flavor paper Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/flavor-paper/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Mon, 06 Mar 2023 14:06:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png flavor paper Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/flavor-paper/ 32 32 Ghislaine Viñas Co-Designs Andra Hem, an Atypical B&B https://interiordesign.net/projects/ghislaine-vinas-andra-hem-cocktail-bar-philadelphia/ Tue, 07 Mar 2023 14:15:00 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=207385 Ghislaine Viñas and a longtime client stir in Swedish inspiration at Andra Hem, a colorful Philadelphia cocktail bar with private guest suites.

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a teal maximalist cocktail bar in Philadelphia
The ground floor of Andra Hem in Philadelphia by Ghislaine Viñas houses a bilevel cocktail bar with an 1800’s painting embellished by artist Mark Mulroney that serves as the mascot of the four-story prop­erty, which has a second bar as well as two private guest suites on the upper levels.

Ghislaine Viñas Co-Designs Andra Hem, an Atypical B&B

If you can survive the 2-hour line to get into Andra Hem, Philadelphia’s chicest new night spot, you’re in for a rather delicious cocktail. The recipe: An ounce of hotel, a teaspoon of art, a twist of bar, a shot of lounge. Shake vigorously! Pour over ice and garnish with honey from the rooftop bee farm. Who is the crafty mixologist behind this spirited typological concoction? Why, it’s New York designer Ghislaine Viñas, teaming with her longtime friend and client/muse, art collector and dealer Paige West. The creative partners in crime have collaborated on too-many-to-count endeavors over just as many years. “Paige and I have been working together forever,” Viñas happily affirms. “One day we’re gonna be little old ladies, still designing projects.”

Let’s hope so! Each joint effort gets more intriguing. This 7,700-square-foot, four-story property, for instance, encompasses an intimate bilevel bar and, above, two one-bedroom floor-through suites. Although Andra Hem is the pair’s first full-on hospitality venture, the typology is not entirely without precedent: West makes an art form of giving her houseguests the hotel treatment. “It’s how Paige hosts friends and family,” Viñas notes of the Philadelphia native. “There’s always a minibar in the guest bedroom, a signature cocktail, branded towels, and things like that. It’s what spins her wheels.”

Envisioning the Design of Andra Hem, a Bar With Guest Suites Above

West initially purchased the Rittenhouse Square site, a quaint but derelict former apartment building with a ground-floor restaurant, intending to convert it into an exhibition space, but ultimately realized it was too small to house the program she’d envisioned. She secured another spot in the city for that purpose and hatched the idea to use this edifice as a kind of artsy micro B&B—albeit with booze instead of breakfast—maybe for rental, maybe just for use by acquaintances (so far, it’s been only the latter). In search of a strong concept, designer and client dove into Philly history, and discovered that Swedes were among the first settlers. Honoring that Scandinavian heritage made sense on a personal level, too, given that West is of Danish ancestry.

The venue’s name came first: “Andra hem means second home in Swedish,” Viñas explains. “It sounded like a lady’s name, so we conceived this as her residence.” The duo embarked on a tour of Stockholm for inspiration, but ultimately decided to be more irreverent than culturally slavish. “It’s not supposed to be a Swedish establishment at all,” Viñas emphasizes. “If you come here expecting traditional Swedish food, you’re going to be disappointed! It’s more about ripping off ingredients and classics and creating something new.”

a black-cloaked seating area in a cocktail bar with gold floral pendant fixtures
Vintage pendant fixtures from Sweden and miniature portraits painted on crushed beer cans by Philadelphia artist Kim Alsbrooks animate a corner of the upstairs bar, with a mohair-covered banquette.

Artful Accents and Custom Designs Create an Inviting Interior

That goes for the décor as well, starting with the artwork that hangs behind the ground-floor bar, an 1800’s portrait from West’s private collection that lacked provenance so had minimal market value. The two had the canvas doctored with a layer of painted-on iconography—a bee, flowers, stylized waves—by Mark Mulroney, another frequent collaborator. (His quirkily surrealist murals also embellish the bar’s restrooms.) That retro-meets-futurist mashup encapsulates the entire project. “We juxtaposed a very traditional Swedish architecture layer with these wacky elements that tie into the overall narrative,” Viñas explains. Firmly in the trad column is the custom wall paneling, a concentric-square relief pattern based on one they’d encountered in an ancient Stockholm restaurant. In the wacky column, meanwhile, is Kim Alsbrooks’s framed miniature portraits painted on crushed beer cans. Lying somewhere in between classic and wack-tastic are David Trubridge’s swirly bentwood pendant globe upstairs, which call to mind barber poles or maybe sinister hard candy. “I get butterflies when I see those lights,” Viñas says. “Something about them ties back to a childhood memory I can’t quite place. I have a very beautiful emotional connection to these.”

a teal maximalist cocktail bar in Philadelphia
The ground floor of Andra Hem in Philadelphia by Ghislaine Viñas houses a bilevel cocktail bar with an 1800’s painting embellished by artist Mark Mulroney that serves as the mascot of the four-story prop­erty, which has a second bar as well as two private guest suites on the upper levels.

