flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware

Office Buildings

Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware

Studio Steinbomer has updated the Oak Brook, Ill., building while preserving its mid-century modern architecture and design.


By Novid Parsi, Contributing Editor  | March 5, 2024
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography

In Oak Brook, Ill., about 15 miles west of downtown Chicago, McDonald’s former corporate headquarters has been transformed into a modern office building for its new tenant, Ace Hardware. Now for the first time, Ace Hardware can bring 1,700 employees from three facilities under one roof. (See more office building news from BD+C.)

Originally designed by architect Dirk Lohan, grandson of Mies van der Rohe, McDonald’s old corporate HQ had quirky design elements such as golden arches on door handles and a circular, tiered boardroom that resembled a Quarter Pounder, with “sesame seeds” on the ceiling. In addition to the 300,000-sf office building and 130,000-sf training facility (which housed Hamburger University), the campus comprises a 218-room Hyatt and a smaller leased office building.

Modernizing McDonald’s headquarters while preserving its mid-century modern architecture

Architecture firm Studio Steinbomer has modernized the administrative building while preserving its midcentury architecture and design. Throughout the building, the design team emphasized the midcentury aesthetic—introducing terrazzo flooring, wood slats, metal panels and brick, as well as replacing windows using the original’s same glass profile.

The team reconfigured and renovated the building to serve Ace’s needs, made updates to meet code requirements, and fully renovated all the restrooms, elevator lobbies, and main lobby. A new amenity center includes a café, private dining rooms, commercial kitchen, fitness center, multipurpose room, interview rooms, and conference center.

Two changes represented the most significant interventions: first, converting McDonald’s large test kitchens on the top floor into offices that can enjoy views of the campus; and second, turning the parking garage into a food service area with a café that opens to an outdoor plaza. Both of these elements aim to provide employees with stronger connections to the site. Similarly, the conference center has been equipped with modern technology and flexible folding walls inside a sunlit, glass-encased space, creating a visual and physical connection with the surroundings.

Previously, the administrative facility’s ground floor had been mostly devoted to back-of-house functions. By converting the parking garage and expanding ground-floor uses with vestibules and meeting areas, the lobby is now more interactive and functional. As a result, people feel welcome to linger in the space under its massive skylight.

On the Building Team:
Owner/developer: JPD Oak Brook Holdings, LLC
Design architect and architect of record: Studio Steinbomer
Landscape Architect: Lamar Johnson Collaborative

MEP engineer: ESD (now Stantec)
Structural engineer: Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc.
General contractor: Executive Construction, Inc.

Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography

Here is the project summary from architect Studio Steinbomer:
The project to renovate this former McDonalds corporate campus, which was much beloved for its mid-century design and unique features, brought very particular challenges. The 80-acre site, located 15 miles west of downtown Chicago, includes lakes and streams, as well as abundant trees, and even boasts the oldest tree in Illinois. In addition to the 300,000-square-foot office building and 130,000-square-foot training facility - which housed Hamburger University - the campus also comprises a 218-key Hyatt and a smaller leased office building. McDonalds’ departure in 2021 left the specialized buildings and bucolic campus in search of a new use and brought significant concern among both architects and the public that the buildings would be lost to a lack of imagination. Fortunately, the new owner saw opportunity in the existing design and brought in Studio Steinbomer to complete base building improvements of the administrative building for new tenant Ace Hardware

The existing headquarters building carries significant architectural bona fides; it was designed by architect Dirk Lohan, grandson of Mies van der Rohe, and was endowed with exquisite, if somewhat dated and worn, detailing. Its function as McDonald's corporate headquarters also brought with it quirky design elements, including golden arches on door handles and a circular boardroom with three tiers of seating resembling the layers of a quarter pounder, complete with “sesame seeds” on the ceiling. The Steinbomer team took stock of the existing opportunities and gave careful attention to curating what should stay and what could go.

Studio Steinbomer's scope of work  included the full renovation of all restrooms, elevator lobbies, and the main lobby, as well as creating a new amenity center that includes a café, private dining rooms, commercial kitchen, fitness center, multi-purpose room, interview rooms, and a conference center. The architects’ efforts included updates to meet code requirements and reconfiguring the program’s spaces and functions, while celebrating the mid-century style and preserving the original architectural design. For Ace Hardware, the project consolidated 1,700 employees from three facilities under one roof for the first time and represented an opportunity to bolster its culture, provide a beautiful workplace, and leave room for expansion. The dramatic adaptive re-use amounted to a taking leap of faith that the interiors could not only be brought into a more modern aesthetic, but also accommodate current technology needs and employee expectations.

The most significant interventions involved converting the large test kitchens on the top floor into offices that take advantage of campus views, and adapting the parking garage into a food service area with a café that opens to an outdoor plaza, both design gestures that provide employees with stronger connections to the site. Likewise, the conference center was fitted with modern technology packages and flexible folding walls inside a sunlit, glass-encased space that interacts visually and physically with its surroundings.

The large administrative facility’s ground floor had been predominantly devoted to back-of-house functions. The lobby, although establishing a grand entrance, previously had little else to offer the building's ground floor experience or uses; there was nowhere to go but up. By converting the parking garage and expanding ground-floor uses with vestibules and meeting areas around the perimeter, the dramatic lobby is now more interactive and functional, inviting people to linger in the charming space under the massive skylight. Throughout the building, but here especially, the Steinbomer team leaned into the mid-century aesthetic, introducing terrazzo flooring, wood slats, metal panels and brick, as well as replacing windows using the same glass profile of the original and continuing the detailing and simplicity of the original design. Dated glass blocks were replaced by glass or slatted wall panels throughout the building to retain the sense of transparency in walls and partitions.

