Graphic Design Student and Professor Collaborate to Capture Images of the City鈥檚 History

Midcentury-1 Image by Michael Page
A home at 40 Lincoln Parkway in the Highlands neighborhood.

08/04/2023
By Marlon Pitter

Michael Page 鈥23 didn鈥檛 explore Lowell during much of his time as a graphic design student. That changed when he took on an Emerging Scholars project his senior year to create an exhibit about Lowell鈥檚 midcentury modern architecture, buildings designed from the 1950s through the 1960s, to document and preserve this era in the city鈥檚 history.

鈥淚 was able to explore with a purpose,鈥 says Page, a Woburn, Massachusetts, native. 鈥淚t felt nice to interact with and see these different buildings and see the city from a different perspective.鈥

Under the guidance of Architectural Studies Program Director Marie Frank, Page took hundreds of photos of several homes and commercial buildings in the downtown and Highlands neighborhoods during the fall and spring semesters. (The Emerging Scholars program pairs students and faculty in the College of Fine Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences to work on yearlong research-based projects.)

An avid photographer, Page knew it would take multiple trips to get the perfect shots for each building.

Midcentury-2
Mochinut, left, and Santander Bank, right, on display in the Mill No. 5 gallery.

鈥淲e started in September, and we finished photographing in May toward the end of the semester,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e kept on going back and forth like, 鈥楴o, we want a different shot where the lighting is different. Now it's a different season.鈥欌

While Lowell is known for its historic mills from the Industrial Revolution, the resurgence of the city through its architecture can be traced back to the 1950s, according to Frank. Looking to recover from an economic downturn after World War II, and many vacant textile mills, the city altered its image, starting with the design of its buildings.

鈥淚t was a conscious attempt to use the architecture to show that Lowell had not died, that its history was not over, and that it was, in fact, going to be a city of the future,鈥 she says.

Architect Eugene Weisberg, a Lowell native who studied at MIT, played a significant role in the development of Lowell鈥檚 midcentury modern build-out. The buildings featured large vertical glass windowpanes and cantilever roofs that extend horizontally over open spaces.

Weisberg鈥檚 work included Temple Beth-El on Princeton Boulevard and the Lowell Bank and Trust Co., now Santander Bank, on Merrimack Street. Downtown鈥檚 Mochinut and Choice Fitness in Central Plaza are similar examples of this work.

Midcentury-3
The exhibit details how midcentury modern architecture aimed to revitalize Lowell.

City of Lowell Historic Board Administrator Steve Stowell '86 and Middlesex North Register of Deeds Richard Howe, Jr. helped Page gather information on individual properties. Page combined those sources with research done at the Center for Lowell History to create the exhibit 鈥淩evitalizing the City: Mid-Century Modern Architecture Comes to Lowell,鈥 while fellow graphic design student Josephine Parsons 鈥23 designed a poster and announcement card for the exhibit.聽

The photos were displayed on the fifth floor of Mill No. 5 in downtown Lowell from late June through July. Interest in Page鈥檚 work has spread to City Hall, where a gallery was installed in July and will be available through August, and the National Park Service.

鈥淥ne of the reasons that City Hall and the National Park are interested is because Lowell鈥檚 bicentennial is coming up in 2026, and this topic of Lowell鈥檚 midcentury modern architecture is important in the overall history of Lowell,鈥 Frank says. 鈥淭he city didn鈥檛 end when the mills left. The city continued, and the people love the city.鈥

Page hopes his work will serve as a lasting reminder of an overlooked era in Lowell.

鈥淭he city is changing, and it鈥檚 important that these photos serve as history to show off Lowell鈥檚 rich urbanization, which has a lot of beautiful qualities that people might forget,鈥 he says.