The two floors of the bar are a pas de deux of similarity and difference. Viñas used the same furniture, paneling, and floral wallpaper on both levels, but altered the color palette (peacock-blue downstairs, mustard-and-black upstairs). She performed the same sleight of hand in the stacked suites, which share an identical layout and furniture plan but feature different fabrics—all bowl-you-over botanicals by mid-century Swedish icon Josef Frank. The trippy DayGlo-toned linen tenting the fourth-floor suite’s bedroom is Viñas’s favorite. “I could just stare at it all day; it’s so vibrant and exquisite.”

The riot of color and pattern that unifies the petite property is both a constant in Vinas’s work yet something of a departure. “I love when things clash, especially in small rooms,” she says. “Here, I really pushed for things to live together that shouldn’t, which was hard for me to do, because my design is so much about control.” It was worth it, she adds. “I loved being pushed outside my comfort zone.” All in the interest of putting guests into theirs, of course.

A Closer Look at the Colorful Cocktail Bar

a teal lounge-like room in Andra Hem in Philadelphia
Back downstairs, custom paneling is based on a his­toric design Viñas saw in a Stockholm eatery.
yellow banquette seating against a yellow wall
In the upstairs bar, vinyl up­hol­stery dresses a banquette, serviced by marble-top tables, all custom.
a partition with cutouts inside a seating area of cocktail bar Andra Hem
Hot dog–shape cutouts create graphic pattern play in the partition alongside the staircase con­nect­ing the two bars.
pendant globes hang above a banquette seating and ottomans in a bar
Bentwood strips encircle David Trubridge’s pendant globes in the upper bar; ottomans in both bars are the velvet-upholstered Fresno.
a wallpaper with Native American iconography
A custom wallpaper pattern incorporating Native American iconography graces the lobby.
a floral mural is on the wall of a bathroom at Andra Hem
A mural by Mulroney brings verve to the bar’s restroom.
the exterior of Andra Hem, a Philadelphia cocktail bar
A globe sconce and a mirror-polished brass plaque, both custom, announce the Rittenhouse Square property.

Inside the Guest Suites at Andra Hem

PROJECT TEAM
Ghislaine Viñas: jenna pino; jaime viñas; lauren mercuri; ashika amarnath
Stokes Architecture + Design: architect of record
bold lighting: lighting design
west collection: art consultant
harmony contract furniture: custom furniture workshop
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
coil + drift: glass pendant fixtures (blue bar)
vescom: curtain fabric
flavor paper: wallpaper
schumacher: banquette fabric
collector: custom tables (bars)
joss & main: ottomans
amazon: table lamps (yellow/black bar)
contardi: fabric pendant fixtures (blue bar), bedside lamps (suites)
lumen 8: custom sconce (exterior)
signs visual industries: custom plaque
imagine tile: custom tile (bath­room)
grout 360: custom grout
kjartan oskarsson studio: custom mirrors
fantini: sink fittings
schoolhouse: cabinet hardware
p.e. guerin: sink fittings (restroom)
established & sons: yellow pendant fixtures (suite)
david trubridge: pendant globes (yellow/black bar)
Wolf Gordon: custom wallpaper (lobby)
georgia lacey interiors: custom desk (suite)
through 1stdibs: desk lamp
ligne roset: sofa
Blu Dot: coffee table
kardiel: ottomans
kasthall: custom rug
design public group: white pendant fixture
57st. design: custom nightstands, custom media console (suites)
svenskt tenn: wallcovering, ottoman fabric
THROUGHOUT
benjamin moore & co.: paint
designtex; hbf textiles: seating fabric
beautiful bed company: beds

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Verona Carpenter Architects Transforms a SoHo Loft into an Artful Home https://interiordesign.net/projects/verona-carpenter-architects-soho-loft/ Tue, 04 Oct 2022 20:28:25 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=201330 Verona Carpenter Architects transforms a SoHo loft into a stunning home for a Milanese curator and collector.

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oak floors next to blackened-steel staircase leading to a mezzanine
The existing oak flooring was resealed and refinished but the oak and blackened-steel staircase leading to a mezzanine is new.

Verona Carpenter Architects Transforms a SoHo Loft into an Artful Home

Laura Mattioli, an art scholar, curator, and collector, found her SoHo loft, and the one two floors up that now houses the Center for Italian Modern Art, on a tip from a friend back in 2011. A native of Milan, Mattioli had been looking for a place in Manhattan where she could open the foundation to spread the word about the modern and contemporary art of her homeland, but she needed a large, open space on one level that she could easily move works in and out of for exhibitions. Her friend had heard about a handsome cast-iron building on Broome Street with full-floor apartments that were about to come on the market. Mattioli immediately booked a flight to New York and within days she had nabbed two of them—one for CIMA and one for herself.

