Architectural Digest USA - December 2023
Architectural Digest USA - December 2023
WORKS
OF ART
visionary
homes
around
the world
S TA R B U R S T
A Viking Longship near Aschaffenburg, Germany
#1 for Oceans…
Onwards.
Now it is time for us to work even harder.
86 French Evolution
Years in the making, the longtime
Paris flat of AD100 duo Luis
Laplace and Christophe Comoy
finally gets the makeover
it deserves. BY ALICE CAVANAGH
94 Hot House
Artist Daniel Arsham revs up
the decor—and scores impressive
parking—at a decommissioned
firehouse in Lower Manhattan.
BY GAY GASSMANN
122
A CORNER OF AN ART-
FILLED HOME IN THE
102 Riding High
The Archers help a New York
transplant fulfill his California
HOLLYWOOD HILLS.
fantasy in a quintessentially LA
compound floating above the
city streets. BY MAYER RUS
ON THE COVER A LAKESIDE HOUSE IN THE AUSTRIAN ALPS DESIGNED BY REM KOOLHAAS.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PERNILLE LOOF & THOMAS LOOF. STYLING BY MARVIN UNGER.
12 AR C H D I GES T.COM
CONTENTS december
FOLLOW @ARCHDIGEST
ARCHITECTURAL DIGEST
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TURNED RESIDENCE IN NYC.
14 A R C H D I G E S T.COM
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editor’s letter 1
AMY ASTLEY
Global Editorial Director
and Editor in Chief, AD U.S.
@amyastley
A
fter the Moroccan-born French artist Nicola L.
began sketching eyes in the late 1960s, it was
her Belgian friend Marcel Broodthaers who
helped her turn them into lamps. Broodthaers,
1, MARK ROSKAMS. 2. © NICOLA L. COLLECTION AND ARCHIVE. 3. MICHAEL BRZEZINSKI/COURTESY OF ALISON JACQUES LONDON
who had been making artworks from thin,
vacuum-formed plastic, brought Nicola to his
5
Antwerp factory, where she produced an edition of 50
visionary lights: A bulb encased by a blue, green, or brown
4 1. A PENDANT VERSION iris, with a movable lid-shade, was mounted on a steel rod.
OF NICOLA L.’S EYE LAMP
IN ARTIST DOUG MEYER’S
Years later, in 2008, she would create pendants, table lamps,
MIAMI BEACH ABODE. and sconces for Galerie Pierre Alain-Challier in Paris.
2. NICOLA WITH AN EYE
TABLE LAMP AT GALERIE
The Eye Lamp joined Nicola’s ongoing series of body-furnishings—vinyl
AND NICOLA L. COLLECTION AND ARCHIVE. 4. LIZZIE SOUFLERIS. 5. STEPHEN KENT JOHNSON.
PIERRE ALAIN-CHALLIER
IN 2008. 3. BLUE EYE
LAMP, 1969/1990.
4. NICOLA L.: LIFE AND
ART, PUBLISHED BY
APARTAMENTO. 5. ADAM
CHARLAP HYMAN’S
MANHATTAN PAD.
3
—HANNAH MARTIN
T H E M O S T M E M O R A B L E D AY S S TA R T AT S U N S E T
T H E D I S COV E RY O F A LI FE TI M E
AT L A N T I S B A H A M A S . C O M
DISCOVERIES
THE BEST IN SHOPPING, DESIGN, AND STYLE EDITED BY SAM COCHRAN
AD VISITS
collector’s eye,” says her husband, Sotheby’s CEO Charles working as a fashion buyer, she began pursuing interiors
Stewart. “She’s thinking about timeless beauty, timeless design.” projects, steadily building up her practice before founding
Heil Stewart grew up surrounded by design in São Paulo, her firm, StudioCAHS, in 2013.
where her grandfather and mother were both architects. At her home on the Upper East Side, just steps from Central
Ultimately, she followed in her father’s footsteps and became Park, Heil Stewart has offset traditional 19th-century details
24 A R C H D I GES T.COM
Designers, epicureans, and guests.
