Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters | HOK

Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters’s new headquarters transforms a century-old stove factory into a workplace that competes with the comfort of home while honoring St. Louis’ industrial heritage.

Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters

© Sam Fentress

Missouri’s largest injury law firm faced a post-pandemic challenge familiar to many organizations: enticing employees back to the office after extended remote work. The solution lay in an unlikely location—a 1910 Magic Chef factory on The Hill, a historic St. Louis neighborhood. The building had sat largely unused for nearly 50 years and survived a fire that destroyed an adjacent structure. Working with Third Man Development, HOK needed to update the structure to modern office standards while preserving its industrial character.

Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters

© Sam Fentress

The renovated loft-inspired environment engages the senses and promotes creativity. Rather than imposing a corporate overlay, HOK revealed the building’s authentic character. Original tongue-and-groove structural wood floors and roof decking were cleaned and left naturally finished, casting a warm glow throughout the space. Exposed brick walls and wood columns preserve the industrial aesthetic while creating visual warmth.

Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters

© Sam Fentress

Salvaged materials serve as both a sustainability and design feature. The team discovered nearly 1,500 feet of solid copper bars—originally used to power manufacturing equipment—and repurposed them as wall cladding, entry signage and pickets for a monumental staircase. To balance industrial rawness with contemporary workplace comfort, HOK introduced a neutral, warm material palette: custom graphic wallcoverings, textural patterned carpet mixed with exposed concrete and strategically placed acoustic treatments. The layout blends dedicated offices with flexible sit-stand workstations, accommodating fluctuating daily occupancy in a hybrid work model.

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Unexpected amenities signal the firm’s departure from legal office conventions. A vintage Airstream trailer serves as a conference room. Another meeting space features exercise bikes for chairs. A 3,000-square-foot courtyard with mini-golf greens provides outdoor space for work and relaxation. Yet the design maintains professional credibility through high-tech conference spaces and daylit deposition rooms that integrate hospitality elements for clients.

Additional programming includes a training facility, a mezzanine library, a central town hall flanking a new internal stair, a fitness center with showers and locker rooms, an event space and a recording studio.

Brown and Crouppen King’s Hill Headquarters

© Sam Fentress

The project demonstrates that adaptive reuse can create workplaces compelling enough to draw employees back to the office while preserving architectural heritage and reducing environmental impact.

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© Sam Fentress

Project Info :

  • ArchitectsHOK
  • Area48000 ft²
  • Year2024
  • Photographs: Sam Fentress
  • Manufacturers:  Sherwin-WilliamsArmstrongBentley MillsFineliteFocal Point LightsGolterman & SaboLightArtMaars Living WallMutinaPLAESYNLawnShawSpoonflowerTarkettUSAIUltimaZINTRA
  • Interior DesignersHOK
  • Structural EngineeringKPFF Consulting Engineers
  • Design TeamHOK
  • Mep ConsultantsDesign-Build
  • General Contractor : Paric Construction

Isabelle Laurent
Show full profile Isabelle Laurent

Isabelle Laurent is a Built Projects Editor at Arch2O, recognized for her editorial insight and passion for contemporary architecture. She holds a Master’s in Architectural Theory from École Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Paris-Belleville. Before joining Arch2O in 2016, she worked in a Paris-based architectural office and taught as a faculty adjunct at the École Spéciale d’Architecture in Paris. Isabelle focuses on curating projects around sustainability, adaptive reuse, and urban resilience. With a background in design and communication, she brings clarity to complex ideas and plays a key role in shaping Arch2O’s editorial

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