“Usually lofts are long and narrow with light only on the two shorter sides,” she says. That’s because the buildings typically stand shoulder to shoulder. Her building, however, which dates to 1873, has a single-story Con Edison utility structure next door, so the apartments from the second floor up also have sunlight streaming in all along the eastern side. Then, too, the ceilings are high, and the layouts offer one vast space overlooking the street and well-proportioned rooms off a wide hallway toward the back. And, the location couldn’t be beat: SoHo, a 19th-century dry goods district, was colonized in the 1970’s by painters and sculptors who turned old industrial spaces into live-work lofts, leading to an explosion of galleries in the area. Although perhaps better known today as a shopping destination, the neighborhood is still home to many creators and arts organizations.

the living/dining area of this SoHo loft  WITH a pair of 10-foot-tall statues by Williamsburg-based sculptor Barry X Ball
Even though the ceiling was dropped a few inches in the living/dining area of this SoHo loft renovated by Verona Carpenter Architects for an art collector/curator, it can still easily accommodate a pair of 10-foot-tall statues by Williamsburg-based sculptor Barry X Ball.

Finding an architect proved trickier than finding the space, however. The first two Mattioli hired were more interested in making a statement. But she wanted the architecture to take a back seat to the art—some inherited from her collecting father, some purchased herself. Then she discovered Irina Verona, co-principal of Verona Carpenter Architects, who understood Mattioli’s point of view. “We like the approach of ‘light architecture’ that respects the surroundings and what happens in it,” she says, speaking of the work she and co-principal Jennifer Carpenter have been doing together since founding their firm in 2017, after Verona had taken on Mattioli’s project.

Verona first completed the center, which opened in 2013. Then came Mattioli’s 4,500-square-foot apartment, which, because it was to be a home, would be “more personal,” the architect notes. But otherwise, the priorities remained largely the same—“quiet architecture for a lot of amazing pieces,” referring to both Mattioli’s art and furniture, much of it mid-century.

She left the two-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath layout largely unchanged but switched up the primary bathroom and a walk-in closet for better flow and to create space for a new staircase to a storage and mechanical mezzanine (another new stair leads to a small sleeping area). Verona also added a terrace—a maneuver that required obtaining approval from the city’s Landmark Preservation Commission because SoHo is an official historic district in which changes are strictly controlled.

Much of the renovation revolved around creating a quiet background that would allow Mattioli’s prized possessions to stand out, namely statues on a scale one usually only sees in museums and furniture by the likes of Franco Albini and Finn Juhl. Take the ceiling, which originally had a massive beam running the length of the apartment. To eliminate that distraction, Verona dropped it a couple inches, leaving, however, crisp coffered frames around the intricate capitals atop the original fluted columns. Track lighting was recessed. Cast-iron radiators were replaced with new fin-tube units running beneath the windows on the street-side wall; integrated in the design is a narrow, built-in bench of blackened steel that barely registers when one enters the space. Italian-made doors are flush and frameless, without visible hardware. Existing oak flooring was refinished for a less yellow, more neutral appearance.

One exception to the quiet-backdrop rule: bold wallpaper based on famous works of (mostly Italian) art. In the guest bedroom, clouds borrowed from a Piero Fornasetti mural float over closet doors. In the study, Andy Warhol’s reinterpretation of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper—a work that resonates with Mattioli because da Vinci’s mural is in Milan—emblazons a large swath of wall.

Behind the statue, the built-in blackened-steel bench under the street-facing windows is only 1 foot deep.
Behind the statue, the built-in blackened-steel bench under the street-facing windows is only 1 foot deep.

The three-dimensional, one-of-a-kind art in the public areas is even more riveting. Sculptures by New Yorker Barry X Ball—two standing 10 feet high and one of them inspired by Michelangelo’s Pietà Rondanini, also in Milan—occupy one end of the open living/dining area. On the other side of the space, furniture by Gio Ponti, Alvar Alto, and Marco Zanuso hold their own near the fireplace. In the newly enclosed kitchen, tribal masks from Mozambique and Mali stand on a counter, inches from the olive oil. High on a wall in the hallway, rough granite blocks wrapped in steel cables are hung, daringly, over an 18th-century sideboard of intricate inlaid wood from Mattioli’s childhood home. The artwork, by Giovanni Anselmo, weighs a ton, literally, and Verona was responsible for ensuring that it would stay put.

Throughout the apartment she added plywood on one or both sides of the wall studs to ensure art could be hung securely. For the wall hosting a 1-ton piece, she had the studs reinforced with metal as well as additional wood. Then, to be safe, the art was also bolted right through the wall.