The French door that satisfies them all.
SignatureKitchenSuite.com
Copyright 2023© Signature Kitchen Suite, 111 Sylvan Ave., Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632. All rights reserved. “Signature Kitchen Suite” and the Signature Kitchen Suite logo are trademarks of Signature Kitchen Suite.
DISCOVERIES 1
26 AR C H D I G E S T.COM
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This season’s best gifts bring
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MAGIC MUSHROOM SHERWOOD LOG SIX. PORTA-NYC.COM
DINNER PLATE; $220. CARRIER; $950.
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NATURAL WONDERS
Botanical treasures, verdant touches, and garden
inspiration for the green-thumbed. Shown is
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MURANO GLASS
WINE PITCHER;
$1,125. DOLCE
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FLEURETTE EARRINGS
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Beauty must-haves, organic objects, and feel-good
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BOVISA ROBE;
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LOROPIANA.COM
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HAIR DRYER;
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32 A R C H D I GES T.COM
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An Exhibition and Sale
October 19 through December 29, 2023
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48 A R C H D I G E S T.COM
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LEISURE CLASS
Dapper diversions for creative minds at play.
Shown is a Wisconsin billiards room by
Emma Burns of Sibyl Colefax & John Fowler.
BERLIN OLIVE
WOOD BALLPOINT
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FESSELER; $210.
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50 A R C H D I GES T.COM
DISCOVERIES
SAMUEL ROSS WITH
WORKS IN PROGRESS AT
HIS LONDON INDUSTRIAL-
DESIGN ATELIER, WHICH
IS SET WITHIN THE
BRUTALIST COMPLEX
180 STUDIOS.
S
tep inside the London industrial-design work-
shop of Samuel Ross, and one thing immediately
becomes clear: He really likes orange. Here,
DESIGN within the Brutalist walls of 180 Studios, it’s
everywhere—the shade of a traffic cone—from
Shape Shifter his metal shelving to his model for the electric
motorbike company Cake. Now that hue reappears in his
new limited-edition faucet for Kohler, a prototype of which
Mining the materials, can be found amid the flotsam and jetsam of his workspace,
in advance of its Design Miami debut.
forms, and colors “People are used to seeing this color,” Ross explains. “It’s
of industry, Samuel Ross democratic in the way that it cuts through any type of environ-
SERENA BROWN
52 AR C H D I GES T.COM
Modèle N° 2060 A S
Since a Century,
OUR PASSION HAS BEEN TO CREATE
EXCEPTIONAL DESIGNS IN LIGHTING
MADE IN FRANCE
info@perzel.com
www.perzel.fr
DISCOVERIES
Ross is best known for his cult streetwear line, A-Cold-Wall*,
which gives intellectual twists to workwear staples. But he’s
also designed products for global brands like Apple and Hublot,
mounted a solo show of fine art at White Cube gallery, and
devised collectible furniture for Friedman Benda—juxtaposing
industrial forms of concrete, steel, and granite with unconven-
tional finishes like a turmeric rub or milk-and-honey patina.
Meanwhile, he’s advocated for creatives of color through his
Black British Artist Grants initiative. It’s all related, he says,
like “different ligaments or nodes across the body.” That
connective tissue, you might say, is the language of utility:
relatable shapes and materials that comment 1
54 A R C H D I GES T.COM
LEICA CINE 1
The Art of Home Cinema.
Feel closer to every scene with Leica Cine 1, the ultra-short throw laser projector that combines
Leica precision optics with advanced laser technology to turn a room into a work of art.
