quooker Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/quooker/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Wed, 31 May 2023 23:20:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png quooker Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/quooker/ 32 32 i29 Reinvents a Historic Canal House in Amsterdam https://interiordesign.net/projects/i29-reinvents-a-historic-canal-house-in-amsterdam/ Tue, 17 May 2022 21:22:31 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=195997 This Amsterdam historical canal house from 1675, designated a state monument, gets brought into the present with a thoughtful renovation from i29.

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The study features a custom desk and, through a window at the base of the bookcase, a view of the living room a half-flight below.
The study features a custom desk and, through a window at the base of the bookcase, a view of the living room a half-flight below.

i29 Reinvents a Historic Canal House in Amsterdam

The archetypal Amsterdam canal house constitutes much of the Dutch city’s residential landscape. Dating to the 17th century, these four- or five-story waterfront row houses were conceived as hybrids: part living space, part warehouse storage for goods transported along the canals. They were built sturdily of wood and masonry construction with heavy beams, i29 co-founder Joeren Dellensen explains, “which is why they still exist.”

Albeit not always in the greatest shape. Take this compact 1675 house near Amstelveld square. Though designated a state monument, it had fallen into ruin before new owners initiated a meticulous two-year restoration and update. “From the start we knew i29 had to be involved in the project, to instill their out-of-the-box, serene, and perfect design,” notes the client, who first hired the firm nine years ago to craft an “invisible kitchen” for the family’s Paris apartment that was entirely concealed behind sliding wall panels imitative of decorative molding.

Here, architectural interventions were strictly limited by mandates protecting heritage houses. “We were not allowed to demolish any walls,” co-founder Jasper Jansen says, noting that the project was a collaborative effort among firm members. “And we couldn’t build any, either, even though very few existed in the space.”

Instead, color performs the role of spatial demarcation. “We used color as a tool to expose the architectural shell to the fullest and to make interventions that define functions,” Dellensen notes, adding that the classic hues chosen “are in sync with the monumental quality of the building.” Complementary blues, greens, and grays are muted and somewhat smoky, contrasting with swaths of crisp white.

Related Post: i29 & Chris Collaris Evoke High Contrast for a Summer Residence in Vinkeveen, the Netherlands

a custom desk in green matches the walls in an Amsterdam home
The study features a custom desk and, through a window at the base of the bookcase, a view of the living room a half-flight below.

The 1,240-square-foot interior of the Amsterdam canal house, adjoining a rear garden, offers long sight lines and elements of delightful surprise. A steep, curving stairway, every bit original, connects the three full floors plus three intermediating half levels. The entry opens into a cozy seating alcove with wide steps down to the ground floor, which had to be lowered for foundation repairs. Occupying the majority of this level is the eat-in kitchen, where custom oak millwork is coupled with chairs by Naoto Fukasawa and lighting pendants by Ludovica and Roberto Palumbo. At the far end of the space, a green glass volume marks entry to a pass-through bathroom leading to a hidden bedroom with garden access.

Fittingly, the living room on floor two retains its characteristic plaster walls and bas-relief ceiling ornamentation, painted creamy white, and restored pine flooring. Behind the rotating bookshelf lies a surprise: a moody blue cocoon in which to read or relax. On the opposite side of the room is another surprise: Interior windows provide a split-level view of the entry seating nook below and the study a half-flight above, where a swath of springlike green frames the built-in desk.

Up on the third floor, “sleeping quarters radiate comfort like a true hotel experience,” Dellensen remarks. Exposed beams trace the peaked ceiling in the main bedroom. Two-way mirrored panels enclose the WC/shower stall, offering sight lines out (into the wet area’s Japanese-inspired soaking tub and beyond) but not in. Up a ladder, an additional mini level is squeezed in below the roof’s bell gable to function as the daughter’s bedroom. So enamored are the homeowners by their pied-à-terre’s charm that they are spending even more time there than they envisioned.

Related Post: i29 Updates Classical Interiors of Landmarked Enlightenment Building in Amsterdam

a white winding staircase in a historic Amsterdam home
The steep original staircase connects all three main levels of the 1675-built row house, plus three interstitial half-levels.
a split level view of an Amsterdam home's study and living room
The living room has a split-level view of the entry seating alcove below and the study above through interior windows.
a blue walled reading nook with a bed
Like a wagon-lit, the hidden reading nook off the living room is just big enough for a bed.
a reading nook in an Amsterdam home with sofa and fireplace
The nook is accessed via the living room’s rotating shelving; the marble fireplace and plasterwork were restored.
concrete floors in a kitchen with a countertop that extends to create a long dining table
The concrete-floored kitchen has a custom oak counter that extends beyond the base cabinets to form a dining table; the wall separating the space from the entry is gray-stained oak.
a pane of green-tinted glass separates a guest suite from a kitchen in this Amsterdam canal house
Green-tinted glass signals the garden-side guest suite at the far end of the kitchen.
a shower stall with views of the outdoors
The main suite’s shower stall is constructed of two-way mirror offering views out but not in.
an a-frame bedroom with white bedding and soft pendants
The main bedroom has custom cabinetry and, like the rest of the Amsterdam canal house, Gregg pendants by Ludovica and Roberto Palomba.
a bathroom with a Japanese-inspired tub and vanity
The main bathroom’s Japanese-inspired tub and vanity were custom made in Germany; the WC/shower stall is hidden behind the mirrored panel on the right.
PROJECT SOURCES
Sigma: paintwork (stairwell)
kvadrat: acoustic wall fabric (living room)
Aleksandra Gaca: pillow fabric (reading room, living room)
norR11: lounge chair, ottoman (living room)
maruni: chairs (kitchen)
concraft: concrete flooring
quooker: sink fittings
blumenberg: custom tub, custom sink (bathroom)
glas xl: two-way mirror
water revolution: taps
THROUGHOUT
Foscarini: pendant lights
schneinder interieurbouw: custom furniture and woodwork
seasons parket: oak flooring
G.K. Visbeen & Co: general contractor
kodde: restoration architect

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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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