marset Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/marset/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Thu, 01 Dec 2022 17:50:20 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png marset Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/marset/ 32 32 This Park City Property Boasts Stunning Views and Elevated Amenities https://interiordesign.net/projects/residential-design-park-city-utah-clb-architects/ Thu, 06 Oct 2022 18:36:03 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=201126 A Park City, Utah, property by CLB Architects offers drop-dead views and hotel-worthy amenities, raising the bar for residential design.

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The cozy 19-by-19-foot tower room has a wraparound terrace, floating fireplace by Focus, rosewood coffee table, and Mrirt rug.
The cozy 19-by-19-foot tower room has a wraparound terrace, floating fireplace by Focus, rosewood coffee table, and Mrirt rug.

This Park City Property Boasts Stunning Views and Elevated Amenities

Gated communities are not usually known for their architecture. Houses are often dated and ostentatious, with little connection to their surroundings. The Iluminus Group wanted to prove the stereotype wrong at a private enclave in Park City, Utah. The development firm hired CLB Architects to design a timeless residence that was simpler and more elegant than its neighbors—though just as enormous—and would appeal to potential outdoors-oriented buyers. “Their goal was to establish a new standard for thoughtful design in this part of Utah,” CLB partner and architect Eric Logan explains. At the same time, the house would have over-the-top amenities like a climbing wall, sports court, bowling alley, and spa. CLB showed that these directives need not be contradictory.

The 4.9-acre site is on a steep slope in the Wasatch Mountains, thick with spruce, fir, and aspen trees. At 8,500 feet above sea level, the property has commanding views of the Park City Mountain resort and across a valley. CLB approached the landscape with respect. Based in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and Bozeman, Montana, the studio has decades of experience designing high-end mountain residences and strives to honor the natural beauty of each location. “We take the notion of connecting with place very seriously,” Logan says. “We’ve been lucky to work on some incredible properties in the West, and we try not to screw them up. Sometimes I think, You should do nothing here and make it a park. But something will be developed there, so we do the best work we can.” At the Park City site, CLB aimed to make the house as compact as possible given the extensive program and keep it from sprawling too far into the forest.

Bronze panels around the fireplace conceal speakers in the living room; the bouclé sofa is custom.
Bronze panels around the fireplace conceal speakers in the living room; the bouclé sofa is custom.

CLB built the home, dubbed Monitor’s Rest, into the hillside and designed an L-shape plan. Approaching from above, visitors enter a courtyard and see a structure that looks smaller than its 18,000 square feet. “The courtyard creates a quiet space where you can take in the sky and get oriented, and it also brings light into the home,” Logan says. The building’s exterior establishes the material palette used throughout: Croatian limestone, shou sugi ban cedar cladding, steel-framed windows, and a copper roof. Its simple form is designed to withstand the harsh winters; anything too expressive will leak or get scraped off in the snow.

The experience of the enclosed, serene courtyard deliberately contrasts with the openness of the interior. A limestone foyer, the nexus of the two-story house, leads in three directions. You can turn right to go to the primary bedroom suite and the office or left to the living and dining areas. Straight ahead is a dramatic atrium with windows facing the forest and stairs leading down to the guest bedrooms and bowling alley.

CLB oriented the common areas to the southwest, including a large patio with an indoor-outdoor pool, and you can ski in and out of a lower entrance that has a locker room. “The public part of the program explodes onto the hillside, and you connect with the slope and the environment,” Logan says. Adds Sarah Kennedy, CLB principal and interior design director, “You’re projected out onto the tree line and really sit with the forest.” Spa and sports rooms are tucked in the back.

CLB collaborated on the interiors with the client, Iluminus co-founder and creative director David Ostrander. Given the house’s size, a main challenge was editing the material selection to create a focused aesthetic. Hemlock ceilings, oak floors, and walls of oak or Croatian limestone unify the disparate rooms. Kennedy cites the Zenlike primary bathroom—composed simply of wood, stone, and black metal—as emblematic of her firm’s pared-down approach. Narrow mirrors hang in front of a window, so you can look out at the trees while brushing your teeth, and a freestanding wood tub creates a sense of calm. The limestone on the walls and floor appears seamless: “It’s cut along the vein, so you don’t read it panel to panel,” Kennedy notes. The adjacent bedroom is similarly restrained, with oak paneling, a custom reeded-oak bed frame, a hanging leather chair, and a Gio Ponti brass mirror.