SHOWROOMS
Miami Heat
Ralph Pucci’s new Florida
emporium captures
the optimism and energy
1. & 4. JUAN PABLO CASTRO. ART: ELIZABETH GAROUSTE/RALPH PUCCI. 2. & 3. COURTESY OF RALPH PUCCI.
of Wynwood
R
alph Pucci is betting on Miami,
specifically the burgeoning Wynwood
neighborhood. “It’s not as commer-
cial as South Beach and not quite as
polished as the Design District. It has
the right vibe for Pucci,” says the
4
zeitgeist-surfing furniture impresario. Two years ago,
after nearly a decade of doing business in the area,
Pucci made a long-term commitment to Wynwood
with the purchase of a 10,000-square-foot former Pucci says of the extensive renovation, in which sleek 1. AN INSTALLATION
OF ELIZABETH
warehouse, set to open as his Florida showroom elements like high-gloss white epoxy floors mix with GAROUSTE DESIGNS
during this year’s edition of Art Basel Miami Beach. remnants of the structure’s grittier past. “I love seeing AT THE NEW RALPH
PUCCI INTERNATIONAL
The new location, situated alongside the home of the furniture—these incredible things by Hervé Van GALLERY IN MIAMI.
the Margulies Collection, won’t be hard to find—a der Straeten, India Mahdavi, Patrick Naggar, and 2. HERVÉ VAN DER
STRAETEN’S LUSTRE
mural by designer Elizabeth Garouste, spanning the all the others—reflected in what looks like a mirror CANDY PENDANT.
building’s entire 100-foot-wide façade, announces of white glass,” he adds. “And I’m excited about the 3. JOHN WIGMORE’S
CHROMA #1 SCONCE.
Pucci’s bold creative spirit in no uncertain terms. synergies with the Margulies, which is one of the 4. THE FAÇADE’S
Next year, the ongoing mural program will feature great Miami cultural resources. I think many of our MURAL BY GAROUSTE.
the work of artist Ruben Toledo. customers will be excited to discover it, and I hope
“We tried to keep the soul of the warehouse intact— their visitors will discover Pucci. I have high hopes
a touch of cool, a touch of rough, a touch of elegance,” for this street.” ralphpucci.com —MAYER RUS
56 AR C H D I GES T.COM
UNWIND
TEAKWAREHOUSE.COM
DISCOVERIES
1
2
DEBUT
A Knight’s Tale
Lauren Santo Domingo brandishes
a coat of arms for Tiffany & Co.’s
latest tableware collection
E
arlier this year, when Lauren Santo Domingo arrived at
Tiffany & Co. as the brand’s new artistic director for its
home category, the first thing she did was research. Delving
into the archives, she immersed herself in company lore,
from its 1837 origin story through 20th-century reinventions
by the likes of jewelry maestro Jean Schlumberger and
Bean progenitor Elsa Peretti. But she also had her own creative sword to
wield. “I asked if Tiffany had a crest,” recalls Santo Domingo, who has
long collected antique European armorial ware, a form of traditional china
4 emblazoned with a family’s coat of arms. When she discovered Tiffany
did not, she says, “we began the process of creating one from scratch.”
Her interpretation—now the basis of the Tiffany Crest tableware
collection—celebrates brand iconography, with a shield that riffs on Bird
on a Rock, Schlumberger’s famous 1960s brooch. Four quadrants reveal
other legacy motifs, among them dragonflies, diamonds, and silversmith
tools. There are also maple leaves, which, like the blue-and-orange palette,
pay homage to Tiffany’s New York City roots. At its center, meanwhile,
flanked by the year 1837, is a stylized T in an archival font. “And no crest
would be complete without a family motto,” notes Santo Domingo, who
chose Reverter ad Tiffany, or “Return to Tiffany” in Latin.
And return shoppers shall. The launch of the Crest collection comes
during a larger renaissance for the brand, which opened the doors to its
transformed Fifth Avenue flagship in April. Amid this momentum, Santo
Domingo sees an opportunity for Tiffany to reassert its dominance in
the world of home accessories, particularly with regard to formal dinner-
COURTESY OF TIFFANY & CO.
ware. “When it comes to china, there haven’t been new options,” she says,
3 alluding to today’s predictable registry patterns. For Santo Domingo,
the line also takes on personal meaning as her family’s new china pattern
1. TIFFANY CREST DESSERT PLATE IN BLUE BONE CHINA
at home in Manhattan. “What’s selfishly most exciting for me, having
WITH GOLD ACCENTS. 2. LAUREN SANTO DOMINGO, collected armorial china for so long, is the opportunity to own a complete
ARTISTIC DIRECTOR OF THE BRAND’S HOME CATEGORY.
