The financial center for Chesapeake Bank’s Middle Peninsula region, the building draws from earlier branch renovations to solidify the bank’s corporate image.
 
   

 

 

 

 



This 22,000 square-foot design/build shopping center deviated in methods and materials from the archetypal colonial brick storefront strip malls found in the Williamsburg area.
 
   

 

 

 

 



This new home for the Williamsburg Chamber and the Convention & Visitor’s Bureau is located in the new city central redevelopment area. The building evokes images of the city’s rich heritage, without directly reproducing a historic style.
 
   

 

 

 

 



This building had been a restaurant, a savings and loan, and then an abandoned structure, until this progressive community bank occupied it. The building, located on a valuable commercial site near downtown Williamsburg, was converted to a recognizable icon for this growing institution.
     

 

 

 

 



This freestanding retail facility and ice cream shop, reminiscent of an old mercantile store, is complete with exposed timber beams and columns, pine flooring and a metal roof. The result is a building that invites people from the street to come and shop, or sit in a rocking chair on the extensive wrap-around porch.
 
   

 

 

 

 


This neo-traditional office building in Williamsburg’s municipal center area responds to the architecture of the neighboring Chamber of Commerce building, also designed by Guernsey Tingle.
 
 
   

 

 

 


This new branch facility serves as a gateway to Williamsburg's New Town, while the interior reflects the credit union's corporate branding.

 
The structure is a 24,000 square foot office building with a two-story atrium space covered by a 24' wide by 96' glass and steel barrel vault. This impressive office building is the first of its kind on the Peninsula.