A repurposed chairlift hangs at the foot of the oak staircase, which has a plaster surround.
A repurposed chairlift hangs at the foot of the oak staircase, which has a plaster surround.

At the back of the ground floor is a small tower. Since the house is built into the hillside, Ostrander wanted a pop-up perch where residents could take in 360-degree views. Measuring 19 by 19 feet, it has a wraparound balcony and references the forest-fire watchtowers found in national parks. “It’s a little retreat that’s whimsical and unexpected,” Ostrander says. Warm and intimate, it practically begs for a kids’ sleepover, though a floating fireplace, rosewood table, and Moroccan Mrirt rug make it plenty sophisticated for adults. Like the rest of the property, the tower is both fun and refined, and brings a whole new perspective to the neighborhood.

A mouth-blown glass chandelier by Semeurs d’Étoiles hangs in the Croatian limestone–clad foyer; a bridge by the window links two wings of the house.
A mouth-blown glass chandelier by Semeurs d’Étoiles hangs in the Croatian limestone–clad foyer; a bridge by the window links two wings of the house.
A fireside den, with a lacquer coffee table by Pierre Augustin Rose, abuts the dining area, with vintage brass Parsons chairs designed by John Stuart in 1968.
A fireside den, with a lacquer coffee table by Pierre Augustin Rose, abuts the dining area, with vintage brass Parsons chairs designed by John Stuart in 1968.
Newell Studio made the custom-dyed sheepskin wall panels in the office.
Newell Studio made the custom-dyed sheepskin wall panels in the office.
A Bourgeois Boheme Atelier chandelier, Stark silk-blend rug, and Charles Kalpakian armchairs fill the office.
A Bourgeois Boheme Atelier chandelier, Stark silk-blend rug, and Charles Kalpakian armchairs fill the office.
Vintage skis cover the ceiling of the locker room.
Vintage skis cover the ceiling of the locker room.
A collaged and handpainted Fromental wallcovering decorates the bowling alley.
A collaged and handpainted Fromental wallcovering decorates the bowling alley.
Clé tiles jazz up a guest bathroom, with marble floor and counters.
Clé tiles jazz up a guest bathroom, with marble floor and counters.
A Molteni cooking range and Wood Stone Home pizza oven appoint the kitchen.
A Molteni cooking range and Wood Stone Home pizza oven appoint the kitchen.
A bronze-and-wool sheep statue stands in a hallway with a copper ceiling; the storage bench is by Jake Whillans.
A bronze-and-wool sheep statue stands in a hallway with a copper ceiling; the storage bench is by Jake Whillans.
The sports court includes a climbing wall.
The sports court includes a climbing wall.
The cozy 19-by-19-foot tower room has a wraparound terrace, floating fireplace by Focus, rosewood coffee table, and Mrirt rug.
The cozy 19-by-19-foot tower room has a wraparound terrace, floating fireplace by Focus, rosewood coffee table, and Mrirt rug.
In the primary bedroom, a ceramic artwork by Jennifer Prichard hangs above the bed’s leather-and-limestone headboard.
In the primary bedroom, a ceramic artwork by Jennifer Prichard hangs above the bed’s leather-and-limestone headboard.
A freestanding wood tub anchors the adjacent bathroom, with Ocean travertine walls and floor.
A freestanding wood tub anchors the adjacent bathroom, with Ocean travertine walls and floor.
A Pod leather hanging chair from Blackman Cruz furnishes the primary bedroom.
A Pod leather hanging chair from Blackman Cruz furnishes the primary bedroom.
Each guest room opens onto a patio.
Each guest room opens onto a patio.
Shou sugi ban cedar and Croatian limestone clad the exterior of the house, which is entered via a courtyard.
Shou sugi ban cedar and Croatian limestone clad the exterior of the house, which is entered via a courtyard.
PROJECT TEAM
clb architects: andy ankeny, brent sikora, jake ostlind, cassidy stickney, jaye infanger, erica hawley
design workshop: landscape architect
magelby construction: contractor
sherwood design engineers: civil engineer
kl&a, inc.: structural engineer
energy 1: mechanical/electrical engineer
orsman design: lighting designer
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
jouffre: custom sofa (living room)
Eny Lee Parker: lamps
semeurs d’étoiles through invisible collection: custom chandelier (entry)
konekt: ottomans (hearth room)
pierre augustin rose through invisible collection: custom coffee table
place textiles: custom sectional fabric
daniel becker studio: custom chandelier
through tom robinson: vintage dining chairs
miksi through invisible collection: custom rug
christopher kreiling through blackman cruz: lamp (office)
ski lift designs: custom ski lift chair (stair)
bourgeois boheme: custom chandelier (den)
dornstab through kalmar: floor lamp
stark: rug
brunswick bowling: bowling alley
restoration hardware: side table
fromental: wallcovering
juniper lighting: lights (guest bath)
Duravit: sink
clé: tile
marrone: custom range hood (kitchen)
wood stone: pizza oven
Dornbracht: sink fittings
old plank collection: art sheep (hallway)
response hg: flooring (sports court)
the court company: wall panels
luxury mrirt rug through benisouk: rug (tower room)
grand splendid studio: rug
through two enlighten: vintage mirror
crump & kwash: custom desk (guest bedroom)
made goods: desk chair
sutherland furniture: lounge chair
THROUGHOUT
masterpiece millwork & door: custom millwork
craftsman upholstery: custom sofa fabrication (hearth room, bowling alley, tower room)
newell studio: custom coffee table (living room); custom dining table (hearth room); custom wall panels (office); custom shuffleboard table (bowling alley)
through 1stdibs: vintage chair (office); armchairs (den); bench (hallway); table, lamp (tower room)
blueprint lighting: custom pendants (primary bedroom, primary bathroom)
marset: reading lights (bedrooms)
watermark: sink fittings (bathrooms)

