oluce Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/oluce/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Tue, 27 Jun 2023 20:33:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png oluce Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/oluce/ 32 32 Danube Views and Ancient Architecture Meet in Budapest Flat https://interiordesign.net/projects/budapest-flat-ramy-fischler-studio/ Tue, 27 Jun 2023 20:33:14 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=213611 For an apartment in Budapest, Hungary, Ramy Fischler Studio applied precepts of an ancient Indian system of architecture, along with its own savoir faire.

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grounded furniture in the living room of a Budapest apartment
In the living area of a three-bedroom apartment in Budapest, Hungary, by Ramy Fischler Studio, Pierre Paulin’s Pascha lounge chairs pair with a custom sofa, all seating selections based on principles of Vastu Shastra, an ancient Indian design philosophy that re­quires furniture in an “earth zone” to be low and grounded, with no legs or feet.

Danube Views and Ancient Architecture Meet in Budapest Flat

Ramy Fischler Studio prides itself on the diversity of its work. Recent projects include a smart fridge, an Hermès perfume store in New York, a line of self-produced furniture, and Twitter’s office in Paris, where the French firm is based and in the process of implementing a new master plan to harmonize the café and restaurant terraces on the Champs-Elysées. From time to time, the studio accepts the odd residential commission. But as principal Ramy Fischler emphasizes, “If we take one on, it has to allow us a certain amount of creativity to develop something unique.”

Recently, an entrepreneur with interests in Hungary approached Fischler with what was certainly a singular assignment. He had bought five apartments in a new luxury development with sweeping views of Budapest—one for his own use, the others for guests—that he wanted decorated in more or less identical style. Fischler took the bait. “We spent a year on his unit, defining exactly what he wanted,” the designer says of the 3,750-square-foot, three-bedroom floor-through, which has an additional 1,100 square feet of outdoor space. “It wouldn’t have made sense to do something different in the others. The décor fits him like a glove and duplicating it means he can give people the same experience as staying with him, only they have their own space.”

The Apartment Design Reflects Vastu Shastra Principles

floor-to-ceiling vitrines separate rooms in this apartment in Budapest
A series of custom floor-to-ceiling vitrines separates the living area from the central hallway.
the Bohemian style living room with natural elements inside an apartment by Ramy Fischler Studio
Ceramics by Hungarian artists populate the vitrines’ oak-veneered floating shelves, while a pair of custom chairs with bronze arms, upholstered backs, but no seats nestle beneath the study porthole.

The client had another very distinct demand: The design should adhere strictly to the principles of Vastu Shastra, the traditional Indian system of architecture. “It’s used to determine the layout of everything from religious to domestic spaces,” Fischler says, noting that the ethos is “simple and frugal.” One of its precepts is that the center of a home should be an empty space free from obstructions like columns or staircases (a requirement satisfied by the apartment’s mid-floor entry hall). And each area in the house is related to one of the four elements—fire, water, earth, and air—to which distinct design rules and color palettes are attached.

Fischler admits that applying such edicts was not always easy, even given the apartment’s generous proportions. “The ideal locations according to Vastu Shastra for faucets, drainage, the kitchen, and so on were often in total contradiction to what was in place in the rest of the building,” he reports. Among the changes he had to make to his original plans was the position of the beds. “Normally I like to have them facing a window so there’s an equal amount of light on both sides,” he explains. “But that was impossible here because they needed to be turned toward the north.” Since the living area is in an “earth zone,” which requires furniture to be low and grounded, none of the seating could have legs or feet. Hence the custom sofas comprising large cushions perched on travertine-slab bases. And in an adjacent sitting nook with a somewhat Japanese aesthetic, two chairs have bronze arms and upholstered backs but no seats, the idea being that, supported by the frame, you sit directly on the floor.

Natural Materials Create a Tranquil Environment

The living-dining room boasts a full-length terrace overlooking the Danube and the imposing Hungarian Parliament Building on the far bank. Vastu Shastra aside, Fischler was determined to create as open a space as possible, reveling in the peerless view and enhancing the great natural light. He did so partly by installing a trio of floor-to-ceiling glass storage units that double as quasi-transparent partitions separating the airy room from the center hallway and the kitchen. The massive vitrines are outfitted with substantial wooden shelves that appear to float weightlessly in the void. “These units are incredibly complex,” Fischler notes. In fact, they took six months to develop due to his insistence that there be no visible support system: Transparent glue and hidden mechanisms inside the boxy shelves were used instead. “There’s often something that’s a little extraordinary in my residential projects,” the designer adds.

Fischler favored natural materials throughout, the most striking being the rammed-earth clay plaster applied in layers on the walls and ceiling of the main hallway. “It’s the most simple and sophisticated material there is,” he says. “I like the way it looks as if different strata have been piled on top of each other.” Other walls are clad in wood veneers like ash and tay, a West African timber, while the entry hall and bedrooms are swaddled in sound-buffering fabric paneling, a response to the client’s sensitivity to noise.

a porthole window connects a study with a living-dining area in this apartment
A large porthole window connects the ash-paneled study to the living-dining area.

