Croxton Collaborative Preserves 96 Percent of Wooster Hall’s Brutalist ‘Bones’ in Sustainable SUNY New Paltz Project

Words: Bronzella Cleveland

Outdated Brutalist Facility Becomes One of America’s Most Resilient Academic Buildings

Outdated Brutalist Facility Becomes One of America’s Most Resilient Academic Buildings
© Tim Hursley

Croxton Collaborative Architects (CCA) has completed its renovation of Wooster Hall at SUNY New Paltz. A comprehensive transformation of the college’s outdated, 75,000-square-foot Wooster Science Building, the firm’s design maintained 96 percent of the structure’s 1967 Brutalist “bones” while converting it into one of the most resilient academic buildings in the country, the firm says.

Representing neither demolition nor preservation, CCA’s interventions were based on a collaborative decision with SUNY New Paltz to maintain Wooster’s urban design sensibilities, footprint, and embodied energy in light of the extensive code compliance modifications needed to update its Brutalist shell and interior. The goal was to achieve an archetype of high performance, both flexible and humanistic. To address and exceed this objective, CCA decoupled the structure’s concrete thermal mass from its exterior, then encased nearly all of its Brutalist “bones” in a new thermal and rain screen envelope to boost its energy conservation. The high thermal mass of the resulting interior provides extended comfort in a systems outage, and natural light flooding throughout achieves high viability in a totally passive mode.

Outdated Brutalist Facility Becomes One of America’s Most Resilient Academic Buildings
© Tim Hursley

Programmatically, the building relocates the college’s departments of Psychology and Anthropology and four engineering labs under one roof, enhancing student-faculty interaction and collaborative learning. These areas are housed on the building’s two upper levels along with a student lounge, café, and teaching/faculty spaces. The ground level contains an expanded café and the relocated student-service offices of Records & Registration, Student Accounts, Academic Advising, and Financial Aid, saving 26 percent in net programmatic space. Extensive daylight throughout the building and “open” views at the end of all main corridors provide secure wayfinding to the exterior in case of emergency. Four bars of sunlight on the Grand Central Atrium’s main stair mark solar noon daily, inviting nature into the building.

Outside, the building’s fresh exterior creates new relationships with the campus, community, and the site’s natural resources. It opens circulation from the adjoining quads and connected buildings and provides abundant social places. Open “Spanish Steps” and landscaping have replaced a “blind” staircase at the back of the building, dramatically expressing the transparency and clarity of the project’s humanistic design.

“This project leveraged fifty years of evolving design knowledge and values to revolutionize the building’s program and purpose, marking a transition from Brutalism to humanism on the same structural scaffold,” says CCA President Randolph Croxton, FAIA. “Ambitious in sustainable goals for building type, Wooster Hall aspires to LEED GOLD certification, but also meets the more stringent energy framework of AIA 2030, the pathway to all Net Zero Carbon buildings by the year 2030.”

“We couldn’t be more pleased with the new Wooster Hall,” said SUNY New Paltz President Donald P. Christian. “The re-opening helps the college meet a strategic goal to nurture innovation and the learning environment in a modern facility that addresses the academic and student-service needs of our students. We appreciate the hard and excellent work that CCA and many other people and companies dedicated to this project, and look forward to its positive impact on our campus for many years to come.”

Croxton Collaborative Preserves 96 Percent of Wooster Hall’s Brutalist ‘Bones’ in Sustainable SUNY New Paltz Project
© Tim Hursley
Manufactured Stone Veneer or Thin-Cut Natural Stone: Which One is Right for Your Next Project?
May 2026

Stone continues to be a go-to material in both residential and commercial construction, used for its texture, depth and ability to elevate a façade or interior space. For masons, general contractors, builders and design professionals looking for lightweig

The Behind-the-Wall Secrets Every Mason Already Knows (But Some Ignore)
May 2026

You’ve been around long enough to know this already: stone doesn’t fail on the face; it fails behind the wall. You can lay the prettiest veneer in the county, but if the prep is junk, that wall’s gonna start telling on you after a couple of winters. Manu

Masonry Innovation in Action: Belden Brick’s Glazed Thin Brick Redefines Design Possibilities
May 2026

Masonry innovation is pivotal in shaping the built environment, and The Belden Brick Company is at the forefront of this evolution. Architects, designers, and contractors increasingly seek materials that marry high performance with bold aesthetics, and Be

Celebrating Craftsmanship and Country
May 2026

The 250th anniversary of the United States is more than a date. It is a reflection of centuries of progress, innovation, and determination. STABILA has chosen to mark this milestone with a product that mirrors those same qualities. The Patriot Series Maso