flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Three decades and counting, Tinkelman Architecture has helped reshape New York’s Hudson Valley

Architects

Three decades and counting, Tinkelman Architecture has helped reshape New York’s Hudson Valley

The full-service firm has designed more than 100 projects in this region, including several multifamily buildings currently in the works


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | November 29, 2022
The Van Wagner Place campus in Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
Tinkelman Architecture has worked on buildings within the Van Wagner Place campus in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., for the past decade. Image credit: Tinkelman Architecture

Tinkelman Architecture is preparing to break ground on a five-story building, located at the Van Wagner Place mixed-use campus in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., that will have 28 luxury apartments, commercial space on the first floor with an indoor pool that will be used by the British Swim School franchise, and a top-floor community space that opens onto a roof deck.

Tinkelman Companies, the firm’s development and property management arm, has been involved with Van Wagner Place for a decade, starting with the renovation and repurposing of four derelict buildings. The campus is now home to offices, shops, and other businesses, as well as the firm’s headquarters inside a former warehouse in Poughkeepsie’s Arlington business district.

In fact, over the 30 years it has been serving New York’s Hudson Valley, Tinkelman Architecture has been the designer on more than 100 projects within that market. Its fingerprints can be found on local banks, wineries, restaurants, retail stores, historic structures and parks, to say nothing of the numerous residential projects it has engaged.

“We like doing a lot of housing,” says Steven Tinkelman, a Poughkeepsie native and life-long Hudson Valley resident, who founded Tinkelman Architecture in 1993. Over the years, his work has contributed to this market becoming, in his words, “more sophisticated, regional, cosmopolitan.”

Tinkelman Architecture generates between $1 million and $2 million per year in revenue from its design work, and double that when development and property management are included. 

Wide-ranging projects

A graduate of Cooper Union and a modernist by training, Tinkelman also acknowledges the aesthetic influence of rustic summer camping as a child. “So there’s a blending of modern tradition with sticks and twigs,” he quips.

His 14-person firm has no signature architectural style, and he is fine with that agnostic approach because he believes it opens portals to pursue a diversity of projects in a market where, he says, other small design firms have come and gone. (While the market’s growth has attracted more civil engineering and construction firms, Tinkelman observes that there’s still a need for structural and mechanical engineers.)

One of Tinkelman Architecture’s better-known infrastructure projects was the design for the Upper Landing Park in Poughkeepsie, which sits under a 1.28-mile walkway across the Hudson River, which opened in 2009. The park includes an elevator to the walkway, which is the longest elevated pedestrian bridge in the world.

 

Upper Landing Park in Poughkeepsie, with walkway in the background
The Upper Landing Park in Poughkeepsie is one gateway to a 1.28-mile walkway over the Hudson river that is a conversion of a railroad bridge that dated back to the 19th Century.  Image: Courtesy of Tinkelman Architecture
 

Among the projects Tinkelman Architecture is currently working on are a 56-unit residential building in Fishkill, N.Y., with 5,000 sf of commercial space; and a 40- to 45-unit residential building in the urban part of Poughkeepsie that will overlook its train station. The latter project, says Tinkelman, includes the restoration of an 1860s-era building that will be used by an arts organization.

The firm has also designed a four-story, 20-unit building called The Westerly, and was recently retained by New York’s Dutchess County to design a campus for homeless housing.

Seeking expansion opportunities

Among Tinkleman’s ongoing clients is the retailer Adams Fairacre Farms, whose stores mingle a country feeling with contemporary design. Tinkelman designed this retailer’s outlets in Newburgh and Wappinger, N.Y., and the expansion of its Poughkeepsie location. The firm is currently working on Adams Faircare Farms’ 56,643-sf store in Middletown, N.Y., which is under construction, and when completed next year will include a 2,905-sf tropical greenhouse and 6,048-sf seasonal greenhouse.

 

Adams Fairacre Farms' newest store in Middletown, N.Y.
One of Tinkelman Architecture's long-time clients is Adams Fairacre Farms, whose newest store in Middletown, N.Y., Tinkelman designed.
 