Fischler’s overall aim was to create not only a tranquil environment decibel-wise but also a visually soothing one. “There’s a sort of sobriety and calm to the whole space,” he says. No doubt the principles of Vastu Shastra contribute to that, but he believes the rigor of the architectural detailing also plays its part. “For me, the framework has to be perfect. When each line is precise, it brings a sense of composure,” he asserts. “That’s always the goal I set myself.”

Inside the Budapest Flat Designed by Ramy Fischler Studio 

grounded furniture in the living room of a Budapest apartment
In the living area of a three-bedroom apartment in Budapest, Hungary, by Ramy Fischler Studio, Pierre Paulin’s Pascha lounge chairs pair with a custom sofa, all seating selections based on principles of Vastu Shastra, an ancient Indian design philosophy that re­quires furniture in an “earth zone” to be low and grounded, with no legs or feet.
the hallway leads into a galley kitchen inside this apartment
Hand-applied rammed-earth plaster clads the walls and ceiling of the hallway, which morphs seam­lessly into the galley kitchen.
a bouclé-upholstered cushion on a travertine slab in an apartment living room
Comprising wool bouclé–upholstered cushions perched on a travertine-slab base, the sofa sits on European oak flooring under a custom tufted-nylon rug.
a globular chandelier hangs above a table in the study
Jason Miller’s Modo chandelier hangs above the study’s desk, chairs, and rug, all custom.
a dining table underneath a light fixture composed of LED-lit alabaster cubes
The same chairs surround the custom dining table, over which loops a bespoke fixture comprising strings of LED-lit alabaster cubes.
fabric panels encase an entry hall with a lounge chair and a glass table
Fabric panels encase the serene entry hall, where GramFratesi’s Bat lounge chair joins a cus­tom sandblasted-glass table.
three shades of beige velvet upholster the walls of the main bedroom in this Budapest apartment
Three different shades of velvet upholster the walls of the main bedroom, in which custom furnishings include the sconces, bed, nightstands, bench, and rug.
a built-in desk on one wall in the main bedroom of this Budapest apartment
Vico Magistretti’s Atollo table lamp and Eero Saarinen’s Executive chair serve the main bedroom’s built-in desk made of tay, an African wood, which cantilevers from the oak-paneled wall.
green serpentine stone wraps around the tube area in this apartment's main bathroom
Verde serpentine stone wraps the tub area of the main bathroom.
shades of upholstered green line the walls of a guest bedroom
Ramy Fischler Collection’s Walter nightstand sits beneath a custom sconce in a wool flannel–lined guest bedroom.
a guest bedroom with walls upholstered in silk panels and cotton satin with a ceramic sculpture in a niche in the wall
In the second guest bedroom, this one paneled in silk and cotton satin, a sculpture by Hungarian ceramicist Simon Zsolt József gets its own niche.
PROJECT TEAM
ramy fischler studio: frédéric alzeari; florence vlemelinx; xiao ye zhang; estelle tran
light is more: lighting consultant
safa: custom furniture workshop
PROJECT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
au gré du verre: custom cocktail tables (living area)
maami home: side table
normann copenhagen: ottomans
rubelli: sofa fabric (LIVING AREA), PANEL FABRIC (SECOND GUEST BEDROOM)
epoca: custom sofas (living area), custom chairs (nook)
lasvit; manooi: custom ceiling fixture (living-dining area)
Gubi: lounge chairs (living area), armchairs (entry, guest bedroom)
Roll & Hill: chandelier (study)
ferm living: glasses, bowl (study), teapot (kitchen)
ligne roset: chairs (study, dining area)
Gaggenau: appli­ances (kitchen)
élitis: panel fabric (main bedroom)
d’argentat: custom nightstands
knoll: desk chair
oluce: table lamp
brossier saderne: custom sconces
Dedar: bed fabric (bedrooms)
holland & sherry: panel fabric (FIRST guest bedroom)
edel carpets: carpet (guest bedrooms)
ramy fischler collection: nightstands
manooi: custom sconces (GUEST bedrooms), custom candelabra (bathroom)
makro: tub (bathroom)
alape: sinks
Dornbracht: tub fittings, sink fittings
THROUGHOUT
j.d. staron: custom rugs
tabu: wood veneer
through zsdrál art pop-up galéria: ceramics

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LSM Modernizes a Multilevel Workplace in Midtown for a Financial Firm https://interiordesign.net/projects/lsm-workplace-design-midtown-financial-firm/ Wed, 05 Oct 2022 16:42:27 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=201489 LSM brings its expertise in modernizing 1960’s office-tower interiors to a financial firm’s multilevel workplace in Midtown.

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a custom reception desk faced in marble
The custom reception desk faced in Lasa Fiore marble stands across from Florence Knoll benches and an Eero Saarinen side table.

