![LANTERN / OMA - Image 1 of 23](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d206/ef3a/3142/66a0/eb68/newsletter/lantern-oma_1.jpg?1715982866)
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Architects: OMA
- Area: 2072 m²
- Year: 2024
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Photographs:John D’Angelo, Jason Keen
![LANTERN / OMA - Exterior Photography](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d211/ef3a/3142/66a0/eb69/newsletter/lantern-oma_1.jpg?1715983136)
![LANTERN / OMA - Exterior Photography, Windows, Brick](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d21b/58f1/c53f/5a28/47e3/newsletter/lantern-oma_4.jpg?1715983082)
Text description provided by the architects. LANTERN, OMA’s first project in Detroit, is now open to the public in Little Village, a neighborhood-wide initiative of Library Street Collective (LSC) co-founders Anthony & JJ Curis. Led by OMA Partner Jason Long, the former commercial bakery and warehouse built in the 1900s has been converted into a mixed-use art hub and public space.
![LANTERN / OMA - Image 8 of 23](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d218/ef3a/3142/66a0/eb6b/newsletter/lantern-oma_3.jpg?1715983053)
![LANTERN / OMA - Image 21 of 23](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d23d/58f1/c53f/5a28/47e8/newsletter/oma-lantern-gf-plan-3.jpg?1715982928)
Led by OMA Partner Jason Long, the 22,300-square-foot complex serves as a new home for two local arts non-profits, Signal-Return and PASC (Progressive Arts Studio Collective). It also includes around 5,300 square feet of artist studios, galleries, and 4,000 square feet of creative retail—all centered around a 2,000-square-foot outdoor courtyard that will serve as an accessible community space.
![LANTERN / OMA - Interior Photography](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d217/58f1/c53f/5a28/47e0/newsletter/lantern-oma_7.jpg?1715983089)
![LANTERN / OMA - Interior Photography, Beam](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d213/58f1/c53f/5a28/47db/newsletter/lantern-oma_8.jpg?1715983053)
OMA’s approach takes advantage of the building’s current state of disrepair, transforming an area missing both its roof and an end wall into a courtyard at the heart of the building. Defined as the primary entry with multiple frontages for all tenants, the courtyard becomes a public gateway and an activity condenser. Signal- Return and PASC’s diverse programs—art education, production, and gallery—are organized across the existing tripartite site to maximize points of access and potential for community interface.
![LANTERN / OMA - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, Shelving](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d21c/58f1/c53f/5a28/47e4/newsletter/lantern-oma_9.jpg?1715983075)
![LANTERN / OMA - Interior Photography, Beam](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d215/58f1/c53f/5a28/47dd/newsletter/lantern-oma_16.jpg?1715983068)
Production zones and artist studios create an active and inviting face to Amity Street, galleries line the courtyard to reinforce a public heart for the building, and neighborhood-serving functions orchestrated on the opposite side of the courtyard consolidate the most public amenities along Kercheval Avenue.
![LANTERN / OMA - Exterior Photography, Stairs, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/6647/d21d/58f1/c53f/5a28/47e5/newsletter/lantern-oma_6.jpg?1715983070)