Tinkleman Architecture is looking to expand beyond the region with which it has become synonymous. It currently has active projects in Ulster and Orange counties (the latter is where the Middletown store will be located), and has been looking for opportunities in Westchester County and nearby Connecticut. But Tinkelman, who lives with his wife Rachel in Pleasant Valley, N.Y., says he still gets a kick from seeing local residents course through buildings and spaces in the mid-Hudson Valley his firm helped create.

Tags

Related Stories

Office Buildings | Feb 12, 2023

Smyrna Ready Mix’s new office HQ mimics the patterns in the company’s onsite stone quarry

Designed by EOA Architects to showcase various concrete processes and applications, Smyrna Ready Mix's new office headquarters features vertical layering that mimics the patterns in the company’s stone quarry, located on the opposite end of the campus site. The building’s glass and concrete bands are meant to mirror the quarry’s natural contours and striations.

Multifamily Housing | Feb 10, 2023

Dallas to get a 19-story, 351-unit residential high-rise

In Dallas, work has begun on a new multifamily high-rise called The Oliver. The 19-story, 351-unit apartment building will be located within The Central, a 27-acre mixed-use development near the Knox/Henderson neighborhood north of downtown Dallas. 

Sustainability | Feb 9, 2023

New guide for planning, designing, and operating onsite water reuse systems

The Pacific Institute, a global nonpartisan water think tank, has released guidance for developers to plan, design, and operate onsite water reuse systems. The Guide for Developing Onsite Water Systems to Support Regional Water Resilience advances circular, localized approaches to managing water that reduce a site’s water footprint, improve its resilience to water shortage or other disruptions, and provide benefits for local communities and regional water systems.

Office Buildings | Feb 9, 2023

Post-Covid Manhattan office market rebound gaining momentum

Office workers in Manhattan continue to return to their workplaces in sufficient numbers for many of their employers to maintain or expand their footprint in the city, according to a survey of more than 140 major Manhattan office employers conducted in January by The Partnership for New York City.

Sustainability | Feb 9, 2023

University of Southern California's sustainability guidelines emphasize embodied carbon

A Buro Happold-led team recently completed work on the USC Sustainable Design & Construction Guidelines for the University of Southern California. The document sets out sustainable strategies for the design and construction of new buildings, renovations, and asset renewal projects.

University Buildings | Feb 9, 2023

3 ways building design can elevate bold thinking and entrepreneurial cultures

Mehrdad Yazdani of CannonDesign shares how the visionary design of a University of Utah building can be applied to other building types.

Giants 400 | Feb 9, 2023

New Giants 400 download: Get the complete at-a-glance 2022 Giants 400 rankings in Excel

See how your architecture, engineering, or construction firm stacks up against the nation's AEC Giants. For more than 45 years, the editors of Building Design+Construction have surveyed the largest AEC firms in the U.S./Canada to create the annual Giants 400 report. This year, a record 519 firms participated in the Giants 400 report. The final report includes 137 rankings across 25 building sectors and specialty categories.   

University Buildings | Feb 8, 2023

STEM-focused Kettering University opens Stantec-designed Learning Commons

In Flint, Mich., Kettering University opened its new $63 million Learning Commons, designed by Stantec. The new facility will support collaboration, ideation, and digital technology for the STEM-focused higher learning institution.

Sustainability | Feb 8, 2023

A wind energy system—without the blades—can be placed on commercial building rooftops

Aeromine Technologies’ bladeless system captures and amplifies a building’s airflow like airfoils on a race car.

Codes and Standards | Feb 8, 2023

GSA releases draft of federal low embodied carbon material standards

The General Services Administration recently released a document that outlines standards for low embodied carbon materials and products to be used on federal construction projects.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Warehouses

California bill would limit where distribution centers can be built

A bill that passed the California legislature would limit where distribution centers can be located and impose other rules aimed at reducing air pollution and traffic. Assembly Bill 98 would tighten building standards for new warehouses and ban heavy diesel truck traffic next to sensitive sites including homes, schools, parks and nursing homes.




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