LSM Modernizes a Multilevel Workplace in Midtown for a Financial Firm

Mid-century office towers are fixtures of the New York skyline. From the MetLife Building to Black Rock, they make up much of the commercial real estate in Midtown but are woefully out of date and ripe for demolition. (Even Skidmore, Owings & Merrill’s 270 Park Avenue has met the wrecking ball.) Low ceilings and large floor plates make for dark interiors, while frequent columns and clunky mechanical systems constrict layouts. Yet for Donnie Morphy, senior director at LSM, these 60-year-old buildings have their charm. “They have great expressions of steel and strong organizational templates,” he says. “There are a lot of things you can’t get rid of, but there’s also a lot you can react to and embrace.” He knows this first-hand. Recently, LSM did just that at the ’60’s office space of a financial firm, creatively updating the interiors so they rival those in any skyscraper of today.

The client engaged LSM to conceive a workplace and a conference center across several levels of an International Style building. The goal was to promote interaction among staffers and give them a light, bright environment—both of which would be difficult given the 50,000- to 100,000-square-foot floor plates. LSM was familiar with the challenges of mid-century structures, having transformed offices in the Seagram Building and Lever House. Led by Interior Design Hall of Fame member Debra Lehman Smith and James McLeish, the firm has shown that with a clever use of material and volume, older buildings can become an asset for clients. “Simplicity is deceptive. Our design for this project embraces the complexity of simplicity,” Lehman Smith says.

A reception area with a long white sofa and two purple chairs
In reception of a financial firm’s Midtown office by LSM, a 14-foot-long sofa and a marble-topped table, both custom, join a pair of leather-covered Charlotte Perriand LC7 chairs, surrounded by walls and flooring of Italian marble.

LSM conceived a plan that encourages employees to move around, connect, and collaborate. The client envisioned various hubs spread across the office, forcing people to take different routes throughout the day and meet colleagues from other teams. At one such intersection, for instance, a terrace—furnished with Richard Schultz’s 1966 table and chairs—meets a pantry with seating by Space Copenhagen and Foster + Partners. The client also sought circulation at the perimeter, rather than private offices, so employees could have access to natural light and take in views of the city as they walked to get coffee.

Though lined with banded windows, the perimeter could feel cramped, with 8-foot ceilings, baseboard heaters, and steel columns every 20 feet. So LSM covered the columns in mirror, a technique the firm has used in new-builds like 55 Hudson Yards. “The idea was that you could demateri­alize the perimeter and make it feel like a new curtain wall,” Morphy notes. Adds partner Terese Wilson, “It reflected the exterior and the light and made everything feel brighter.” The team also carved out the drywall between the ceiling beams, going to the underside of the slab to gain over 2 feet of height. They brought the same technique to the conference center, heightening the ceiling wherever possible to create more breathing room and add alcoves illuminated by LEDs.

All of LSM’s interventions came back to the same directive from the client: light, bright, and voluminous. “The biggest effort was trying to get natural light all the way to the core and expressing volume within the rigid framework,” Morphy continues. In the conference center, the heart of the space, “We carved out a three-story cube to create a dynamic and forward-thinking first impression appropriate for this client,” Lehman Smith says. The void visually connects the upper and lower floors and helps visitors get oriented. From reception, which is located in the middle of the floor, they can see 100 feet across to a perimeter window. Glass walls, balustrades, and smoke baffles ensure maximum transparency.

Marble, a creamy, subtly veined variety from Italy, extends to flooring and walls, further brightening the conference center. At first, the stone appears stark, but upon closer inspection, a pleated pattern on the walls becomes apparent. “Not only did we carve the space architecturally but we also carved and sculpted the stone wall to give it scale and texture,” Morphy explains. “The level of detail increases as you get closer.” Instead of an office filled with contemporary art, the walls themselves become sculpture, as does the curved reception desk faced in the same pleated marble.

A three-story volume was carved out of the middle of the conference center.
A three-story volume was carved out of the middle of the conference center.

LSM employs such curves throughout to soften the building’s structure and 90-degree angles. Meeting rooms and stairwells are rounded, as are furnishings, like reception’s Charlotte Perriand LC7 chairs, marble-topped coffee table, and long ecru sofa. The conference center’s feature stair widens at the top and bottom to form “an elegant curvature that pulls you up,” Morphy says. It’s one of the many subtle touches that gradually reveal themselves to the visitor. “As you walk through, you see layers of detail that create the whole,” Wilson says. As Manhattan reckons with a glut of empty offices and companies increasingly favor new construction, LSM proves there may be life in these old buildings yet.