Cast-iron columns dating to the 19th century frame the living area’s Giorgio Soressi sectional sofa and gas fireplace.
Cast-iron columns dating to the 19th century frame the living area’s Giorgio Soressi sectional sofa and gas fireplace.
Arne Jacobsen chairs line the dining table by Piergiorgio and Michele Cazzaniga.
Arne Jacobsen chairs line the dining table by Piergiorgio and Michele Cazzaniga.
The kitchen, previously open to the living/dining area, was enclosed and outfitted with new cabinetry, countertops, and appliances.
The kitchen, previously open to the living/dining area, was enclosed and outfitted with new cabinetry, countertops, and appliances.
In the living area, a Marco Zanuso chair pairs with a Gio Ponti table.
In the living area, a Marco Zanuso chair pairs with a Gio Ponti table.
A walnut bed, 1950’s Hans Wegner bench, and Tolomeo lamp furnish the primary bedroom.
A walnut bed, 1950’s Hans Wegner bench, and Tolomeo lamp furnish the primary bedroom.
In the powder room off the entry foyer, Piero Fornasetti wallpaper, mimicking malachite, joins a solid-surfacing vanity, custom mirror, and an antique sconce.
In the powder room off the entry foyer, Piero Fornasetti wallpaper, mimicking malachite, joins a solid-surfacing vanity, custom mirror, and an antique sconce.
oak floors next to blackened-steel staircase leading to a mezzanine
The existing oak flooring was resealed and refinished but the oak and blackened-steel staircase leading to a mezzanine is new.
A Fornasetti mural inspired the wallpaper in the guest bedroom, while its bathroom’s wallpaper is modeled on an Andy Warhol screen print of Marilyn Monroe multiples.
A Fornasetti mural inspired the wallpaper in the guest bedroom, while its bathroom’s wallpaper is modeled on an Andy Warhol screen print of Marilyn Monroe multiples.
Off the loft’s main hallway, Franco Albini bookcases define an alcove.
Off the loft’s main hallway, Franco Albini bookcases define an alcove.
In the study, wallpaper depicting a reinterpretation of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper coor­dinates with shelving by Dieter Rams.
In the study, wallpaper depicting a reinterpretation of Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper coor­dinates with shelving by Dieter Rams.
The new terrace’s retractable awning stretches over  an aluminum table by Matthew Hilton.
The new terrace’s retractable awning stretches over an aluminum table by Matthew Hilton.
the exterior of the SoHo loft
The client lives on the building’s second floor and owns and runs the Center for Italian Modern Art, on the fourth floor, that space also by Verona Carpenter Architects.
PROJECT TEAM
verona carpenter architects: ana maria reyes; hakan westergren
jim conti lighting design: lighting consultant
northeast contracting group: terrace contractor
old structures engineering: terrace structural engineer
charles g. michel engineering: mep
think construction: general contractor
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
dwr: sectional (living area), chairs (dining area, kitchen), sofa (study), table (terrace)
mdf italia: table (dining area)
cassina: chair (living area)
valcucine italia: cabinets, countertops (kitchen)
wolf: cooktop
franke: sink
Add tag via side panel:
Fritz Hansen: table
porcelanosa: custom vanity (powder room)
hansgrohe: sink fittings
kravet: wallpaper (powder room, guest bedroom)
valsan: towel bar (bathroom)
flavor paper: wallpaper (bathroom, study)
through 1stdibs: bookcases, sofa (alcove)
wyeth: nesting tables (study), bench (primary bedroom)
vitsoe: shelves (study)
artemide: lamp (primary bedroom)
breakwater bay: sconces (terrace)
nuimage: awning
THROUGHOUT
lualdi: doors
halo: track fixtures
element lighting: recessed fixtures
benjamin moore & co.: paint

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Dufner Heighes Transforms a Historic House in Pelham, New York into a Modern Family Home https://interiordesign.net/projects/dufner-heighes-transforms-a-historic-house-in-pelham-new-york-into-a-modern-family-home/ Mon, 09 May 2022 16:07:40 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=196011 For a growing family looking to put down roots, Dufner Heighes modernized this historic home in Pelham, New York.

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Dufner Heighes designed the mudroom’s Bubble table; the terrazzo flooring by Artistic Tile incorporates marble chips.
Dufner Heighes designed the mudroom’s Bubble table; the terrazzo flooring by Artistic Tile incorporates marble chips.

Dufner Heighes Transforms a Historic House in Pelham, New York into a Modern Family Home

Flip back a page, please. Now, kick up your feet, relax—here, have a cocktail—and observe this intriguing wood-paneled room: the resolutely leafy view, that groovy triangular window, the serene quiet, the vintage-heavy furniture scheme. Bet you think this is the living room of some cozy ’70’s-mod cabin on a remote rural plot, right? Well, surprise! In fact, this is the second-floor sitting room of a painstakingly preserved century-old Edwardian-style manse within shouting distance (although please don’t; the baby’s sleeping) of the Bronx.

