Mission, History & Future

Our Mission

The Workhouse Arts Foundation helps to grow and support a vibrant arts center that offers engaging opportunities and inspiring experiences in visual and performing arts, education classes, historical perspective, community engagement, and personal enrichment.

Explore the Workhouse Arts Center

History

President Theodore Roosevelt, at the turn of the twentieth century, appointed a penal commission to investigate the over-crowded and unsanitary conditions at the District of Columbia Jail. Based upon the penal commission’s recommendations, Congress approved the purchase of a 1,155-acre tract of land north of the Occoquan River, and the Occoquan Workhouse was created. It later became known as the Lorton Correctional Complex and/or the Lorton Reformatory. 

The first prisoners arrived in 1910 and their initial task was to build wooden structures to house themselves. In the 1920s, the prisoners replaced these buildings with brick structures using bricks manufactured by themselves at the on-site kiln complex. 

The prison was, for much of its history, an agricultural work camp. Intended to be self-sufficient, the prison developed extensive agricultural operations: cultivated fields; pastureland; an orchard/cannery; a poultry farm; hog ranch; slaughterhouse; dairy; blacksmith shop, and a sawmill. Along with all of these functions, it also contained feed, hay, and storage barns.

By the late 1980s, the prison was known more for its over-crowding and disorganization than for President Roosevelt’s rehabilitation program, becoming representative of the nation’s difficulties with correctional facilities. Federal legislation enacted in 1997 required the prison to be closed by December 31, 2001, with the last prisoner leaving in November of 2001. In 2002 the land was sold to Fairfax County for $4.2 million dollars, with the understanding that the land was to be used for open space, parkland, and/or recreation use.

A group of community leaders proposed a plan to transform a 55-acre portion of the former prison facility into a cultural arts center. The Fairfax County Board of Supervisors approved the rezoning in July of 2004, and the Workhouse Arts Center was born. A year later, the site was nominated to the National Register of Historic Places. After several years of planning, adaptive reuse and rehabilitation of the historic buildings, the Workhouse Arts Center opened to the public in September 2008. 

The Workhouse Arts Center currently consists of eleven (11) useable buildings. These structures contain galleries, artist studios, dance studios, music rooms, event spaces, movement/exercise studios, a museum exhibit space, an intimate theatre, a gift shop, a welcome center, and administrative offices. The Workhouse supports more than 65 professional and emerging visual artists by providing them affordable studios and galleries in which to create and exhibit their work. In addition to visual arts, the Workhouse is home to the W3 Theatre performing arts program, the Lucy Burns Museum, the Military in the Arts Initiative, the Art of Movement program, and large-scale community events. The Workhouse also offers over 300 arts education classes and workshops in a broad spectrum of art disciplines.

Picture of Lorton Reformatory pre-1920s. Originally published by Hornbaker & Ledman, Occoquan, Va

Picture of Lorton Reformatory pre-1920s. Originally published by Hornbaker & Ledman, Occoquan, Va

Future

The Workhouse Arts Foundation, Inc. and Fairfax County have exciting plans for the total realization of the 2004 Workhouse Arts Center initial concept. 

In early 2022, Fairfax County began a restoration process for two campus buildings, known as W13 and W15. Once completed, Fairfax County will lease these buildings to commercial entities, and for the first time in the Workhouse Arts Center’s history, there will be a restaurant, and possibly a coffee shop/brewery, located right on campus. For more detailed information about this exciting development please see: https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/publicworks/capital-projects/workhouse-campus-buildings-w13-and-w15

The Workhouse Arts Foundation, Inc. is working with Fairfax County on a Master Campus Planning process to ensure that initial vision of the entire Arts Center is still viable. That initial plan envisioned, in addition to the currently occupied visual and performing art components, a vibrant arts complex that would include an amphitheater, a professional theatre, an event center and an education center. Stay tuned for more information on the Master Campus Planning process.

Rendering of future Workhouse Arts Center Campus

Support the Workhouse Arts Center

The Workhouse Arts Center, a project of the Workhouse Arts Foundation, raises funds to fuel inspiration and provide engaging, multidisciplinary community arts experiences for nearly 100,000 visitors every year. Make a tax-deductible contribution to support Workhouse and its programs today!

Workhouse Arts Foundation is grateful for the support of the following partners: