We're thrilled to share that our Suffolk West Palm Beach team will manage the renovation and revitalization of the Esther B. O’Keeffe and Rovensky buildings on The Society of the Four Arts campus in Palm Beach. New York-based architect Beyer Blinder Belle, in collaboration with local architect Spina O'Rourke + Partners, designed this project, which includes historical preservation of the building envelope and the complete replacement of the structural systems and MEP components. The renewed facilities will house a performance theater, circa 650-seat auditorium, art galleries, administrative offices, a children’s library, and an executive boardroom — spaces designed to expand the Society’s cultural and educational reach. Set in one of the island's most prominent locations, the restoration marks one of Palm Beach's most important and high-profile projects, preserving a cherished landmark while preparing it for future generations. Thank you to the Society of the Four Arts for this opportunity, and we look forward to delivering this project to the community.
Exciting project — preserving the architectural character of the Four Arts campus while modernizing critical systems is no small feat. Our team has worked on similar historical renovations in South Florida, providing tailored lighting and controls packages that balance energy efficiency with architectural intent. We’d love to follow this build’s progress — it’s a fantastic example of thoughtful restoration meeting modern infrastructure.
I am totally impressed.As your forget math teacher at Saint Francid I am proud of you. You definitely were on a different calling than most other students.You actually dreamed and followed up. Maybe I go to Florida and do the math. How are you? Time flies Feel free to text me
Exciting - congrats Suffolk! 🙌
Congratulations team, you should collaborate w our office for SBE small business’ PBC OSBD
Congratulations
How do you keep your team inspired and aligned through a renovation this complex while honoring the site’s history and raising the bar for the community spaces it will serve for generations?