Archinect
Resolution: 4 Architecture

Resolution: 4 Architecture

New York, NY

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Steele Residence

Date of Completion: 2004
Square Footage: 1,650 sf
Construction Cost: $400,000

Materials: Floor: 3-1/4” ebonized oak, slate tile.  Walls: painted gypsum board, black steel base, maple veneer plywood, white back painted glass, stainless steel, limestone tile. Ceiling: painted concrete, gypsum board. Cabinetry: maple veneer, white lacquer, Baltic birch. Doors: custom maple and frosted glass, stainless steel and frosted glass.

 

The Steele Residence project is a complete gut renovation of an apartment for a couple returning to the city after long careers in Chicago.  The couple, recently retired, but still active in various community oriented projects throughout the country sought a design that reflected this phase of their lives. 

The primary organizational strategy for the apartment is a central utility island that contains parts of the kitchen, mechanical and storage.  This core, expressed as a maple volume, is the center of which all the elements of the apartment rotate around.  The public areas such as the living room, entry and gallery are located more central to the core and bedrooms and offices further away.  This rotation is further accentuated by the manipulation of the ceiling plane.  Soffits that compress the private spaces open up to full ceiling heights at the public areas and curve directionally around the central core.

The rotation of space sets up several organizational axes that provide multiple and unique focal points.  Several of these center on various portions of a custom built-in “art” wall that encompasses an entire side of the living/dining room.  Each axis creates movement around the space into the next. Large custom maple, steel and glass doors are utilized to provide various degrees of privacy, screening various areas or even becoming the focal point while maintaining an openness throughout the space with light.

 
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Status: Built
Location: Brooklyn, NY, US
Firm Role: Architect
Additional Credits: Architects: Joseph Tanney, Robert Luntz
Project Architect: John Kim
Contractor: Isernia Construction
AV Consultant: Harvey
Photographer: © Floto + Warner