Dufner Heighes was the firm tasked with future-proofing the historic Pelham, New York, house for a growing family. The 7,100-square-foot dwelling has an intriguing back story. Previous owners include the island nation of Barbados, which used it as an embassy, and a Coca-Cola executive who frequently hosted President Eisenhower there back in the 1950s. Another head of state, George Washington, reportedly stayed on the property, too, in a structure that once stood on this abode’s exact footprint. That provenance piqued the interest of Erica Holborn, CEO of Sandow Design Group (Interior Design’s parent company) and a self-professed real-estate enthusiast. “I’m a house-with-a-story person,” she admits.

In the second-floor primary suite’s sitting room, windows are angled to follow the roofline; a print by Linda Colletta, Sky III, joins a Dufner Heighes–designed Stop coffee table, a D’Urso sofa, and vintage wing chairs reupholstered in shearling.
In the second-floor primary suite’s sitting room, windows are angled to follow the roofline; a print by Linda Colletta, Sky III, joins a Dufner Heighes–designed Stop coffee table, a D’Urso sofa, and vintage wing chairs reupholstered in shearling.

When Holborn and her husband, Andrew, first saw the property listing, they deemed the eight-bedroom too big for their needs. Fast forward a year later. Their Dufner Heighes–designed Sutton Place apartment was getting a bit too snug for their expanding family (especially with WFH in the mix), and their upstate getaway, a 1970’s A-frame designed by Frank Lloyd Wright protégés, was too far from the city for full-time residency. Plus, the Holborns got an offer on the latter that they couldn’t refuse. So when the price dropped on the Pelham place around the same time, they finally took a look—and were sold.

Among the structure’s many attributes was that it had been pristinely restored, from the oak millwork to the original hardware. “It was a perfect situation, because the previous owners had updated a few things, like the kitchen, but restored everything else—stripping layers of paint off moldings and all that stuff no one wants to deal with,” notes Daniel Heighes Wismer, firm copartner with Greg Dufner. In short, it was practically turnkey. Early site visits suggested the project would be primarily decorative and cosmetic: reupholstering some existing furnishings, buying new items to fill in a few gaps, replacing antique light fixtures with more modern designs, updating cabinetry, hanging artwork. Midway through planning the new kitchen, however, it became apparent the current footprint was underscaled for the size of the house and had an awkward, dinky island unsuited to cooking and dining. “During one of our meetings with the team from Bilotta, with whom we were designing the kitchen,” Wismer recalls, “someone questioned whether we could tear down a wall to annex the adjoining butler’s pantry—and that changed everything,” necessitating plumbing and electrical rerouting plus new structural steel. “My dream has always been to have a butler’s pantry,” Holborn sighs. “And then I finally buy a house with one—and promptly take it out!”

The monthslong renovation was well worth it. The new scheme is much brighter and airier, with a long Arabescato Corchia marble island that seats four, plus a window-wrapped breakfast nook. Dufner Heighes deployed two patterns of Artistic Tile terrazzo flooring, one incorporating marble chips, to create area rug–like accents that delineate spatial zones. Shaker-style cabinetry is simpatico with the period architecture yet modern enough to suit the décor. The same flooring and cabinetry also extend into an adjacent space, a former family room that now serves as a storage-packed mudroom.

Dufner Heighes designed the mudroom’s Bubble table; the terrazzo flooring by Artistic Tile incorporates marble chips.
Dufner Heighes designed the mudroom’s Bubble table; the terrazzo flooring by Artistic Tile incorporates marble chips.

The reinvention of a living space as service-oriented hub made sense, given the floorplan already offered a generous number of hangout areas, including the ground-floor salon and contiguous sunroom, a second-floor playroom for two-year-old Marlowe and baby Bodhi, a sitting room off the primary suite, and the family and game rooms that anchor the daylit basement level. “The challenge,” Dufner says, “was how to make each living space feel like it had a unique function and purpose.” Seating in particular was selected with specific activities and postures in mind. Thus the salon’s more upright Bob sectional, its firm, snakelike form perfect for perching with a glass of wine; the sunroom’s more lounge-y Bouroullec Brothers Ploum sofa, a holdover from the upstate house (albeit newly reupholstered); and the super deep, nap-conducive sofa in the family room, where TV viewing occurs.

Though the house has a traditional layout, with discrete rooms, they open graciously onto each other, and curating sight lines was particularly important. Many features were considered holistically so they would work together from room to room. On the first floor, for instance, “there are points where you can see the ceiling fixtures in the sunroom, living room, entry hall, and the dining room all at once,” Wismer explains. “So the lighting we specified all needed to work within their respective rooms and also as a cohesive group.” Furniture and other accents were chosen and placed similarly, he adds. “There was a balancing of where we could go a little wild and where something had to be toned down so it wouldn’t get too heavy or layered.”

Speaking of going a little wild, check out the dining room wallpaper. The pattern, a trippy graphic confection in riotous hues, tents the room, extending up from crisp wainscoting lacquered a mercurial green-gray color. The op art patterning is the perfect jazz riff on the abode’s 1914 bones. “The contrast between historic and modern is just so great,” says Wismer. A sentiment that summarizes the project top to bottom.

