Albert, Righter & Tittmann Architects, Inc.

Albert, Righter & Tittmann Architects, Inc. We draw on decades of study and practice to design handsome, well-crafted buildings. They haven’t looked back since. Jacob Albert was one of Jim’s students.

Every building should be beautiful, functional, and durable; every project is an opportunity to create a delightful and memorable new place that our clients will love. The partnership of ART Architects was formed in 1996 when Jim Righter, Jacob Albert, and John Tittmann decided to pool their efforts. Jim’s architectural career began at Yale in the late 1960’s. Graduating from the School of Archite

cture in 1971, he was part of a new movement in architecture that turned its back on the limiting modernist orthodoxy of the day. Led by architects like Charles Moore and Robert Venturi, this new vision drew form from buildings of all eras, both classical and vernacular. Central to this movement was Vincent Scully, the great Yale architectural historian who legitimized the study of history for practicing architects, reminding his students that architecture is an essential bearer of meaning. Scully introduced a generation of students to the great river of culture embodied in architecture. Jim, practicing in New Haven and teaching at Yale through the 1970s, was part of that world. While at Yale both in the College, and later in the School of Architecture, Jacob was also drawn to Vincent Scully, even serving as head TA for Scully's class one year. For Jacob, the study of history and the study of architecture were naturally one and the same. Upon graduating from the School of Architecture, Jacob worked briefly for Allan Greenberg in New Haven and then followed Jim to the heart of Boston where James Volney Righter Architects had just moved and where the practice would thrive. Together, Jim and Jacob created a rich portfolio of new houses that explored classical and vernacular idioms indigenous to New England. John Tittmann followed Jim and Jacob’s footsteps through Yale College and Yale School of Architecture where he was also influenced by the circle centered on Scully. Deeply interested in the possibilities of the Classical tradition, John took extensive sketching trips to Greece, Turkey, Italy and Spain to see Classical and Mediterranean sites first hand. On one trip, in 1987, he travelled with Thomas Gordon Smith to ancient Ionia to assist Smith’s research for a new translation of Vitruvius. In 1989 Stanley Tigerman recruited John to teach at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Architecture where he joined Smith again teaching classicism. By 1991, however, John moved to Boston, where he hung out his own shingle as Tittmann Associates. Jim, Jacob and John, now in the same city, began sharing resources, and in 1996 decided to work together. The firm, ART Architects, is now best known for its command of the architectural traditions of New England. The firm’s projects are fresh interpretations of a wide variety of New England architectural languages, both Classical and vernacular. In a monograph on their work published by the Vendome Press, Robert A.M. Stern describes the firms work as, “beautifully naturalized—to site, to purpose, and to tradition.” Beauty in buildings is not skin-deep; it comes when buildings speak to us of our memories, our aspirations, our humanity.

  |Henry B. Plant Hall at The University of Tampa, originally built in 1891 as the Tampa Bay Hotel, designed by architec...
06/02/2026

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Henry B. Plant Hall at The University of Tampa, originally built in 1891 as the Tampa Bay Hotel, designed by architect J.A. Wood. The Moorish Revival reference is an unexpected style in Florida!

artarchitects.com/culture
Photo:

We’re closing out National Preservation Month with our renovation project of Milton Academy’s Faulkner Health Center, a ...
06/01/2026

We’re closing out National Preservation Month with our renovation project of Milton Academy’s Faulkner Health Center, a historic structure that was once a dormitory.

Builder: NABC General Contractors
Sketch:

For National Preservation Month, we’re highlighting Treetop, a house designed by architect Ruth Maxon Adams in 1928—care...
05/30/2026

For National Preservation Month, we’re highlighting Treetop, a house designed by architect Ruth Maxon Adams in 1928—carefully restored and renewed by ART for modern living while preserving its original soul.

ARTarchitects.com/projects/treetop
Builder: George Charleton
Interior: Kerry Wilson
Landscape: Patrick Chasse
Photo:

Perched on a knoll, Eight Gables is a thoughtful dialogue between the 18th century and the present.Happy National Preser...
05/28/2026

Perched on a knoll, Eight Gables is a thoughtful dialogue between the 18th century and the present.
Happy National Preservation Month!

ARTarchitects.com/projects/eight-gables
Builder:
Landscape:
Photo:

The Ames Library is one of H.H. Richardson’s great buildings in North Easton, MA. We were honored to help restore the to...
05/22/2026

The Ames Library is one of H.H. Richardson’s great buildings in North Easton, MA. We were honored to help restore the tower, stone by stone.
It’s still National Preservation Month!
We’ll be sharing our restoration and preservation projects throughout May. Stay tuned for more posts.

ARTarchitects.com/projects/ames-free-library/
Structural:
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Restoring history requires a bit of detective work. For this entry restoration in Harvard Square, our team delved into t...
05/12/2026

Restoring history requires a bit of detective work. For this entry restoration in Harvard Square, our team delved into the archives to find the original 1891 design for the decorative fan window & side lights.
Happy National Preservation Month! We’ll be posting more of our restoration projects through the end of May.


ARTarchitects.com/projects/1891-door-surround/
ArchitecturalDetail LeadedGlass Fanlight HistoricArchitecture Preservation TraditionalArchitecture EntrywayDesign HistoricPreservation BostonArchitects HarvardUniversity ArchivalResearch RestorationProject BrickArchitecture ClassicDesign ArchitecturalHistory Doorway Entryway PeriodArchitecture Craftsmanship DesignDetails BuildingRestoration LandmarkBuilding

What shapes an architect’s way of seeing?In our latest ART Journal, “Legacy, Lineage, and Literature,” J.B. Clancy explo...
05/04/2026

What shapes an architect’s way of seeing?
In our latest ART Journal, “Legacy, Lineage, and Literature,” J.B. Clancy explores the books, traditions, and influences that inform our practice.
Read the full essay at the link in bio.

May is National Historic Preservation Month!As Harvard Lampoon celebrates their 150th anniversary, ART Architects is pro...
05/01/2026

May is National Historic Preservation Month!
As Harvard Lampoon celebrates their 150th anniversary, ART Architects is proud to be a part of a multi-phase restoration of their 1909 building in Cambridge, MA.
We’ll be sharing our restoration and preservation projects throughout the month. Stay tuned for more posts.

ARTarchitects.com/projects/harvard-lampoon/
Builder: Cenaxo, Walsh Construction
Structural: Boston Building Consultants
Photo:

A well toned workout space. ARTarchitects.com/projects/bayside-retreatBuilder: Interior: Photo:                         ...
04/29/2026

A well toned workout space.

ARTarchitects.com/projects/bayside-retreat
Builder:
Interior:
Photo:

New England farmhouse meets Neoclassical European villa. artarchitects.com/projects/farm-villaBuilder: DomusLandscape: J...
04/24/2026

New England farmhouse meets Neoclassical European villa.

artarchitects.com/projects/farm-villa
Builder: Domus
Landscape: Johnathan Keep
Photo:

Address

33 Union Street
Boston, MA
02108

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+16174515740

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