Converting the ground-floor parking garage into the desired café amenity brought different challenges. Because the live load requirement for vehicles is lower than that for people, parts of  the garage space  required a reinforced structural slab to be placed on top of the existing slab and columns to also be reinforced, creating further spatial limitations. In addition, accommodating modern technology, electrical, and HVAC infrastructure added a layer of complexity in the building’s various low-slung interiors with long, open spans. In response, the architects varied ceiling heights where possible to open interior spaces and introduced acoustical ceiling baffles to mitigate any closed-in effect. To create a sense of void above the low ceiling in the café, for example, wooden slats were layered overhead to create the perception of an unseen void. The effect creates the feeling of sitting under a pergola shelter that opens onto the verdant campus via the floor-to-ceiling glass that opens to the adjacent patio.

The artful adaptive re-use of the campus, once thought to be un-adaptable due to its specific program and quirky features, manages to deftly retain the existing bones of the architecture, the character and quality of the design, and the spirit of the place to keep the building alive and functioning well into the future. 

Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography
Former McDonald’s headquarters transformed into modern office building for Ace Hardware
Photo: © Connor Steinkamp Photography

 

Related Stories

| Aug 11, 2010

NBBJ selected to design Russell Investments’ Seattle headquarters

NBBJ has been hired by Russell Investments as the architectural firm to design the interior space of its new global headquarters at 1301 2nd Avenue, a building also designed by NBBJ.

| Aug 11, 2010

Report: Fraud levels fall for construction industry, but companies still losing $6.4 million on average

The global construction, engineering and infrastructure industry saw a significant decline in fraud activity with companies losing an average of $6.4 million over the last three years, according to the latest edition of the Kroll Annual Global Fraud Report, released today at the Association of Corporate Counsel’s 2009 Annual Meeting in Boston. This new figure represents less than half of last year’s amount of $14.2 million.

| Aug 11, 2010

AAMA developing product-based green certification program for fenestration

The American Architectural Manufacturers Association is working on a product-based green certification program for residential and commercial fenestration, the organization announced today. AAMA will use the results of a recent green building survey to help shape the program. Among the survey's findings: 77% of respondents reported a green certification program for fenestration would benefit the product selection process for their company.

| Aug 11, 2010

City offices to up daylight, reduce water use

Breaking ground this month and scheduled for completion in November, the Palmetto Bay Village Hall in Miami-Dade County, Fla., will become the operating center for the mayor, village commissioners, government departments, the police department, and commission chambers. The two-story facility has been designed by JMWA Architects to win LEED Gold certification.

| Aug 11, 2010

Glass features keep Phoenix high-rise cool

A 26-story, 700,000-sf glass-clad tower has become downtown Phoenix's first office high-rise in eight years. One Central Park East, developed by Mesirow Financial, designed by SmithGroup, and built by Holder Construction Company, contains 495,000 sf of office space spanning 16 floors, plus a nine-level parking lot and ground-floor retail space.

| Aug 11, 2010

New HQ for automobile association stresses employee collaboration

AAA Northern California, Nevada, and Utah (AAA NCNU) has a new corporate headquarters in Walnut Creek, Calif. The interior of the six-floor, 250,000-sf building features an open layout by architecture firm Gensler to encourage greater collaboration across the automobile association's departments. Targeting LEED Gold certification, the building uses wood from Forest Stewardship Council-certified...

| Aug 11, 2010

Project's mixed materials downplay massing

Philadelphia-based KlingStubbins provided design services for the 120,000-sf Carnegie Center, which is part of the 103-acre mixed-use Carnegie Center West development in West Windsor Township, N.J. The four-story building features horizontal brick bands, ribbons of glass, aluminum accents, and metal end panels and curtain wall at all four corners to break up the building's massing.

| Aug 11, 2010

Firehouse converted to hip hot property

Sound the alarm! A 9,000-sf former firehouse is being converted into a new multipurpose space for ZUMIX, a nonprofit music and arts organization that's partnering on the project with Landmark Structures of Woburn, Mass., and the East Boston Community Development Corporation. The $2 million renovation of the 1920s structure, known as Engine Company 40 Firehouse, includes a complete gut job to ma...

| Aug 11, 2010

High-tech tower targets LEED Platinum

Construction is slated to begin on the new $38 million AI Tech Center in Hartford, Conn., in spring 2010. The Building Team, which includes Suffolk Construction Co., CBT Architects, and Jones Lang LaSalle, planned the high-tech 13-story, 259,000-sf tower to meet LEED Platinum certification. Green features include photovoltaic power, a fuel cell power plant, abundant natural lighting, and a roof...

| Aug 11, 2010

And the world's tallest building is…

At more than 2,600 feet high, the Burj Dubai (right) can still lay claim to the title of world's tallest building—although like all other super-tall buildings, its exact height will have to be recalculated now that the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH) announced a change to its height criteria.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Adaptive Reuse

Detroit’s Michigan Central Station, centerpiece of innovation hub, opens

The recently opened Michigan Central Station in Detroit is the centerpiece of a 30-acre technology and cultural hub that will include development of urban transportation solutions. The six-year adaptive reuse project of the 640,000 sf historic station, created by the same architect as New York’s Grand Central Station, is the latest sign of a reinvigorating Detroit.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021