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This Sustainable Home by Pascali Semerdjian Architects Reflects São Paulo’s Style https://interiordesign.net/projects/this-sustainable-home-by-pascali-semerdjian-architects-reflects-sao-paulos-style/ Wed, 06 Jul 2022 14:16:30 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=198484 This apartment by Pascali Semerdjian Architects built with sustainability-certified indigenous wood expresses São Paulo’s unique urban style.

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Works by Brazilian artists—Ana María Tavares (left), Gabriela Costa (right), and Matias Mesquita (background)—line the entry hall.
Works by Brazilian artists—Ana María Tavares (left), Gabriela Costa (right), and Matias Mesquita (background)—line the entry hall.

This Sustainable Home by Pascali Semerdjian Architects Reflects São Paulo’s Style

The first time Brazilian architect Sarkis Semerdjian met clients Renato Lulia Jacob and Emily Perry, the chemistry between them was obvious. Semerdjian, who is coprincipal with Domingos Pascali of the São Paulo-based firm Pascali Semerdjian Architects, had gone to London in late 2019 to visit friends. Jacob and Perry, originally from Brazil and the U.S., respectively, had lived in England for a decade. When the couple learned of Semerdjian’s visit, they invited him for a meal at their Edwardian townhouse in North London. “Being there with them was like sitting at a bar with old friends,” Semerdjian recalls. From then on—despite the challenges of the project they were about to embark on—the relationship “just flowed.”

Not long before that dinner, around the time Perry became pregnant with her and Jacob’s second daughter, the couple had decided to move to São Paulo, where Jacob had grown up. “There was a kind of gravity pulling us back,” he says. They wanted their daughters to grow up speaking Portuguese and have more time with their Brazilian grandparents. “The window for both,” Perry adds, “was getting smaller.”

They hired Pascali Semerdjian, which had worked with several of Jacob’s friends, and began looking for a suitable apartment in Vila Nova Conceicao, a leafy neighborhood adjacent to São Paulo’s Ibarapuera Park, one of relatively few green spaces in a city famously choked in concrete and asphalt. They were looking for a place they “wouldn’t feel guilty over destroying and rebuilding,” as Jacob puts it, eventually settling on a spacious flat in a nondescript 1990’s building, previously owned by an elderly couple who had moved out five years earlier. Jacob and Perry returned to London, intending to visit São Paulo frequently during the gut renovation of the apartment—a plan the pandemic quickly nixed. “All our process was via Zoom,” Pascali reports, noting that the couple was only able to return to the city shortly before the project’s completion.