3. THE BRAND’S NEW COAT OF ARMS. 4. TIFFANY
set,” she says. “This will be the one that is seared into my children’s
CREST DINNER PLATE. 5. BIRD ON A ROCK BROOCH. memories.” tiffany.com —SAM COCHRAN
58 A R C H D I GES T.COM
D-Safavid Reverie wallpaper. Coordinating Safavid fabrics on ceiling, curtains, and upholstery. Interior design by Mark D. Sikes.
IKSEL.COM
1. AT THE HISTORIC
FAMILY HOME OF LOUIS
VUITTON IN ASNIÈRES-
SUR-SEINE, FRANCE, AN
ART NOUVEAU ADDITION
EXTENDS FROM THE
ORIGINAL WHITE-STUCCO
HOUSE. 2. A BAY OF
FRAMES AN ARCHIVAL
MONOGRAM TRUNK.
3. LOUIS VUITTON MAISON
1 DE FAMILLE BAG.
HISTORIC HOUSES
ucked in the Paris suburb of Asnières- Williams, as well as an active celebration of the
Top left: Questa è Acqua © Patrick Hurst (2023); 316 stainless steel; from a unique series of 5 plus proofs; 88.75 x 53.25 x 37.5 in (225 x 135 x 95 cm)
Top center and bottom left: Nesoi © Spiller + Cameron (2023); Mixed media, 49.75 x 40.875 in (126.37 x 103.82 cm) (framed)
Top and bottom right: I Will Rise © Nicola Anthony (2023); Marine grade stainless steel suspended by wire; 67 x 39.4 x 39.4 in (170 x 100 x 100 cm)
The above artists are represented in the United States by Long-Sharp Gallery.
1
GIFTABLE:
A BLANKET FOR THIS
HOLIDAY SEASON
A Footsac may look like an ordinary,
ultra-plush, cozy, comfy blanket. But
with a built-in pocket for your feet, it’s
so much more. And whether you’re HOTELS
shopping for someone on your list
or getting something just for you,
Footsacs make an amazing gift. So
Paris in
don’t leave any feet out in the cold—get
a stylish Footsac that can keep your
toes warm in any season.
Bloom
To create the palette for
the new Hôtel de la Boétie
3 in Paris, Beata Heuman
started as she would with
any residential project.
“We select a few key elements and build from there,” reflects the AD100
designer, beloved for her unerring if unexpected way with color. In the
case of La Boétie, the latest from the hit hospitality group Touriste, those
tentpole touches include statement headboards in the style of flat-weave
rugs, grass-green carpets, and—in lieu of conventional crisp white linens—
SIMON BROWN. ART: KIRSTY LACKIE.
pink sheets and towels. “They make such a difference,” notes Heuman
of her rosy selects, which play off rustic curtains of her own Potato Sack
jute (part of a just-launched fabric line) and benches upholstered in bold
gingham checks. Wall and tile hues lighten from lower floors to upper.
“We wanted the space to feel like an escape from the hustle and bustle,”
she says, alluding to its location in the 8th arrondissement. Opened in
September, La Boétie marks the first hotel project for Heuman, who was
drawn to Touriste’s designer-driven approach to accessible accommodations.
(Prices begin at $265 a night.) The experience only whet her hospitality
Shop our full line of appetite. “With a hotel, there’s a sense of theater,” she says. “It’s quite fun
to be given that freedom.” hoteldelaboetie.com —SAM COCHRAN
Footsac Blankets at Lovesac.com
Future residences located at:
10245 Collins Avenue, Bal Harbour, FL 33154
ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER. FOR CORRECT
REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES,
TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE.
New York Residents: THE COMPLETE OFFERING TERMS ARE FOUND IN A CPS-12 APPLICATION AVAILABLE FROM THE OFFEROR.
FILE NO FILE NO. CP23-0060.
