April 27, 2021

Library Street Collective in Detroit is a Snarkitecture First

Snarkitecture draws its name from The Hunting of the Snark, a Lewis Carroll poem. A recent project, Library Street Collective in Detroit, the firm’s first freestanding gallery, is evidence of that inspo. Situated in the Belt, a downtown alleyway populated with murals and artistic interventions, the ground-floor space occupies 1,600 square feet in the landmarked L.B. King and Company Building from 1911. In its signature reinterpretation of everyday materials, Snarkitecture worked with what was present on-site, namely the facade’s historic brick, to create the key design feature: a portal connecting the alley to the gallery interior that also nods to the notion of a bricked-up window. “The intent is to create a moment of wonder,” co-founder Alex Mustonen says. Carroll would be proud.

A Closer Look at the Facade of Library Street Collective in Detroit

The brick facade of Library Street Collective in Detroit by Snarkitecture
Library Street Collective in Detroit. Photography by PD Rearick/courtesy of Library Street Collective.
A closer look at the original brick that inspired the current design of Library Street Collective
Library Street Collective in Detroit. Photography by PD Rearick/courtesy of Library Street Collective.

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