a custom reception desk faced in marble
The custom reception desk faced in Lasa Fiore marble stands across from Florence Knoll benches and an Eero Saarinen side table.
the conference center's stairs with curved glass surrounding them
The curved theme is carried out in the glass balustrades and guardrails of the conference center’s stair.
Paul Smith bowls stand on a cus­tom credenza
Paul Smith bowls stand on a cus­tom credenza along the perimeter of the conference center.
the elevator lobby
Pleated Lasa Fiore covers walls in the elevator lobby and throughout the conference center, while flooring is Lasa Nuvolato.
From reception, the sightline stretches 100 feet across the floor to a perimeter window.
From reception, the sightline stretches 100 feet across the floor to a perimeter window.
a woman walks across a break out area in front of a leather-upholstered sofa
Flooring in a break-out area, with a custom leather-upholstered sofa, is Lasa Classico marble.
a custom table in the center of the conference room
Eames Aluminum Group chairs around a custom table and Cradle-to-Cradle Silver–certified carpet furnish a conference room.
a meeting room with leather-covered paneling and a Vico Magistretti Atollo lamp
Leather-covered paneling envelops a meeting room, where a Vico Magistretti Atollo lamp tops a custom credenza, its mirror cladding reflecting Mies van der Rohe’s Brno chairs.
Outdoor furniture by Richard Schultz and custom ipe benches appoint the landscaped terrace.
Outdoor furniture by Richard Schultz and custom ipe benches appoint the landscaped terrace.
the perimeter circulation corridor
In the perimeter circu­lation corridor, the ceiling was recessed, adding over 2 feet of height, and the columns clad in mirror.
LEDs illuminate the coves along the office’s marble staircase.
LEDs illuminate the coves along the office’s marble staircase.
a bar-height counter in a pantry that doubles as a flex work space
Jaime Hayon Aleta stools line the custom bar-height counter in a pantry, which doubles as flex work space.
a corner pantry with the skylit stair
Intersections, like a corner pantry with the skylit stair, enable employee interaction.
PROJECT TEAM
LSM: james mcleish; mario degisi; mark andre; nathan strieter; nilay akbas; sofia zavala; zibo zhou
fisher marantz stone: lighting consultant
ojb landscape architecture: landscape architect
thornton tomasetti: structural engineer
jb&b: mep
Island architectural woodwork: millwork
mcgrory glass: glasswork
commodore construction: metalwork
unifor: custom furniture workshop
structuretone: general contractor
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
cassina: chairs (reception)
svend nielsen: custom desk
knoll: benches (reception), side tables (reception, conference center), chairs (meeting room), furniture (terrace)
walters: custom stair (conference center)
stelton: bowls (conference center)
herman miller: chairs (conference room)
Tarkett: carpet (conference room, meeting room)
oluce: lamp (meeting room)
wausau tiles: pavers (terrace)
milliken: carpet (hall)
tile bar: floor tile (pantry)
viccarbe: stools
ultraleather: stool upholstery
THROUGHOUT
campo­longhi: marble supplier
spinneybeck: leather upholstery, paneling

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Natalia Vologdina-Anikina Sees Green for Moscow Home of Four https://interiordesign.net/projects/natalia-vologdina-anikina-sees-green-for-moscow-home-of-four/ Fri, 17 Dec 2021 14:19:31 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=191692 When a repeat client of interior designer Natalia Vologdina-Anikina came to her to create a new apartment for their family of four, they had two requests. The first was that she organize it so that both adults and kids can have their own kinds of revelries. The second was to color it emerald.

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In the dining area, a Cannubia table and chairs gather beneath an MA&DE chandelier; in the living area, a custom sofa rests upon a Tapis Rouge rug, illuminated by a Aromas chandelier and a 1977 table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Oluce.
In the dining area, a Cannubia table and chairs gather beneath an MA&DE chandelier; in the living area, a custom sofa rests upon a Tapis Rouge rug, illuminated by a Aromas chandelier and a 1977 table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Oluce.

Natalia Vologdina-Anikina Sees Green for Moscow Home of Four

When a repeat client asked designer Natalia Vologdina-Anikina to create a new apartment for their family of four, they had two requests. The first was that she organize it so that adults and kids can have their own kinds of revelries. “They are a young and very energetic family with two kids,” she says. “They have lots of friends and love to have parties at their house.”

The second? “There was a color they definitely wanted to see,” she says. “It was emerald.” The jewel tone features throughout the 1,600-square-foot apartment in Moscow’s central Khamovniki neighborhood, from the upholstery of the dining chairs to the cladding of walls in the primary bedroom. 

In the living area, emerald shows up in a wall mural she created with the clients. “It symbolizes the first letter of their family name in a creative, geometric form,” she says—and marks the spot for adult parties while the kids have fun in their own party room down the hall. 