A pair of Finn Juhl chairs and a Bob sectional designed by Thomas Bernstrand and Stefan Borselius furnish the living room’s seating vignette; the area rug, like most of the floor coverings throughout, is from Aronson’s.
A pair of Finn Juhl chairs and a Bob sectional designed by Thomas Bernstrand and Stefan Borselius furnish the living room’s seating vignette; the area rug, like most of the floor coverings throughout, is from Aronson’s.
Near the living room fireplace, with original oak millwork, a Jaime Hayon side table cozies up to a leather daybed.
Near the living room fireplace, with original oak millwork, a Jaime Hayon side table cozies up to a leather daybed.
In the foyer, a portrait by Elizabeth Peyton is complemented by handmade paper flowers by Livia Cetti and a custom table by Casey Johnson.
In the foyer, a portrait by Elizabeth Peyton is complemented by handmade paper flowers by Livia Cetti and a custom table by Casey Johnson.
In the dining room, wallpapered in Borderline Chinoiserie by Voutsa, a Kiki Smith print, Fawn, hangs over a Jaime Hayon credenza; a flock of mouthblown glass birds adds height and interest to the oak table by Philipp Mainzer.
In the dining room, wallpapered in Borderline Chinoiserie by Voutsa, a Kiki Smith print, Fawn, hangs over a Jaime Hayon credenza; a flock of mouthblown glass birds adds height and interest to the oak table by Philipp Mainzer.
In the sunroom, a Bouroullec Brothers Ploum sofa joins an Iacoli coffee table featuring a custom top in onyx from Artistic Tile.
In the sunroom, a Bouroullec Brothers Ploum sofa joins an Iacoli coffee table featuring a custom top in onyx from Artistic Tile.
Works in India ink from Hugo Guinness’s “Wobbly Records” series garnish the game room, adjacent to the lower-level family room.
Works in India ink from Hugo Guinness’s “Wobbly Records” series garnish the game room, adjacent to the lower-level family room.
In the kitchen, with Shaker-style cabinetry from Bilotta, Dufner Heighes added a built-in banquette to maximize space; the chairs and stools are by Hans Wegner.
In the kitchen, with Shaker-style cabinetry from Bilotta, Dufner Heighes added a built-in banquette to maximize space; the chairs and stools are by Hans Wegner.
Daughter Marlowe’s bedroom features an Edward Wormley Knowland chaise, Finn Juhl Eye coffee table, and Lee Jofa’s Prism Pastel wallpaper.
Daughter Marlowe’s bedroom features an Edward Wormley Knowland chaise, Finn Juhl Eye coffee table, and Lee Jofa’s Prism Pastel wallpaper.
A custom bar in ribbed oak backdrops the lower-level family room, with a Hans Wegner Mama Bear chair and Simple side tables by Dufner Heighes; marble from Artistic Tile tops the Space Copenhagen Fly table.
A custom bar in ribbed oak backdrops the lower-level family room, with a Hans Wegner Mama Bear chair and Simple side tables by Dufner Heighes; marble from Artistic Tile tops the Space Copenhagen Fly table.
Flavor Paper’s Happy Butterfly Day wallpaper and a Gio Ponti mirror bring zing to a powder room.
Flavor Paper’s Happy Butterfly Day wallpaper and a Gio Ponti mirror bring zing to a powder room.
The primary bedroom is furnished with a Lawson-Fenning Chiselhurst bed, custom Simple bedside tables by Dufner Heighes, a Michael Robbins Ranger bench, and a painting by Bruce Tolman.
The primary bedroom is furnished with a Lawson-Fenning Chiselhurst bed, custom Simple bedside tables by Dufner Heighes, a Michael Robbins Ranger bench, and a painting by Bruce Tolman.
Katie Hammond’s Ol’ Dirty Bastard accents the stair hall, illuminated by Louis Poulsen pendants.
Katie Hammond’s Ol’ Dirty Bastard accents the stair hall, illuminated by Louis Poulsen pendants.
product sources
sitting room
knoll: sofa
dunbar: side table
design for macha: ceiling fixture
through noguchi shop: floor lamp
garrett leather: armchair shearling
kvadrat: side chair fabric
LIVING ROOM
blå station through scandinavian spaces: sofa
house of finn juhl: chairs
Gubi: coffee table
aronson’s: rug
bd barcelona through ddc: green side table.
Fredericia: daybed
lawson-fenning: vessels
MUD ROOM
bilotta: cabinetry
Artistic Tile: flooring
seungjin yang through the future perfect: pink stool
Blu Dot: yellow ottoman
through noguchi shop: pendant
STAIR
Louis Poulsen: pendants
DINING ROOM
voutsa: wallpaper
e15 through stillfried wien: table
Carl Hansen & Son: chairs
iittala through fiskars group: glass birds
bd barcelona through ddc: credenza
aronson’s: rug
GAME ROOM
mitchell gold + bob williams: sofa
aronson’s: rug
Carl Hansen & Son: Lounge
Blu Dot: side table
through john derian: artwork
sun room
ligne roset: sofa
iacoli: coffee table
CB2: side table
KITCHEN
Artistic Tile: flooring, counters
bilotta: cabinetry
Carl Hansen & Son: chairs, stools
e15 through stillfried wien: table
Louis Poulsen: pendants
FOYER
casey johnson studio: custom table
Blu Dot: ottoman
through john derian: flowers
aj madison: appliances
NURSERY
lee jofa: wallpaper
through design within reach: rocking chair
dunbar: sofa
house of finn juhl: coffee table
floyd: shelving
stokke: crib
FAMILY ROOM
rejuvenation: ceiling fixture
nessen lighting: gold lamp
&tradition: coffee table, ottoman
Carl Hansen & Son: green lounge chair
mitchell gold + bob williams: sofa
aronson’s: rug
kvadrat: mama bear chair fabric
zak & fox: club chair fabric
BEDROOM
design for macha: ceiling fixture
michael robbins: bench
lawson-fenning: bed
once milano: quilt
aronson’s: rug
POWDER ROOM
flavor paper: wallpaper
Gubi: mirror
THROUGHOUT
visual comfort through circa lighting: table lamps (sitting room, dining room, family room, bedroom); ceiling pendant (living room, dining room, foyer); floor lamps (living room, nursery); reading lamp (living room)
through furniture from scandinavia: items from fredericia, house of finn juhl, gubi, carl hansen & sØn, louis poulsen, and &tradition