In the dining room of a São Paulo apartment renovated by Pascali Semerdjian Architects, Bertjan Pot’s Prop pendant fixtures hang from the exposed original ceiling, which is complemented by walls paneled in board-formed concrete.
In the dining room of a São Paulo apartment renovated by Pascali Semerdjian Architects, Bertjan Pot’s Prop pendant fixtures hang from the exposed original ceiling, which is complemented by walls paneled in board-formed concrete.

Having spent practically their entire adult lives as renters—in Buenos Aires, Lisbon, and London, where they’d moved three times in 10 years—the new homeowners “had a checklist of mistakes we wouldn’t make and things we liked,” Perry says. This included wall space for a growing art collection; public areas that were generous but not palatial; avoidance of leather or synthetic fabrics; and certificates of sustainability for every piece of wood used in the renovation. The goal: “A home that was proud of São Paulo,” a city, she adds ruefully, “that people love to hate.”

Gutting the 4,000-square-foot apartment was relatively easy. Removing the worn-out gypsum ceiling revealed the building’s elegant concrete formwork, which is left exposed in some rooms. Save for an unmovable plumbing pipe—wrapped in rope, it’s now part of the daughters’ playroom—there were few structural constraints, allowing the couple to organize the layout as they saw fit: The public areas and guest suite occupy the southern half of the apartment, while sliding doors allow private circulation between the three family bedrooms and the kitchen, an intimate sanctum within the larger context.

A custom cocktail table joins an Oscar Niemeyer chaise longue, a two-sided Siri bench by Claudia Moreira Salles, and a pair of vintage Svante Skogh armchairs.
A custom cocktail table joins an Oscar Niemeyer chaise longue, a two-sided Siri bench by Claudia Moreira Salles, and a pair of vintage Svante Skogh armchairs.

In particular, the clients worked with the architects to develop social zones that are both deeply Brazilian and vividly cosmopolitan. In the entry hall, a hemicycle of light blazes through a panel of jade-color Pakistani onyx, “like a sunset at the end of the corridor,” Semerdjian suggests. Board-formed concrete panels line the walls, from which a small, brass key bowl projects like a font of holy water: a secular blessing for the domestic space. The panels continue throughout the public areas, curving around the building’s idiosyncratic chamfered corners to create what Pascali describes as “a kind of tunnel” connecting the entry to the dining and living rooms. In the latter, the panels frame a pair of built-in sofas sitting in a large niche that formerly accommodated a fireplace—the type of fanciful gesture toward old-world glamour that Jacob and Perry were looking to avoid.

The residence comes to life in the refinement of its details, a punctilious approach to junctures and joints, to the points where materials meet. In one corner of the kitchen, shelves in washed freijo wood and pale gray quartz meet in a complex concatenation of boxes and panels, as precise as frames crafted for museums. Nearby, a 9-foot-long table, also fashioned from freijo, cantilevers weightlessly from the side of a monolithic concrete island—a cool, calm defiance of physics that recalls São Paulo’s most iconic buildings, which take heavy concrete masses and levitate them above the earth.

Another aspect of the sprawling inland metropolis—its constantly evolving relationship with a tropical environment that it has never fully suppressed—is reenacted on the apartment’s many planted terraces, which encircle it with an exuberant jungle worthy of neighboring Ibarapuera Park. “The garden is chaotic, like a forest,” Semerdjian acknowledges. “Our goal was to really surround the space. The foliage, the concrete—there’s a lot of identity in those elements.” The residence’s tranquility does not so much erase the stimulating excess of the urban environment outside as highlight its intoxicating beauty, the irresistible pull that brought Jacob and Perry and their young daughters here in the first place.

