CCRR Website
CCRR was stuck on an aging Concrete5 site that couldn't meet Archway's security standards. I migrated it to WordPress — the stack the rest of Archway runs — and rebuilt its resources and jobs into modern, searchable databases staff can actually manage.
We've been working with Lyndon for years and have appreciated his graphic design, video production and website expertise across a number of projects. He helped us establish templates for design, taught us video production skills and consulted our website redesign. He has high standards for his work and always delivers high-quality design work. We don't know what we'd do without Lyndon's assistance over the years.
Project Info
The driver behind this build was security. CCRR was running on an aging Concrete5 architecture that hadn’t kept pace with Archway Community Services’ strict security protocols, and it sat apart from the rest of Archway’s sites, which all run on WordPress. Migrating to WordPress solved both problems at once: tighter security, more flexibility, and a familiar stack that staff could actually maintain and update themselves.
With the platform sorted, we took the opportunity to fix everything else that had aged. The design was dated and missing modern UX, so it got a full refresh. The old workshop sign-up flow was replaced with a proper events system for registering attendees. And the biggest upgrade was the content itself: CCRR’s resources and job listings had been living as plain text with PDF attachments — hard to manage, hard to search. I built custom resource and jobs databases in their place, fully searchable and filterable, easy for staff to keep current. Something modern, instead of a stack of PDFs.
The Problem
CCRR’s site ran on an aging Concrete5 platform that no longer met Archway’s strict security protocols and didn’t match the WordPress stack the rest of the organization uses — making it harder to secure and harder to maintain. The design was dated and short on modern UX, and resources and job listings were served as basic text with PDF attachments: clunky for staff to update and clunky for visitors to use.
My Approach
CCRR’s site ran on an aging Concrete5 platform that no longer met Archway’s strict security protocols and didn’t match the WordPress stack the rest of the organization uses — making it harder to secure and harder to maintain. The design was dated and short on modern UX, and resources and job listings were served as basic text with PDF attachments: clunky for staff to update and clunky for visitors to use.