In the dining area, a Cannubia table and chairs gather beneath an MA&DE chandelier; in the living area, a custom sofa rests upon a Tapis Rouge rug, illuminated by a Aromas chandelier and a 1977 table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Oluce.
In the dining area, a Connubia table and chairs gather beneath an MA&DE chandelier; in the living area, a custom sofa rests upon a Tapis Rouge rug, illuminated by a Aromas chandelier and a 1977 table lamp by Vico Magistretti for Oluce.
Masiero pendants hang near custom cabinets and storage, near a sink and faucet by Blanco.
Masiero pendants hang near custom cabinets and storage, near a sink and faucet by Blanco.
A custom bed and bedside tables define the primary bedroom, with pendants by Aromas and an Arte di Vivre rug.
A custom bed and bedside tables define the primary bedroom, with pendants by Aromas and an L’Art De Vivre rug.
KT-Exclusive wallpaper decorates the daughter’s bedroom, illuminated by a Slamo suspension light.
KT Exclusive wallpaper decorates the daughter’s bedroom, illuminated by a Slamo suspension light.
Custom oak panel rises above a custom bed in the son’s bedroom, with cabinets by The Idea, Mullan Lighting pendants, and a rug by New Day.
Custom oak panel rises above a custom bed in the son’s bedroom, with cabinets by The Idea, Mullan Lighting pendants, and a rug by New Day.
Iris Ceramica tile lends a dramatic touch to the guest bathroom, with Panezeri pendants illuminating a Montebianco sink and Carlo Frattini fittings.
Iris Ceramica tile lends a dramatic touch to the guest bathroom, with Panzeri pendants illuminating a Montebianco sink and Carlo Frattini fittings.
Botanic Green quartzite clads the shower of the primary bathroom, which also features a custom vanity and Kerasan toilet.
Botanic Green quartzite clads the shower of the primary bathroom, which also features a custom vanity and Kerasan toilet.
41zero42 tiles give dimension to the childrens’ bathroom, while a blue ArtCeram toilet offers color.
41zero42 tiles give dimension to the children’s bathroom, while a blue ArtCeram toilet offers color.

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Kingston Lafferty Design Infuses a House in Cork, Ireland With Soothing Shades of Green https://interiordesign.net/projects/kingston-lafferty-design-infuses-a-house-in-cork-ireland-with-soothing-shades-of-green/ Wed, 01 Dec 2021 21:21:56 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=190489 Gemstone greens—along with a spectrum of other bold, jewel colors—bring unexpected calm to a house in Cork, Ireland, by Kingston Lafferty Design.

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Kingston Lafferty Design
A skylit passageway outfitted with a custom vanity leads to the main bed­room, where the headboard wall hosts Gio Ponti porcelain tiles.

Kingston Lafferty Design Infuses a House in Cork, Ireland With Soothing Shades of Green

When the design history of the pandemic is written, it will be told with tales of firms completing projects without ever physically meeting clients, setting foot inside job sites before they’re finished, and other protracted, unexpected developments. Lovers Walk—a residence in Cork, Ireland, by Kingston Lafferty Design—is one of those stories. “It started as a small decoration job for us,” founder and creative director Róisín Lafferty recounts. “But it grew legs and ended up as a substantial design project.” The two-story, four-bedroom suburban house was purchased by a couple looking to return to Ireland from abroad to raise their young son. As the pandemic struck and timelines extended, the scope kept evolving to encompass every element of the house. “We had to think on our feet,” Lafferty concedes.

At first, the house looked solidly built, but project collaborators Kiosk Architects discovered that the structure had major issues with energy efficiency. Original flooring needed to be removed, and the exterior required extra work to meet current standards. “The clients put a lot of trust in us,” Lafferty says, “which was bold and brave considering that we didn’t meet in person until the end of construction.”

The oak stair and paneling in the entry hall are part of a ’70’s addi­tion to the house.
The oak stair and paneling in the entry hall are part of a ’70s addi­tion to the house.

The house was built in the 1940s. What attracted the homeowners—and informed KLD’s concept—was the central staircase, part of a ’70s addition and somewhat in that era’s style. Lafferty loved its warm, almost orange-toned oak joinery, which creates a strong impression on both levels. “It’s quite dominant,” notes the designer, to whom the clients had first turned for her firm’s signature look. The 11-year-old practice has earned a reputation for experimenting with bold swaths of solid color, mostly in paint: blood-red walls for a café in London; a deep-blue theater for a corporate office in Skerries, Ireland; and, most notably, a widely published Victorian house in Dublin with blue walls, a green ceiling, and a ruby-red dining table.

Verde Alpi marble clads the fireplace wall in the living room of a 1940’s house in Cork, Ireland, renovated by Kingston Lafferty Design.
Verde Alpi marble clads the fireplace wall in the living room of a 1940s house in Cork, Ireland, renovated by Kingston Lafferty Design.

The house, located on a cliff overlooking the city, is surrounded by large oak trees. “We wanted to bring in that depth of green,” says Lafferty, who, along with KLD lead designer Fiona Stone, went beyond paint to inject the rooms with warmth and color that complemented the site. Hence much of the living room is wrapped in moss-green marble; forest-green heavy wool curtains hang in the child’s room, which is painted a similar shade, his favorite color; and the primary bedroom’s headboard wall is clad in jade porcelain tiles (by Gio Ponti, no less).

Living room lighting includes Juanma Lizana’s painted iron chandelier and a Vico Magistretti table lamp; the floor is polished concrete.
Living room lighting includes Juanma Lizana’s painted iron chandelier and a Vico Magistretti table lamp; the floor is polished concrete.