WARNING: THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF REAL ESTATE HAS NOT INSPECTED, EXAMINED, OR QUALIFIED THIS OFFERING.
THIS CONDOMINIUM HAS ALSO BEEN REGISTERED WITH THE MASSACHUSETTS BOARD OF REGISTRATION OF REAL ESTATE BROKERS AND
SALESPERSONS F-1284-01-01.
RIVAGE BAL HARBOUR CONDOMINIUM is developed by Carlton Terrace Owner LLC (“Developer” or “Offeror”). This offering is made only by the
Developer’s Prospectus for the Condominium. Consult the Developer’s Prospectus for the proposed budget, terms, conditions, specifications,
fees, and Unit dimensions. Sketches, renderings, or photographs depicting use of space, design, furnishings, lifestyle, amenities, food services,
club services, rental services, hosting services, finishes, materials, fixtures, appliances, cabinetry, soffits, lighting, countertops, floor plans, or art
are proposed only, and the Developer reserves the right to modify or withdraw the same in its sole discretion. No specific view is guaranteed. No
specific use of space is guaranteed. Pursuant to license agreements, Developer has a right to use the trade names, marks, and logos of: (1) The
Related Group; and (2) Two Roads Development, each of which is a licensor. This is not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer
to buy, condominium units to residents of any jurisdiction were prohibited by law. 2023 © Carlton Terrace Owner LLC, with all rights reserved.
DISCOVERIES 1
ONE TO WATCH
Out of
the Ordinary
Mining the everyday,
Ryan Preciado sparks 3
creative conversations
I
t’s a chaotic environment, but I like that,”
SON, 2023. 3. CHUMASH CHAIR, 2019.
NEW FEELING (BABY BLUE), 2023.
Los Angeles shop where he paints his some-
times functional sculptures. “We’re always
moving things around. Cars come in and out.
66 AR C H D I GES T.COM
ANGEL SKIN
Sustainable precious coral,
of superlative quality and rarity.
A miraculous marvel of nature,
fashioned with passion and style.
ORAL REPRESENTATIONS CANNOT BE RELIED UPON AS CORRECTLY STATING REPRESENTATIONS OF THE DEVELOPER.
FOR CORRECT REPRESENTATIONS, MAKE REFERENCE TO THIS BROCHURE AND TO THE DOCUMENTS REQUIRED
BY SECTION 718.503, FLORIDA STATUTES, TO BE FURNISHED BY A DEVELOPER TO A BUYER OR LESSEE. ARTIST’S
CONCEPTUAL RENDERING; SURROUNDING BUILDINGS AND LANDMARKS MODIFIED OR OMITTED. THE COMPLETE
OFFERING TERMS ARE IN A CPS-12 APPLICATION AVAILABLE FROM THE OFFEROR. FILE NO. CP23-0071. WARNING: THE
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF REAL ESTATE HAS NOT INSPECTED, EXAMINED, OR QUALIFIED THIS OFFERING.
St. Regis Residences, Miami a/k/a 1809 Brickell Condominium.
The St. Regis Residences, Miami is developed by 1809 Brickell Property Owner, LLC (“Developer”). The St. Regis Residences, Miami is not owned, developed,
or sold by Marriott International, Inc. or its affiliates (“Marriott”). Developer uses the St. Regis marks under a license from Marriott, which has not confirmed
the accuracy of any of the statements or representations made about the project by Developer. Developer also uses the trade names, marks, and logos of
licensors: (1) The Related Group; and (2) Integra Investments, LLC. None of the licensors is the Developer. The Developer is not incorporated in, located in, nor
resident of, New York. This is not intended to be an offer to sell, or solicitation of an offer to buy, condominium units in New York or to residents of New York,
or of any other jurisdiction were prohibited by law. Consult the Developer’s Prospectus to understand this offering, the amenities specific to each tower, the
proposed budgets, terms, conditions, specifications, fees, Unit dimensions and method for calculation, site plans, and to learn what is included with purchase
and by payment of regular assessments. All prices are subject to change at any time and without notice, and do not include optional features or premiums for
upgrades. 2023© 1809 Brickell Property Owner, LLC.
