Frank Dittenhafer (Class of 1978) was first elected to the Penn State Architecture Alumni Group board six years ago, serving for four years as a board member before being elected as that body’s president for two one-year terms. He remains on the board today, as the most recent past president as his tenure ended on June 30th.
Viewing entries in
PENNSYLVANIA
Two Murphy & Dittenhafer Architects projects were recently named recipients of Pennsylvania Historic Preservation Awards: The Zimmerman Center for Heritage has been selected to receive an Initiative Award in Education, while The Forum Auditorium has been selected to receive a Construction-Public & Institutional Properties award.
Want a sneak peek inside the F.W. Woolworth Department Store at 44-50 West Market Street? Check out these photos.
Murphy & Dittenhafer Architects, along with partner the Time Group, recently embarked on what will be a six-month review and evaluation of the Northwest Triangle in York, with an eye toward new construction on the land, which takes its name from a bend in the Codorus Creek it borders.
Does anything here look familiar? Murphy & Dittenhafer Architect Ryan Shank snapped these images of work going on at 59 E. Market St. in York, which used to house the historic Lafayette Club.
Murphy & Dittenhafer Architects are specialists at renovations, repurposing, and the adaptive reuse of aging campus buildings – particularly ‘vintage’ modern structures like Myer Hall originally constructed in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.




