Supporting Visionaries in Pittsburgh and Beyond

Richard King Mellon Foundation, New Headquarters

To Project Types

Pittsburgh, PA | 18,000 SF

The Richard King Mellon Foundation headquarters provides space to welcome and celebrate grantees and honor the organization’s legacy of philanthropy.
Curated shelves, layered rugs, and comfortable seating give the lounge an inviting, lived-in feel for casual meetings or focus work.

Founded in 1947, the Richard King Mellon Foundation has awarded over 8,000 grants and more than $3 billion in funding to support conservation, economic development, economic mobility, health and well-being, organizational effectiveness, and social impact investments.

The foundation's headquarters design happened in conjunction with their brand refresh. The entry corridor evokes the brand's signature color and dynamism.
Private offices wrap around the office's perimeter and use a continuous wall of interior glass to provide acoustic privacy while democratizing visibility, natural light, and views.

Their new headquarters inside the LEED Silver Auction House in Pittsburgh’s walkable Strip District neighborhood, was designed to welcome their diverse and growing cohorts of grantees and celebrate the impact of their work throughout Pittsburgh and the region. The new space also connects the foundation’s employees to the community with an accessible, flexible, and energy-efficient workplace that honors their legacy of philanthropy.

Beyond their functional use, the translucent convening center (left) and the solid green cafe and core (right) reflect the foundation’s duality: visionary and full of possibility while also being grounded and tangible.

Arranging the convening space and the mechanical space directly opposite each other helped created boundaries for the atrium and the surrounding offices.

Two enclosed spaces within the space help organize the open floor plan and break down its scale by defining boundaries for the café, lounge, and workspaces. The convening center is translucent, appearing to glow from within, and provides space to welcome and celebrate grantees. Its interior can be configured in a variety of ways to accommodate different sized groups. It also features a custom mosaic representing the nearly 2,000 organizations the Richard King Mellon Foundation has supported throughout its history. Opposite the convening center is a space that houses the cafe and core elements like the restrooms, elevator, and stairs.

Environmental graphic design was incorporated from the project's earliest stages, including the design of this flexible, and adaptable approach to honoring the foundation's many grantees.
The Grantee Wall displays the foundation's 75-year legacy by honoring all 2,000 past and present grantees. Future grantees can be added to the wall for up to 15 years with minimal cost.
The insertion of the convening center serves many purposes: event space, celebrates grantees and the foundation's history, defines the boundaries of the atrium and establishes corridors.

Working with the Pittsburgh artisan collective, Monmade, the project includes many regionally sourced, responsibly made, and environmentally conscious products, including light fixtures, signage, planters, and wall treatments.


AIA Cincinnati, Building Architecture Large Scale, Merit Award