Handsome New Apartments on Eighth Street – Architecture Critic Will Morgan
Architecture Critic Will Morgan
Handsome New Apartments on Eighth Street – Architecture Critic Will Morgan

The newly renovated and just opened apartment block on Eighth Street, between North Main Street and Miriam Hospital, looks like the standard yellow brick parochial school of the 1950s. Once part of St. Raymond's convent and school complex, this is believed to have served as a refuge for wayward youth.
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18 Eighth Street has two studios, fourteen one-bedroom apartments, and a couple of two-bedroom suites. It is is another demonstration of the astonishing health of real estate on Providence's East Side.
That prosperity is now reaching down the slope of the Summit neighborhood. Only twenty-two years ago, when looking for a house to buy, our realtor advised us against investing west of Hope Street.
Adaptive re-use–saving and re-purposing solid older buildings makes sound economic and environmental sense, especially compared to cheap new construction built for a quick return. Older buildings often were better made–this 1955 building is incredibly solid, with 16-inch foundation walls and a loadbearing concrete frame.

This conversion to apartments not only saves a piece of neighborhood history, but also provides a lesson in amenable gentrification. By offering rental apartments rather than condominiums, such a realistic development multiplied can offset anti-urban alienation such as the Fane Tower.
No. 18's apartments are aimed at young professionals, rather than students. It is close to bus lines (some renters do not even have cars) and to Miriam Hospital. A few units may be rented furnished for short-term housing for visiting professors or medical residents.
This home, the convent next door, and the school up on Highland Avenue were associated with St. Raymond's Church, which was built in 1911, just across North Main Street. As the Catalonian friar St. Raymond was the patron saint of expectant mothers, midwives, and children, it is appropriate that this building served as a home for troubled young people.

Ghassan Daou, the force behind the conversion, is a Lebanese-Canadian businessman who came to Providence in 2008, wanting to do good things for the community. He is known to many on the East Side as the proprietor of the Wayland Square-anchoring Café l'Artisan, which he opened ten years ago.
Daou wisely knew he needed an architect, to both ensure quality and specify materials that would be cost-effective and attractive. He was thoroughly involved in the project even to the point of choosing hardware and wall finishes.

.Daou and Ryan also are restoring St. Raymond's convent house next door, turning its nuns cells and small chapel into apartments. Also, they are already working on a design for a 20-unit apartment block on the open lot next door.


Cabinets are faced with a self-healing matte laminate. Countertops are composed of a synthetic stone and resin that reads as a more expensive material.
Jack Ryan describes 18 Eighth Street as "a great building, with great bones and a great history." And now thanks to Daou and his architect, it also has a great future.