The layout of the living room, which had been fussy, was streamlined. A sofa upholstered in deep-navy velvet adds punch to the space. Similar jewel tones were chosen to balance the room’s marble-rich palette, which reminded Lafferty of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion. “We needed a poppiness to jar against that,” she notes. Adding another layer to the mix, the clients allowed their contemporary art collection—mostly playful, abstract works—to be positioned throughout the house as the design best allowed. “They weren’t precious about it,” Lafferty reports.

Another Debo­nademeo sconce hangs on the finger tile–clad wall of the portal connecting the kitchen to the entry hall.
Another Debo­nademeo sconce hangs on the finger tile–clad wall of the portal connecting the kitchen to the entry hall.

To add drama to the journey from the entry hall to the kitchen and dining area, Lafferty and Stone inserted a tunnellike portal lined with red finger tiles between the spaces. The clients didn’t want the kitchen to be overwhelmed with storage cabinets, so the designers kept them at base level, covering the countertops, island, and two wall-size backsplashes with pink quartzite that’s “like rock candy,” Lafferty says—a move that places added emphasis on the above-sink picture window and its view out onto nature. While Lafferty admits some might consider the rosewood-veneer cabinetry to be outdated, she relished the idea of pushing the materials so they’re “almost on the cusp of clashing.”

A skylit passageway outfitted with a custom vanity leads to the main bed­room, where the headboard wall hosts Gio Ponti porcelain tiles.
A skylit passageway outfitted with a custom vanity leads to the main bed­room, where the headboard wall hosts Gio Ponti porcelain tiles.

Upstairs, each of the three bedrooms—for the couple, their son, and guests, respectively—has its own color story. Riffing off the ’70s vibe, the guest room juxtaposes cobalt blue curtains against walls painted a buff pink called Dead Salmon; a navy shaglike carpet adds to the theme, which Lafferty describes as “almost disgusting.” The designers are particularly proud of the primary bedroom, “a small space that needed to look sleek and effortless,” Stone notes. Access is via a wide, open passageway with chevron-pattern oak flooring and three large, angled skylights set into the sloped roofline. A vanity of burgundy marble is tucked under the eaves on one side of the room; a walk-in closet and the bathroom lie behind the opposite wall, which is faced in lacquered walnut-burl veneer that abuts the green tile of the headboard wall around the corner. “It’s like a jewelry box with so many materials used,” Stone continues. “But it feels incredibly calm. There’s almost a nostalgic air about it”—a verdict with which the clients agree. It seems their trust in KLD’s boldly unconventional aesthetic has paid off handsomely.

Upholstered in cotton velvet, the living room’s Mario Marenco sofa is backed by a wall sheathed with painted wood slats.
Upholstered in cotton velvet, the living room’s Mario Marenco sofa is backed by a wall sheathed with painted wood slats.
Debona­demeo’s disklike sconce presides over the kitchen dining area’s leather-upholstered custom banquette and sofa.
Debona­demeo’s disklike sconce presides over the kitchen dining area’s leather-upholstered custom banquette and sofa.
The kitchen’s island, backsplash walls, and countertops are polished quartzite while custom cabinetry and millwork are rosewood veneer.
The kitchen’s island, backsplash walls, and countertops are polished quartzite while custom cabinetry and millwork are rosewood veneer.
GamFratesi’s Tail chair, upholstered in velvet, pulls up to the Rosso Levanto vanity.
GamFratesi’s Tail chair, upholstered in velvet, pulls up to the Rosso Levanto vanity.
Shaglike car­peting, a wall of floor-to-ceiling curtains, and a George Nelson pendant outfit the guest bedroom.
Shaglike car­peting, a wall of floor-to-ceiling curtains, and a George Nelson pendant outfit the guest bedroom.
Birch-plywood steps service the built-in bunk bed in the child’s room.
Birch-plywood steps service the built-in bunk bed in the child’s room.
In the son’s room, a Roly Poly chair by Faye Toogood and painted built-ins pop against curtains and Form Us With Love’s Unfold pendant fixture in the child’s favorite color.
In the son’s room, a Roly Poly chair by Faye Toogood and painted built-ins pop against curtains and Form Us With Love’s Unfold pendant fixture in the child’s favorite color.
A Verde Alpi marble frame and walls faced in mirror and terrazzo tile set off Serena Confal­onieri’s pendant fixture in the family bathroom.
A Verde Alpi marble frame and walls faced in mirror and terrazzo tile set off Serena Confal­onieri’s pendant fixture in the family bathroom.
The family bathroom materials in a different palette distinguish the guest bathroom, which also sports identical PVD-coated brass fittings and a wall-mounted sink.
The family bathroom materials in a different palette distinguish the guest bathroom, which also sports identical PVD-coated brass fittings and a wall-mounted sink.
Glossy tile fronting the main bathroom vanity contrasts with its Rosso Levanto marble backsplash and flooring.
Glossy tile fronting the main bathroom vanity contrasts with its Rosso Levanto marble backsplash and flooring.
Project team
Kiosk Architects: architect of record
herrick electrical: mep
dfl: woodwork
miller brothers: stonework
cameleo: plasterwork
rose construction: general contractor
product sources FROM FRONT
arflex: sofa, ottoman (living room)
modern hill furniture: orange chair
oluce: lamp
moore o’gorman joinery: custom cocktail table
fest amsterdam: side table
urban nature culture: vase
muurla: gray bowl
hkliving: blue bowl
Juanma Lizana: chandelier
jover: curtain fabric (living room, kitchen)
flos: pendant fixture (kitchen)
miele: cooktop, ovens, r­e­frigerator
Blanco: sink
quooker: sink fittings
cinca: finger tile (portal)
astep: pendant fix­ture (entry hall)
wow design: vanity front tile (main bathroom)
rmc: shower wall tile
through 1stdibs: chair (guest bedroom)
Hay: pendant fixture
edmund bell: curtain fabric
scatter box: bedspread
jacaranda carpets: carpet (guest, child bedrooms)
driade: chair (child bedroom)
muuto: pendant fixture
kvadrat: curtain fabric
trunk floor: custom wood flooring (child, main bedrooms)
&tradition: sofa (dining area)
yarwood leather: banquette upholstery
zava luce: sconces (dining area, portal)
Courtesy of Gubi: vanity chair (main bedroom)
natuzzi italia: bed, nightstand
salviati: sconce
tal: spotlights
teamwork italy: wall tile
louise roe copenhagen: vases
mason editions: pendant fixture (family bathroom)
crosswater: towel ring
nic design: sink (family, guest bathrooms)
THROUGHOUT
astro lighting: downlights
stone seal: concrete flooring
cork glass center: bathroom glass, mirror, shower screens
vos: bathroom sink fittings
minima home: furniture supplier
farrow & ball: paint

