The Mezzanine wraps around a central atrium that looks down into the amenity platform below — coffee, bar, conference rooms, events, podcast studio. Your office sits a short flight up. Close the door to focus. Open it to be in the middle of everything. Configure the suites as you need; expand into neighboring space as you grow.
The structure is in place. The architecture is done. What comes next is up to you.
Walk to your desk and the building hums below you. Close the door and the world goes quiet. Open it and you’re back in the middle of everything.
The Mezzanine is what happens when you take a private office and drop it above a working neighborhood. Five conference rooms below you. A coffee shop below you. An event space with a stage below you. A podcast studio below you. A wellness room below you.
Up here: quiet. Private suites wrapped around the atrium, heritage ceilings, original proportions. The amenities are one flight away. The noise is not.
Configure the Mezzanine as a single private floor, a set of suites, or somewhere in between. As your team grows, expand into the suite next door without touching your address. The building grows with you.
Private offices, open office zones, and three conference rooms organized around the central atrium that opens to the amenity platform below.
AI-rendered concepts showing what the Mezzanine and atrium could look like finished. Same bones, same windows, same ceilings — imagined as it will actually be lived in.
Seen from the Mezzanine railing: the double-height atrium at the heart of the building, dressed as a private members’ lounge. Chesterfield leather. Billiards. Velvet swivel chairs in brass-footed circles. The original classical columns left to do what they do.
This is the view from every private Mezzanine suite. Every morning. Every meeting. Every client tour.
One of the private office suites on the Mezzanine, configured for a principal or partner. Mahogany desk. Credentials on the wall. A round meeting table with leather club chairs for three. Historic windows pulling in the Wash Ave light.
Seventeen-foot coffered ceilings, original proportions, a door that closes. And the building’s amenity platform one flight down when it’s time to break the day up.
A 3D walkthrough of the space — configured to open clean, without the dashboards or highlight reels. Use it to get a feel for the proportions, the light, and the flow.
1017 Olive sits one block off the Wash Ave corridor. Here’s what that means in minutes.
Bella’s Coffee Cafe, Rooster Breakfast, Insomnia Cookies.
Sen-Thai, Medina Grill, Sushi Ai, The Moniker, Rosalita’s.
The Crack Fox, Bridge Tap House, Dorsa and Thaxton speakeasies.
8th & Pine station — Clayton, the Airport, the stadiums.
Configuration questions, pricing, tours, expansion — Jack handles it all. Direct line, no gatekeepers.