Vintage Erik Buch chairs surround Pascali Semerdjian’s Monica table in the dining room; flooring here and throughout much of the four-bedroom apartment is European oak.
Vintage Erik Buch chairs surround Pascali Semerdjian’s Monica table in the dining room; flooring here and throughout much of the four-bedroom apartment is European oak.
In the dining room, a wall sculpture by Brazilian-Polish artist Franz Krajcberg hangs near the entrance to the kitchen.
In the dining room, a wall sculpture by Brazilian-Polish artist Franz Krajcberg hangs near the entrance to the kitchen.
Served by Alvar Aalto stools, a freijo table cantilevers from the kitchen’s solid concrete island, which was hoisted in through a window.
Served by Alvar Aalto stools, a freijo table cantilevers from the kitchen’s solid concrete island, which was hoisted in through a window.
A built-in brass key bowl protrudes from a niche in the entry hall.
A built-in brass key bowl protrudes from a niche in the entry hall.
Works by Brazilian artists—Ana María Tavares (left), Gabriela Costa (right), and Matias Mesquita (background)—line the entry hall.
Works by Brazilian artists—Ana María Tavares (left), Gabriela Costa (right), and Matias Mesquita (background)—line the entry hall.
A vintage Kurt Østervig lounge chair upholstered in sheepskin sits next to a custom sofa in the living room, where flooring is basalt.
A vintage Kurt Østervig lounge chair upholstered in sheepskin sits next to a custom sofa in the living room, where flooring is basalt.
At the other end of the living-room sofa, backlighting turns a panel of Pakistani onyx into a glowing artwork.
At the other end of the living-room sofa, backlighting turns a panel of Pakistani onyx into a glowing artwork.
An artwork by Katrin Korfmann joins a Zanine Caldas armchair and a rare vintage floor lamp attributed to Hans Bergström in the main bedroom.
An artwork by Katrin Korfmann joins a Zanine Caldas armchair and a rare vintage floor lamp attributed to Hans Bergström in the main bedroom.
Pascali Semerdjian’s Duna sconce, which contains sand and can be rotated like an hourglass, lights a niche in a child’s bedroom.
Pascali Semerdjian’s Duna sconce, which contains sand and can be rotated like an hourglass, lights a niche in a child’s bedroom.
Its closet incorporates custom acrylic storage lit by LEDs.
Its closet incorporates custom acrylic storage lit by LEDs.
Millwork in the playroom is freijo, an abundant South American timber.
Millwork in the playroom is freijo, an abundant South American timber.
A Luiza Ladeira Lavorato photograph hangs above the main bedroom’s brass table lamp and custom desk.
A Luiza Ladeira Lavorato photograph hangs above the main bedroom’s brass table lamp and custom desk.
Its bathroom niche and sink are custom made of copper.
Its bathroom niche and sink are custom made of copper.
Custom fittings enliven the main bathroom, clad entirely in Branca Paraná marble.
Custom fittings enliven the main bathroom, clad entirely in Branca Paraná marble.
PROJECT TEAM
pascali semerdjian architects: ana luisa cunha
rodrigo oliveira paisagismo: landscape consultant
companhia de iluminação; dimlux: lighting consultants
avelart móveis: woodwork
dix arte metal: metalwork
tresuno: concrete work
steel engenharia e construções: general contractor
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
Moooi: pendant fixtures (dining room)
etel: table (dining room), chaise longue (living room), desk chair (main bedroom)
through studio schalling: chairs (dining room, living room), floor lamp (main bedroom)
villa remate: custom sofas (living room)
marset: sconce (entry)
pedras bellas artes: custom cocktail table, basalt flooring (living room)
espasso: bench
: black side tables
vitra: lamp
phenicia concept: rug
lumini: sconces (playroom, child bedroom)
deca: fittings (main bathroom)
artek: stools (kitchen)
Nuura: pendant fixtures
docol: sink fittings
savoir beds: bed (main bedroom)
Bert Frank: table lamp
arte final placas: custom storage (child bedroom)
THROUGHOUT
arteal artefatos de alumínio: windows
oscar ono: wood flooring
suvinil: paint

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Interior Design Hosts December Virtual re:Source https://interiordesign.net/designwire/interior-design-hosts-december-virtual-resource/ Tue, 07 Dec 2021 17:05:55 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_news&p=191181 A very special thank you to our re:Source sponsors who made this event possible:

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re:source

Interior Design Hosts December Virtual re:Source

A very special thank you to our re:Source sponsors who made this event possible:

Bella Dura
CANCOS Tile & Stone
Crossville
Garden on the Wall
Ligne Roset
Marset
Mosa

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The Room Studio Invites the Outdoors In for a Spacious Family Home in Spain https://interiordesign.net/projects/the-room-studio-invites-the-outdoors-in-for-a-spacious-family-home-in-spain/ Fri, 03 Dec 2021 15:06:05 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=191014 When tasked with creating a home that offers sensory experiences, inside and out, for a family of four in Spain, local firm The Room Studio rose to the occasion.