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Ghislaine Viñas Creates a Calm Yet Vibrant Getaway in Palm Beach, Florida https://interiordesign.net/projects/ghislaine-vinas-creates-a-calm-yet-vibrant-getaway-in-palm-beach-florida/ Thu, 26 Aug 2021 18:30:24 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=187088 Ghislaine Viñas creates a calm yet vibrant Palm Beach, Florida, getaway that celebrates the beauty of the Atlantic Ocean.

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Viñas designed TriBecCa, the wool rug that anchors the living area seating group, which is serviced by a custom bleached-ash coffee table and Ultrasuede-covered Taiko poufs by Tomoko Mizu.
Viñas designed TriBecCa, the wool rug that anchors the living area seating group, which is serviced by a custom bleached-ash coffee table and Ultrasuede-covered Taiko poufs by Tomoko Mizu.

Ghislaine Viñas Creates a Calm Yet Vibrant Getaway in Palm Beach, Florida

With the constant drama of crashing waves right outside, creating a beachfront home that feels restful can prove surprisingly challenging. But New York–based interior designer Ghislaine Viñas ran with that sense of theater at this 3,900-square-foot ground-floor condo in Palm Beach, Florida, artfully drawing in the colors and movement of the water visible at every turn through floor-to-ceiling windows.

This is Viñas’s second project for the clients, the first being their Manhattan apartment. (A third project is also underway.) The owners, a married couple with two teenagers, wanted a getaway where they could relax and spend time with relatives, many of whom live in the area. Because of their past collaboration, Viñas was able to nail the brief right out of the gate. “They wanted a feeling of joyfulness and relaxation—but in an energetic sort of way,” the designer says. Comfort, she adds, was paramount. She also knows the clients to be modernists with an abiding love of midcentury furniture; the wife grew up with Arne Jacobsen Egg chairs, Eero Saarinen Womb chairs, and many other iconic pieces in her childhood home. And because this is a beach house, everything had to be easy to upkeep. “It’s supposed to be a stress-free living environment—it’s not supposed to be fussy!” Viñas says.

A custom mirror and Menghan Qi’s Audrey’s Landscape animate the hallway leading to the primary bedroom.
A custom mirror and Menghan Qi’s Audrey’s Landscape animate the hallway leading to the primary bedroom.

Although the living area’s coffered ceiling was deemed worthy of preservation, one element original to the 1980s condominium that absolutely needed to go was the “hideous” dark-cherry woodwork in the kitchen and bathrooms, which felt very heavy and contrary to the open and airy atmosphere Viñas was aiming for: “We cleaned out everything and created a fresh, white, invigorating space.” She left stonelike ceramic-tile floors in some rooms, including the living area, but specified white-ash planks for the three bedrooms and installed new baseboards and architectural lighting throughout. She also opened up the kitchen to the public areas and added an eating bar with high stools—perfect for breakfasting, lunching, and general hanging out. Shaker detailing on the cabinetry doors echoes the gridlike coffers overhead. “It’s not a look-at-me kind of project, so the little details are important,” Viñas explains.

As for the palette, the clean white base is spiked with serene oceanic blues, soft corals, and moments of terra-cotta, plus Viñas judiciously placed more intense accents throughout. The wife loves bold hues, especially when they jump from warm to cold tones. Viñas accomplished this chromatic sleight of hand by letting artwork and a few carefully chosen pieces do the heavy lifting. For example, the custom-colored yellow poufs in the living room and a series of hanging lamps in the octagonal entryway, the rainbow shades of which were woven using recycled soda bottles as a sort of armature.