THE MONOCHROME LOOK— WHERE ELEGANCE MEETS SIMPLICITY
VISPRING.COM
A CENTURY OF STYLE
From editor-in-chief Amy Astley and Architectural Digest, AD at 100
FROM LEFT: ANTHONY COTSIFAS; JASON SCHMIDT; OBERTO GILI
Marc Jacobs, Jennifer Aniston, Diana Vreeland, India Mahdavi, Peter Marino,
Kelly Wearstler, Oscar Niemeyer, Axel Vervoordt, Frank Lloyd Wright, Elsie de Wolfe,
abramsbooks.com/AD100
E legance handmade
since c r e at o r o f t h e m o s t b e a u t i f u l ru g s i n t h e w o r l d
c u s to m | co n t e m p o r a ry | t r a d i t i o na l | AU BU S S O N | S AVO N N E R I E | T I B E TA N | A N T I Q U E
1975 5 0 E n t e r p r i s e Av e N, S e c au c u s , N J 0 7 0 9 4 | 2 0 1 - 6 0 1 - 0 0 4 0 | s a l e s @ b o k a r a . co m B O K A R A . CO M
uncomm
In a departure from
the megaprojects
that have made his
name, Rem Koolhaas
crafts a minimalist
lakeside house for
an Austrian family
TEXT BY PHILLIP DENNY
PHOTOGRAPHY BY PERNILLE LOOF & THOMAS LOOF
STYLED BY MARVIN UNGER
ON THE FIRST LEVEL, A MONUMENTALLY SCALED SASH WINDOW OPENS ONTO A TERRACE WHERE
A RIMINI DECK CHAIR BY JAN KURTZ TAKES IN THE ALPINE VISTA ACROSS THE LAKE.
IN THE KITCHEN, CUSTOM STAINLESS-STEEL CABINETS HANG ON OKOUME WOOD PANELS. LINEAR LED LAMPS ARE
t
EMBEDDED IN THE CONCRETE WALLS AND CEILING. TABLE AND CHAIRS BY EERO SAARINEN FOR KNOLL;
RUG BY RUGVISTA; CUTTING BOARD BY MULLER VAN SEVEREN FOR VALERIE OBJECTS; NYMPHENBURG VASE AND BOWL.
he weather changes quickly on the Austrian Metropolitan Architecture. Measured against Koolhaas’s
Zeller See. At daybreak, fog rises from the tran- considerable oeuvre, this comparatively small structure—
quil lake, creeping into the quiet village on its about 3,000 square feet—undoubtedly ranks among the
western shore. The midday sun pierces passing architect’s greatest investments of time-per-square-foot.
clouds, light and shadow playing in chiaroscuro Koolhaas presented his plans for the house in person
over the Alpine landscape. An afternoon sun at the town hall. “The city architect hailed it as the most
shower dampens the valley; rooftops glisten and significant building in Zell am See since the church,” the
the surface of the lake glimmers. client recalls. “St. Hippolyt was built in 1215.”
This is the scene witnessed from the First glimpsed from town, the house resembles an out-
Austrian House, the latest residence by Dutch cropping of white marble emerging from the hillside. After
architect Rem Koolhaas. It is his first built a winter snowfall, it is all but invisible. Slipped between two
house in almost three decades—his most recent, squat, Alpine-style buildings along a narrow drive, the struc-
the Maison à Bordeaux was completed in 1998; it was pre- ture occupies a steep site scarcely more than 40 feet wide,
ceded by the Dutch House in 1995, and the Villa dall’Ava in 1991. the former side yard of the house next door. After subtracting
All have been hailed as masterpieces. Created in close collabo- setbacks required by the local building code—a little over 13
ration with architect Federico Pompignoli, this home marks a feet on either side—the resulting mass is a narrow tower rising
surprising evolution in the career of one of the world’s most from the street, much of its bulk buried, like an iceberg, within
celebrated designers. the hillside. “How can an underground house enable the
Planning for this project began over a dinner six years ago. penetration of daylight and views that are crucial for living?”