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A sliding glass wall floods the kitchen with light and opens the space to the outdoors.
A sliding glass wall floods the kitchen with light and opens the space to the outdoors.

The Room Studio Invites the Outdoors In for a Spacious Family Home in Spain

When tasked with creating a home that offers sensory experiences, inside and out, for a family of four in Spain, local firm The Room Studio rose to the occasion. Building the house from the ground up, the design team, led by Meritxell Ribé & Josep Puigdomènech, examined the existing plot of land first to envision ideal indoor-outdoor features. “The starting point was the idea of creating an architectural project without stridency, characterized by the elegance of its forms and the serenity of its materials,” they state. The two-story home features a chromatic palette complimented by oak wood flooring and oiled walnut wood cladding throughout. Subtle hues of blues and terra-cotta, as well as smoked glass add visual interest. The kitchen serves as an unexpected focal point given its bold black-and-white features and expansive glass doors, which open to an outdoor dining area with views of the pool.

“It is a very complete project, as there is a cinema room, gym, swimming pool and large suite rooms,” the designers add, noting that selecting natural materials remained a vital component for each space. “We have worked from the total cladding of the façade to the natural stone paving of the exterior, which also had to connect with the interiors.” Such careful selections paid off. The finished home achieves a dialogue between indoor and outdoor spaces, inviting a sense of play with pops of color and graphic wallcoverings, like those in the childrens’ rooms, just as the family asked for.  

A transparent wall made of wood and glass separates the entrance hall from the living room and the dining room, creating a play of light and shadow at nightfall.
A transparent wall made of wood and glass separates the entrance hall from the living room and the dining room, creating a play of light and shadow at nightfall.
The whole house is fully automated, from the blinds to the air conditioning to lights.
The whole house is fully automated, from the blinds to the air conditioning to lights. The living room features a sofa by Frigerio as well as a floor lamp by Flos with center tables by Molteni&C.
A sliding glass wall floods the kitchen with light and opens the space to the outdoors.
A sliding glass wall floods the kitchen with light and opens the space to the outdoors.
Walnut wood was used on the main floors and stone-colored lacquered doors in the bedroom area.
Walnut wood was used on the main floors and stone-colored lacquered doors in the bedroom area.
The main bath features a soaking tub and a neutral palette.
The main bath features a soaking tub and a suspended lamp by Nuura.
The wallcoverings in the children's rooms are made of decorative wallpaper from a Danish company called FermLiving.
The children’s rooms feature decorative wallpaper from Danish company FermLiving. The bed is by Mon Lit Cabane.
The one-piece steel staircase features indirect light hidden in the banister.
The one-piece steel staircase features indirect light hidden in the banister.
View of exterior. Outdoor table of Ethimo; chairs, armchair, poufs and tables of Expormim; lamps of Paola Lenti; poufs of Point; floor lamp of Marset; striped cushions of FermLiving.
View of the exterior featuring furnishings by Ethimo and Expormim as well as lighting by Paola Lenti and Marset.

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Jorge Pérez’s Private Collection on Display at One Park Grove in Miami by OMA and Meyer Davis https://interiordesign.net/projects/jorge-perezs-private-collection-on-display-at-one-park-grove-in-miami-by-oma-and-meyer-davis/ Mon, 15 Nov 2021 14:17:25 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=190180 Works from developer Jorge Pérez’s private collection are showcased in the lobby and public areas at One Park Grove, a Miami residential tower by OMA and Meyer Davis.

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Art in the lobby at One Park Grove, a residential tower in Miami by OMA, with public spaces by Meyer Davis, includes a bronze by Argentine sculptor Alberto Bastón Diaz and a mural by Venezuelan painter Paul Amundarian.
Art in the lobby at One Park Grove, a residential tower in Miami by OMA, with public spaces by Meyer Davis, includes a bronze by Argentine sculptor Alberto Bastón Diaz and a mural by Venezuelan painter Paul Amundarian.

