Archinect
Resolution: 4 Architecture

Resolution: 4 Architecture

New York, NY

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Loft of Frank and Amy

Program:
Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 3
Features: Writing Room, Open Loft Living, Dining & Kitchen

Materials: Concrete Floors, Slate Bathroom Floors, Imperial Black Granite & Teak Countertops, Maple & White Lacquer Cabinets, Hot Rolled Black Steel Cladding, Slate Tile, Durock & OSB Walls

Furniture: Bedroom; lounge chair by Paolo Deganello for Cassina, Kartell drum table, circa 1946 American bedside table, Kitchen/Living/Dining; box construction by Droog Design through Moss, Nakashima sofa w/red wool blend, Ettore Sottsass Pre Memphis Wiggle Table, Andrea Branzi’s stacked disk sculpture, Fred Silverman Pendant Light, Lacquered cube furniture

Designed for a writer and a film editor, the Loft of Frank and Amy is a bare, wide-open play space in New York City’s gritty Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood. Located in a former industrial building, the loft occupies an entire floor with full window exposure and dynamic urban views on three sides.  The design enhances this industrial context by posing new construction as a single sculptural intervention within this existing space. This intervention becomes a compressed box of utility (containing the kitchen, mechanical and supportive spaces) that divides the public and private areas of the loft.  A primary feature of the box is a series of huge sliding doors that can open the entire perimeter of the loft, or conversely, can extend to the exterior walls to close off the bedrooms. 

 
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Status: Built
Location: New York, NY, US
Firm Role: test