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Fogarty Finger Charts a New Course in the Brooklyn Navy Yard With Dock 72 https://interiordesign.net/projects/fogarty-finger-charts-a-new-course-in-the-brooklyn-navy-yard-with-dock-72/ Sat, 09 Oct 2021 20:06:16 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=189003 With its nautically inspired interiors for Dock 72, Fogarty Finger helps the Brooklyn Navy Yard chart a new course.

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Bryce Wymer’s mural anchors another lobby vignette.
Bryce Wymer’s mural anchors another lobby vignette.

Fogarty Finger Charts a New Course in the Brooklyn Navy Yard With Dock 72

Across the East River from the Lower East Side, the Brooklyn-side shoreline zigzags inward to form Wallabout Bay. This funky stretch of waterfront, once home to Lenape tribespeople and early Dutch settlers, began its modern life as an innovation hub in 1801, when President Adams designated it one of the country’s first Navy yards; during its World War II heyday, it operated six dry docks and employed 70,000 workers. More recently, the since-decommissioned site has been reborn as a hotbed of tech companies and creatives, the home address of healthcare incubators, furniture startups, small-batch juice purveyors, cutting-edge military-gear makers, film sound stages, and the country’s largest rooftop soil farm.

Until now, the majority of redevelopment in the Brooklyn Navy Yard has entailed adaptive reuse of its industrial warehouses. Enter Dock 72, the first ground-up commercial office building to be erected right on the waterfront (and, in fact, one of the largest such structures to be built in the city’s outer boroughs in many decades). The 16-story volume, with base building design by S9 Architecture, sits prowlike on a skinny pier sandwiched between two former dry docks and culminating in a new ferry terminal. In 2015, as construction documents were being drawn up, codevelopers Boston Properties and Rudin Management tapped Fogarty Finger to start conceptualizing interior architecture—from FF&E to art curation—for the entry-level lobby and commissary, second-floor fitness center, and penthouse-level conference center, totaling some 60,000 square feet of amenities. WeWork had already signed on as anchor tenant and the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation was naturally involved, too, meaning there were many stakeholders to please—and to align. “Those many players had so many different opinions, which is so New York, right?” says Fogarty Finger director Alexandra Cuber, who led the project with associate director Candace Rimes. “From that delightfully tangled knot of ideas and individual preferences, we had to come up with a strong concept that had enough nuance and depth that everyone could see themselves in it and find a piece they’d contributed to.”

Capped by a wood-slat drop ceiling, the 170-foot-long, terrazzo-floored lobby corridor, with a Dan Funderburgh mural and custom benches, doubles as a lounge.
Capped by a wood-slat drop ceiling, the 170-foot-long, terrazzo-floored lobby corridor, with a Dan Funderburgh mural and custom benches, doubles as a lounge.

Ultimately, the design team sought to channel both the can-do spirit of the 300-acre industrial park and what Cuber calls its “nautical messaging”: the unique sun-bleached, rust-tinged palette and omnipresent visual language of ship details and graphics. As a guiding narrative, she and Rimes homed in on the Plimsoll Line, a technical symbol on every ship’s hull that denotes the proper immersion level given its load and the density of the water it’s traveling through. FF commissioned a rendering of Plimsoll markings in yellow neon, which now glows beaconlike at the Dock 72 entry—setting the stage for the subsequent journey.