Jorge Pérez’s Private Collection on Display at One Park Grove in Miami by OMA and Meyer Davis

“Let’s build sculpture.” That’s how Will Meyer, principal of Meyer Davis, recalls the design team of One Park Grove—the last of three towers to be built in a Coconut Grove, Miami, waterfront residential complex—being rallied by Jorge Pérez, chairman of Related Group, which co-developed the project with Terra Group. “Jorge didn’t say, ‘Let’s build a box and decorate it,’” Meyer notes. “It’s a totally different approach to design.”

Pérez, one of Miami’s preeminent art collectors (his name graces the Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron) assembled an all-star lineup to bring One Park Grove to life. OMA, led by partner Shohei Shigematsu, envisioned the tower’s undulating architecture of exterior concrete columns that swell and contract like the trunks of royal palm trees. Studio Sofield designed the understated kitchens and bathrooms in the residences.

A concrete-and-grass amphitheater sits at the base of the tower. Photography by Ossip van Duivenbode.
A concrete-and-grass amphitheater sits at the base of the tower. Photography by Ossip van Duivenbode.

Landscape architect Enzo Enea laid out the parklike grounds, which cover 5 acres and include an outdoor amphitheater, a ribbon of swimming pools, and a sculpture park. And celebrity event planner Colin Cowie programmed services and experiences from music playlists to poolside towel and sunscreen selections.

Meyer Davis’s charge was designing the tower’s lobby, amenity spaces (more than 50,000 square feet of them, including a screening room, spa, and wine room), and other public areas, incorporating artwork from Pérez’s extensive private collection. “There are a lot of branded towers in Miami, but this one has a real personality,” co-principal Gray Davis says. “It touches on all the sensory points that make an enjoyable experience and give the project a real soul.”

Slatted white-oak walls, stained three different hues and hung with Spanish moss, mirror the ribbed architectural concrete of the lobby’s upper reaches.
Slatted white-oak walls, stained three different hues and hung with Spanish moss, mirror the ribbed architectural concrete of the lobby’s upper reaches.

Meyer Davis senior project manager Sonya Cheng calls One Park Grove’s interiors “bohemia on the bay.” That’s a reference to Coconut Grove’s long history—it’s the city’s oldest neighborhood—and reputation as Miami’s free-spirited artistic and intellectual hub. Onetime abode of John Singer Sargent, Tennesse Williams, and Joni Mitchell, the Grove, as it’s known, is home to the city’s top private schools and the former Coconut Grove Playhouse. The neighborhood also happens to be one of the city’s leafiest, with a dense tree canopy that stretches to the shores of Biscayne Bay. “I thought we should provide something of the essence of Coconut Grove, immersed in nature and maximizing exposure to light and air,” Shigematsu says of the 23-story tower’s 68 residences, which he likens to “stacked villas.”

Shigematsu cites another influence on OMA’s architecture: Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s 1983 Surrounded Islands, where they wrapped an archipelago of tiny islets in nearby Biscayne Bay in sheets of hot-pink polypropylene. Cheng also mentions the installation as influencing how the lobby interiors negotiate the tower’s unique peanut-shape footprint—pinched at the center with two elevator cores—and multiple grade changes. Similar to the way the islands were encircled with concentric bands of pink fabric, the designers layered ribbons of stone flooring that radiate outward from the core. “Where all those lines converge and intersect, we created ‘islands’ of seating groups,” Cheng explains. Patterned rugs ground those sitting areas—Meyer describes them as “moments of serenity, the residual between waves”—as they float between the core and the lobby’s curved glass exterior. The language of undulating forms continues vertically, with core walls clad in slats of white oak and others hosting a palisade of backlit white panels. “It’s not a traditional layout—it’s organic and really out there,” Meyer acknowledges. “It was hard to describe to people who weren’t on the team exactly what we were doing. It’s really a new language with its own logic, rules, and geometry, but it creates its own sense of space.”

Art in the lobby at One Park Grove, a residential tower in Miami by OMA, with public spaces by Meyer Davis, includes a bronze by Argentine sculptor Alberto Bastón Diaz and a mural by Venezuelan painter Paul Amundarian.
Art in the lobby at One Park Grove, a residential tower in Miami by OMA, with public spaces by Meyer Davis, includes a bronze by Argentine sculptor Alberto Bastón Diaz and a mural by Venezuelan painter Paul Amundarian.