Viñas’s Sir Stripe-a-lot Sunbrella acrylic-polyester accents Mathilda dining chairs by Patricia Urquiola; above the credenza hangs Fox’s Grandma’s Lamp.
Viñas’s Sir Stripe-a-lot Sunbrella acrylic-polyester accents Mathilda dining chairs by Patricia Urquiola; above the credenza hangs Fox’s Grandma’s Lamp.

Just below that fixture, the classic Saarinen laminate-top pedestal table was a natural choice given the wife’s love of the classics. It softens the room’s hard edges, as do the round ombré rug and custom crescent-shape wall-mounted consoles. “The repetition of circular forms is very pleasing and relaxing,” the designer observes. Ditto the pair of paintings by Ludwig Favre that Viñas describes as “other-worldly underwater-y”: fantastical compositions of tropical leaves mixed with flashes of bright color.

Comfort was taken to what some might call an extreme: The clients asked to test-drive every chair and sofa before they agreed to live with it. (The Egg chairs, of course, didn’t need to interview for the position.) Wherever possible, Viñas used performance fabrics for seating upholstery, many from her own line for HBF Textiles. The L-shape sectional in the living room—substantial and deep enough to provide plenty of room for family gatherings—is clad in her Sister Solid polyester-acrylic, while dining room chairs sport her Sir Stripe-a-lot Sunbrella.

In the middle of the apartment, Viñas created a cozy media room, which can be shut off with glass doors to provide privacy without skewing cavelike. Two walls are dressed in another of her designs, Wild Thing for Flavor Paper, a tropical-leaf motif that can, in certain colorways, be quite wild indeed. Here, though, Viñas specified a custom shade—a subdued sand—which allowed her to introduce riotous pattern without overwhelming the smallish space.

The primary bedroom started with the view; namely, “how the color of the ocean changes all the time as the sun hits it,” Viñas reports. “And how, when the sun goes down, it transforms from green to blue in a really beautiful way.” She pulled those hues into the carpet (Vestry Street, one of her designs for Aronson’s) and lounge chairs (upholstered in a blue-and-coral stripe) and even the ombré walls, which transition from soft blue to white. “The room has a beautiful tranquil feeling,” she says, stating the obvious.

Although everything is done with great subtlety, the overall effect is quite striking, a sophisticated yet unpretentious take on the prototypical beach house. “It is definitely the kind of place,” she notes, “where, when you walk in, you say, ‘Oh my gosh, I’m so glad I’m here; it makes me feel good.’”

The entryway’s PET lamps provide a full range of vibrant color, while an ombré rug and console, both custom, soften the octagonal space; Ludwig Favre’s Hollywood Wildlife graces the walls.
The entryway’s PET lamps provide a full range of vibrant color, while an ombré rug and console, both custom, soften the octagonal space; Ludwig Favre’s Hollywood Wildlife graces the walls.
project Team
george beaver: general contractor/builder
custom cabinetry: woodwork
Product sources
aronson’s floor covering: custom rugs (living area, primary bedroom, entry, media lounge)
republic of fritz hansen: egg chairs
designtex: fabric (living area)
Property Furniture: poufs
Knoll Textiles: fabric
ligne roset: sectional (living area), sleeper sofa (media lounge)
hbf textiles: sectional fabric (living area); chair fabric (dining area)
interiors by laura: custom head-board fabrication (boy’s and girl’s bedrooms)
nectar: bed bases (boy’s and girl’s bedrooms)
febrik: bed and headboard fabric (boy’s bedroom)
the rug company: custom rugs (boy’s and girl’s bedrooms, entry)
cappellini: cabinet (dining area)
moroso: chairs
edelman leather: seat leather
dualoy leather: arm strap leather
material through scandinavian spaces: table
romo: headboard fabric (girl’s bedroom)
serena and lily: hanging chair
cowtan and tout: cushion fabric
zero through global lighting: sconces
flavor paper: wallpaper (girl’s bedroom, media lounge)
rich brilliant willing: chandelier (kitchen)
i colori through stone source: backsplash tiles
Design Within Reach: stools
richard schultz through knoll: chairs (patio)
acdo álvaro catalán de ocón through for me lab: lighting pendants (entry)
knoll through design within reach: table
regeneration: credenza (primary bedroom)
calico: wallpaper
rh: platform bed
perennials: upholstery
knoll through evensonbest: bench
herman miller through design within reach: lounge chairs
Janus et Cie: fabric
lekker home: side table
louis poulsen through ylighting: table lamps
kvadrat: curtain fabric
vitra: lounge chair
david sutherland: fabric
lepere: side tables
THROUGHOUT
collector nyc: ustom consoles (entry, hall); custom coffee table (living area); custom bedside tables (primary bedroom); custom mirror (hall)
artstar; scad artsales: artwork

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