Courier Square
Charleston, South Carolina
Featured Press
The New York Times
Institute of Classical Architecture & Art
Traditional Building Magazine
Courier Square, Evening Post Industries’ redevelopment on Upper King Street, continues the expansion of Charleston’s urban fabric north from the city’s already bustling Broad Street area over three phases of construction. The first phase is composed of two distinct buildings side by side: an office building on Meeting Street and a residential building on Columbus Street overlooking a greenway serving as a city park and a passage to downtown for pedestrians and cyclists.
The Guild, an eight-story loft-style brick-clad apartment building, recalls the industrial character of the late 19th- and early 20th-century warehouses in the area. The building provides 220 apartments; storefronts line Columbus Street. A clock tower rising 120 feet, visible from the highway entrance to Charleston’s historic Lower Peninsula, marks the development on the new greenway. Atop an enclosed 234,000-square-foot parking structure at the center of the site masked by the office and residential building, a roof terrace provides residents with a swimming pool and an adjacent lounge area.
The office building, headquarters for the property developer Greystar, continues Charleston’s classical tradition of nineteenth-century commercial architecture, using Greek Revival details to mark the five-story structure that provides 70,000 square feet of office space. At the ground level, shopfronts set into rusticated stone facades activate Meeting Street. The upper floors are stucco with Ionic columns; the metal-paneled fifth-floor penthouse offers views out to the Cooper River to the east.
Gary Brewer, Project Partner and Designer
Robert A.M. Stern Architects
Photographer: Peter Aaron, Francis Dzikowski, OTTO