Positioning large sculptures from Pérez’s collection also directed Meyer, Davis, and Cheng’s choreography of the lobby’s interior. At times, circulation took a backseat to art placement, in which Pérez played an enthusiastically active role. “Sometimes, we’d pick a spot and Jorge would say, ‘No, this piece works better over there,’” Cheng recalls. Sometimes the team accompanied Pérez to his private storage facility to preview artworks, other times to the art museum in downtown Miami. “We turned the typical design process upside down to achieve a different result,” Meyer notes.

Another of Moe’s monumental concrete heads lies on its side beneath Bec Brittain pendant fixtures.
Another of Moe’s monumental concrete heads lies on its side beneath Bec Brittain pendant fixtures.

An early recommendation was South African artist Ledelle Moe’s ensemble work Memorial Collapse, a trio of monumental heads, laid on their sides, with rebar emerging through the concrete. “When Jorge suggested those, our response was a resounding ‘Hell, yeah!’” Meyer recalls. “He gets really excited about art. When he sees the direction a designer or architect is going in, he wants them to take it as far as they can. If you lean in on his spirit, you get results.”

  • Works by Kelley Johnson, in foreground, and Polly Apfelbaum, at rear, enliven an elevator corridor.
    Works by Kelley Johnson, in foreground, and Polly Apfelbaum, at rear, enliven an elevator corridor.
  • A custom sofa and vintage-inspired armchair gather round William Gray nesting tables.
    A custom sofa and vintage-inspired armchair gather round William Gray nesting tables.

Other works populating One Park Grove’s public spaces run a gamut of styles and media. Outside in the gardens, Jaume Plensa’s The Poets in Bordeaux (Body Soul God, Country, Water Fire), which comprises three 35-foot poles topped by illuminated resin busts, changes appearance as the lights cycle through different colors. Interior amenity spaces feature more subtle works, including delicate vellum drawings by Miami-based artist Michele Oka Doner and a Richard Serra etching.

One Park Grove’s well-orchestrated blend of architecture, design, and art bears an ultimate stamp of approval: Earlier this year, Pérez, who has lived on the Coconut Grove waterfront for decades, decided to trade in his Venetian palazzo-style mansion for a penthouse at One Park Grove. He donated the $33 million proceeds from the sale of his house to The Miami Foundation.

project team
meyer davis: scott abrahams; matthew haseltine; cass nakashima; nils sanderson; daeho lee; matthew edgardo davis; jeremy kim; gonzalo lopez; pantea tehrani; sumit sahdev; jun shimada; andrew mack; miguel darcy; betty fan; carly dean; ahmadreza schricker; britt johnson; shida salehi-esmati; jackie woon bae; ian watchorn; filippo nanni; esin erez; luke willis: oma. mei lau; drew tucker; marianne mordhorst
arquitectonica: architect of record.
arredoluce; enea garden design; plant the future: landscaping consultant
south dade lighting: lighting consultant
desimone consulting engineers: structural engineer
feller engineering: mep
vsn engineering: civil engineer
allegheny millwork; miles of wood: woodwork
excellence in stone: stonework
american upholstery: custom upholstered-goods workshop.
moriarty: general contractor
product sources from front
stripe vintage modern: blue armchairs (lobby)
Stellar Works: nesting tables
f&r general interiors: custom console (lobby), table (wine room)
apparatus studio: pendant fixtures (reception)
steel monkey dream shop: custom shelving (reception, lobby)
gabriel scott: pendant fixtures (lobby)
tacchini: round side tables
liaigre: floor lamp
the future perfect: modular coffee tables
phillips collection: side table
bec brittain: pendant fixture
harbour: sofa, chairs, coffee table (cabana)
marset: floor lamp
metalarte: table lamp
berhardt design: console (spa), pendant fixture (playroom)
usona: chaise longues (spa)
hbf textiles: wallcovering (screening room)
ludwig & larsen: sconces
sacco carpet: custom carpet
kravet: chair fabric
jab anstoetz: pillow fabric
opuzen: drapery fabric
tri-kes: custom wallcovering (playroom)
tommy bahama: pillows
wine cellar innovations: custom lockers (wine room)
le lampade: ceiling fixture
throughout
tailor-made textiles: custom rugs
benjamin moore & co.; scuffmaster: paint

more

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