Beneficent House stands as a senior living community designed for elderly residents, offering both market-rate and subsidized apartments in a building from the late 1960s that really shows off a strong Brutalist style, with lots of raw concrete and interesting forms you won't find in newer buildings, and you'll see the architect Paul Rudolph's work pretty clearly, especially with the wood grain patterns left in the concrete so some of the walls look and feel less cold. The planned balconies never did get built, but each unit comes with big floor-to-ceiling windows that let in lots of sunlight, give residents nice views of Downtown Providence, and were placed at angles to keep people's privacy, which is thoughtful, though you might notice too how the building uses a mix of clay brick and concrete string-courses in wide bands that break up the tall mass of it, so the scale feels easier to live with than you'd think from the outside.
Apartments are available in studio, one-bedroom, or two-bedroom layouts, some with full kitchens and lots of closet space, with sizes and floor plans that suit different needs, and you'll see both affordable and market units mixed together, so there's a variety of neighbors and backgrounds in the building. Some of the first-floor apartments open out onto patios and shared gardens, while all the units enjoy the big windows for city views. Residents have access to a 24-hour fitness room, a central laundry, and a modern elevator, plus you'll find utilities included with the rent so there's no extra worry about bills piling up. Garage parking is available, and traveling around is pretty simple with bus and train stops right at the door, not to mention how close the building sits to Routes 95 and 195. The exterior looks bold and different, showing influences from architects like Le Corbusier with features that help define each home inside the bigger whole, while on the outside, colored, or polychrome, walls break up the concrete a little, which calls back to earlier Victorian buildings nearby like the Wilcox Building.
Some details and services aren't listed, but the place was planned for elderly residents and carries the Beneficent Congregational Church Complex name. Many of the design decisions help bring light and some warmth to what might seem, at first, like a big and heavy structure-a real mix of what was modern in the 1960s, with some touches to make it feel more like home.