements will extend down to the building’s below-grade foundations
The development of additional classroom spaces allows for rehearsal, teaching, and enhanced use of digital media within the school.
Construction challenges include operating in a prime location on an active campus, maintaining many of the building’s historic elements, and gutting and repurposing the entire space.the building required seismic upgrades, completely new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems, as well as a 3-story addition for classroom and office spaces. The project scope includes the creation of two state-of-the-art theaters, practice rooms, and media labs in the existing chapel space, along with a new cabaret theater that functions as a flexible environment for student interaction and as a cabaret performance space.
2025 | LABJ Commercial Real Estate Awards, Gold Award, Redevelopment
2024 | ENR Best Renovation/Restoration
2024 | LABC Adaptive Reuse
The University of Southern California hired the MATT team to help with the adaptive reuse of the historic United University Church on campus. The adaptive reuse of the chapel and lower level of the building for performance and office spaces provides a centralized location for the School of Dramatic Arts, which is currently distributed across multiple buildings on campus. Built in the 1930s,
The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County – Commons Project replaced the museum’s existing Jean Delacour Auditorium wing with a new 2-story addition plus a basement on the west side of the existing building. The project entailed limited renovation and alteration of office spaces along with landscaping and site work on the south side of the existing building and site. The new 27,500 SF, Type II-B building, houses a flexible theater space, theater gallery, cafe, catering kitchen and restrooms at a new building height of 48’-6”. The sustainability target for the new building is LEED Gold.
2025 | LABJ Commercial Real Estate Awards, Gold Award, Redevelopment
2024 | ENR Best Renovation/Restoration
2024 | LABC Adaptive Reuse
The University of Southern California hired the MATT team to help with the adaptive reuse of the historic United University Church on campus. The adaptive reuse of the chapel and lower level of the building for performance and office spaces provides a centralized location for the School of Dramatic Arts, which is currently distributed across multiple buildings on campus. Built in the 1930s, the building required seismic upgrades, completely new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems, as well as a 3-story addition for classroom and office spaces. The project scope includes the creation of two state-of-the-art theaters, practice rooms, and media labs in the existing chapel space, along with a new cabaret theater that functions as a flexible environment for student interaction and as a cabaret performance space. The development of additional classroom spaces allows for rehearsal, teaching, and enhanced use of digital media within the school.
Construction challenges include operating in a prime location on an active campus, maintaining many of the building’s historic elements, and gutting and repurposing the entire space
2025 | LABJ Commercial Real Estate Awards, Gold Award, Redevelopment
2024 | ENR Best Renovation/Restoration
2024 | LABC Adaptive Reuse
The University of Southern California hired the MATT team to help with the adaptive reuse of the historic United University Church on campus. The adaptive reuse of the chapel and lower level of the building for performance and office spaces provides a centralized location for the School of Dramatic Arts, which is currently distributed across multiple buildings on campus. Built in the 1930s, the building required seismic upgrades, completely new mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems, as well as a 3-story addition for classroom and office spaces. The project scope includes the creation of two state-of-the-art theaters, practice rooms, and media labs in the existing chapel space, along with a new cabaret theater that functions as a flexible environment for student interaction and as a cabaret performance space. The development of additional classroom spaces allows for rehearsal, teaching, and enhanced use of digital media within the school.
Construction challenges include operating in a prime location on an active campus, maintaining many of the building’s historic elements, and gutting and repurposing the entire space
2024 | LABJ Commercial Real Estate Awards, Gold Award, Best New Headquarters
The team at MATT collaborated with CO Architects during the preconstruction phase to renovate a 47,000 sf, Type V warehouse-turned-office building into a modern research laboratory facility for the Terasaki Institute. The modernized building provides a new home for the Terasaki Institute and a hub for biomedical research innovation.
The two-story facility houses labs, lab support, office spaces, and a vivarium for specimen storage. The team began by demolishing all non-bearing walls to clear the space and then executed a point cloud scan to help the design team facilitate their design process and preserve the building’s history.
The team worked closely to be flexible and adjust to unforeseen circumstances, such as executing a vibration mitigation structural upgrade, which included steel for stiffening the floors to reduce floor vibration in the lab space. The project also includes structural upgrades, a new mechanical well and upgrades to the existing sheer walls.
Photos courtesy of CO Architects/Kim Rodgers Photography
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