  • A Bower Studios mirror, Souda’s Sass table, and Paul Smith’s Big Stripe upholstery on the built-in bench furnish a meeting room.
    A Bower Studios mirror, Souda’s Sass table, and Paul Smith’s Big Stripe upholstery on the built-in bench furnish a meeting room.
  • Each elevator cab showcases a different Navy Yard photograph by Harrison Boyce.
    Each elevator cab showcases a different Navy Yard photograph by Harrison Boyce.
  • Guests check in at a blackened-steel reception desk in the lobby.
    Guests check in at a blackened-steel reception desk in the lobby.

It’s quite a journey indeed from the front door to reception at the far end of the building, accessed via a 170-foot-long corridor with a glass wall directing eyeballs to the active adjacent dock. “To make that lengthy pathway an enjoyable process required breaking it up into ‘rooms’ that could be occupied and experienced,” Cuber explains. Changes in ancillary seating (from low- to high-back) and flooring (dark- to light-gray terrazzo) demarcate a series of vignettes along this promenade. So do blackened-steel screens and portals that cast a spirited shadow play and reflect the linearity of ship cables, sails, and razzle-dazzle camouflage.

Farther down the corridor, a custom steel screen joins Andrew Neyer’s Astro pendant globes and Sputnik stools by Mattias Ljunggren.
Farther down the corridor, a custom steel screen joins Andrew Neyer’s Astro pendant globes and Sputnik stools by Mattias Ljunggren.

In addition to subdividing space, the steel portals also frame wall murals by area artists who were given free rein to devise compositions that spoke to the context, but assigned a specific color palette reflecting a different type of water from the Plimsoll Line. Bryce Wymer’s depiction of ship-wrangling in a tropical storm pays homage to women who worked in the yard during wartime; an abstract color field by Kristin Texeira, who has a studio in the complex, is painted in summer-water hues.

The murals reflect another guiding principal of the project: a commitment to
locally made design. All art and much of the custom furniture were produced in or near the Navy Yard. “We were passionate about finding the right partners and a diverse group of collaborators,” Rimes notes. “It pushed us to go the extra mile: We walked all around Crown Heights, Bushwick, Greenpoint, and throughout the Navy Yard to find who can make what or submit an idea.”

Amenities feature a veritable roll call—er, ship’s manifest—of Big Apple talent. For the ground-floor café, Concrete Collaborative crafted tiles in custom colorways derived from photographs of the yard. Dan Funderburgh contributed a lobby mural as well as a nautical-print wallpaper for the second-floor lounge and juice bar. IceStone fabricated recycled-glass table bases in the lobby. And elevator cabs function as intimate viewing rooms for large-scale Navy Yard photographs by Harrison Boyce.

The 16th-floor conference center, with a subdividable 200-capacity town hall space, plus various lounge and meeting areas, is no exception to the city-made mandate, with shapely mirrors by Bower Studios and stacked-stone tables by Souda. What’s different up here is a shift in vibe and materiality, from the pre­dominant white-oak millwork of the lower levels to warmer walnut tones and a darker palette. “The colors become saturated and inky, as if they’ve been soaked in water,” Rimes says. “It’s like being on the deck of a vintage yacht.” A perfect launching point for next-gen captains of industry.

project team
Fogarty Finger: robert finger; tin min fong; garrett rock; allie mathison; taylor fleming; evita fanou; jacob laskowski; carl laffan; chris worton
perkins eastman: Architect of Record:
one lux studio: lighting consultant
let there be neon: custom graphics
ove aruo & partners: structural engineer
cosentini associates: mep
langan: civil engineer
armada; capitol woodwork; zsd: woodwork
argosy designs; gkd metal fabrics: metalwork
concrete works east: concrete work
gilbane; hunter roberts: general contractors
product sources from front
lampiste: custom dome fixtures (lobby)
andrew nyer: pendant globes (hall, café)
oluce: table lamp (hall)
hbf: tripod tables
Maharam: Bench fabric (hall), banquette fabric (meeting room)
filzfelt: felt (elevator lobby)
Hay: chairs (hall, café). la cividina: white tables, wire tables (hall)
johanson: stools
ananda: flooring (studio)
normann copen­hagen: chairs (meeting room)
bower studios: mirror
souda: table (meeting room), side table (lounge)
velis: cab (elevator)
lf illuminations: cylinder fixtures (reception)
acolyte: pendant fixtures
clé tile: floor tile (bar)
brendan ravenhill studio: pendant fix­tures
Stellar Works: stools
milliken: carpet tile (lounge)
sattler: pendant rings
arper: chairs, sofas, ottomans
garsnas: barrel chairs
light originals: pendant fix­tures
gotham lighting: can fixtures
missana: chairs (hall)
concrete collaborative: floor tile (café)
throughout
zonca terrazzo: terrazzo flooring
hudson company: wood floor­ing
ceilings plus: custom slat ceilings
trespa: paneling
tagwall: storefront systems

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