At Logic, we believe that thoughtful design should be visible in every corner — not just in the modules we manufacture, but in the spaces where we imagine, test, and refine them. That’s why we’re excited to share a look inside our newly renovated space in the Harmony Lot — a transformation that speaks to where we’re going and how we’re building to get there.
The new space is tucked into the corner of downtown Brattleboro’s Harmony Lot, and we’ve claimed it for a clear purpose: to prototype our next-generation modules and give future customers a place to experience them in person. This will be the home of Prototype 2 — our most refined kitchen, bathroom, and utility modules yet — and a showroom that helps people visualize how Logic can fit into their own homes.
When we first got the keys, the space was in rough shape. The former headshop featured dark green and black walls, a collapsing drop ceiling, insulation hanging down in plain view, and the kind of musty smell that keeps people out rather than welcoming them in. It didn’t feel like Logic — not yet.
Over the past two weeks, our small team rolled up their sleeves and got to work. No contractors. No delays. Just the Logic crew and a vision. We tore down the ceiling, rerouted electrical, patched insulation, sanded every wall, and coated the whole thing in bright white paint. We installed a clean drywall ceiling and fitted new LED fixtures that make the entire space feel larger, lighter, and more inviting.
At the heart of the effort was our summer intern, Thad — a manufacturing engineering student from Vermont State University. Working closely with Jason Van Nest and leading friends he pulled in as day labor, Thad spearheaded the charge from demolition through painting and lighting. “It was all hands on deck,” Thad says. “Especially getting the drywall up on the ceiling — that was a team moment.”
The result is a space that does more than just look good. It gives our modules the blank canvas they deserve. By removing distractions and clutter, we’ve created an environment where a visitor’s focus goes straight to the product — a clean, modern, modular system designed to meet today’s housing needs.
In the short term, this space will be our lab and launchpad — where we assemble Prototype 2 and stress-test every design decision with an eye toward affordability, simplicity, and manufacturability. In the long term, it becomes a showroom — a place where future customers can walk in, see a kitchen or bathroom module sitting on a pallet, and immediately picture it in their own home.
And that’s the point. Logic isn’t about bells and whistles. It’s about building smart, repeatable systems that deliver value — and showing them clearly, without distraction. As Thad put it, “We want customers to walk in and say, Yeah, I can see this in my house.”
We’re proud of the space, and even prouder of what’s going into it next.
Stay tuned — Prototype 2 is coming.