No sooner had the client revealed he owned a microscopic, Koolhaas asks, neatly summarizing the project’s fundamental
perhaps unbuildable, hillside plot near his hometown, than contradiction. “It meant that the section of the house was
Koolhaas proposed a project, intrigued by the challenge. It was critical,” he continues, referring to the structure’s intricately
a relief, the client recalls, from the megaprojects that have stacked levels. Aboveground, the house’s white concrete
become standard fare for Koolhaas’s firm OMA, the Office for has a lustrous finish that looks and feels like fine porcelain.
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 77
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE EMBEDDED IN THE GAP. A
PEDRALI VOLT CHAIRS BON BON TABLE BY STUDIO
SURROUND A TULIP TABLE SUPEREGO STANDS IN FRONT
ON THE THIRD LEVEL’S OF AN ERNST AMBÜHLER
TERRACE. THE WHITE RESIN DAYBED/SOFA IN THE DOUBLE-
STAIRCASE RISES ALONGSIDE HEIGHT LIVING AREA
ALUMINUM-PAPER-COVERED ON THE FIRST LEVEL. RUG
WALLS; LED LIGHTING IS BY KVADRAT.
THE BOTTOM OF THE HOUSE sits at street level. Turning a Twin guest suites—two snug bedrooms with plush faux-fur
key in the discreet entryway prompts the large metal door walls, each with its own wood-paneled bathroom—lie behind
to silently pivot inward, revealing three-and-a-half flights of the sitting room, burrowed into the hillside.
stairs rising straight ahead, parallel to, but never touching, On the next landing, a pair of wooden boxes jut from
a luminous wall covered in what resembles insulation foil and the concrete wall; entering the third level reveals them to be
evokes Andy Warhol’s aluminum-foil-lined Factory. To the the backsides of kitchen cabinets. At the lakeside end of the
left, a room lined in warm okoume wood offers a place to store space, a wood-faced wall serves as the backdrop for a stain-
ski boots and jackets. Here, street shoes are traded for soft felt less-steel kitchen with the cool polish of minimalist sculpture.
slippers, which also help to protect the home’s immaculate, An antique Suppenbrunzer—a blown-glass sphere containing
pale resin floors. a carved-wood dove, one of the homeowner’s prized posses-
Climbing the staircase is akin to an Alpine hike in minia- sions—is suspended above an oval Eero Saarinen–designed
ture: Each level of the house delivers a corresponding vista. Tulip dining table.
One flight up, rubber flaps divide the stairwell from a double- Across from the kitchen, the ceiling rises above a large
height sitting room. The tall space is framed by opposing upholstered bed strewn with cushions for lounging. To one
walls that loom like sheer cliffs. The floor runs outward to a side, structural glass plates support the translucent, pale-green
terrace. Inside and outside are divided by two broad panes grating of the floor above. On the other, a long skylight opens
of glass spanning the space’s full width. The turn of a hidden onto the upper yard. In one corner, a trapezoidal opening cut
knob causes the bottom panel to slide smoothly upward. high into the concrete walls offers a glimpse into the sauna
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 81
and adjacent shower. In the opposite corner, a short run of
steps leads up to a darkened corridor that tunnels deeper into
the hillside. A 90-degree turn at the end reveals a steep and
narrow staircase, and, at the landing, a solid door.
Crossing this threshold, the space stretches spectacularly
forward. Like stepping into a telescope, the house’s sawtooth
roofline rises and falls along its length, rhythmically pushing
one space into the next: bedroom to bath to living room to
terrace. The whole is startlingly spartan: A limited palette of
materials unifies the expanse, a contrast to the collage-like
quality of the architect’s early work. “I’ve become increasingly
skeptical of the compulsion to differentiate,” Koolhaas admits.
“I value reduction of the repertoire, but also the intensification
of experience.”
ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NY. © JOSEPHSOHN ESTATE AND KESSELHAUS JOSEPHSOHN ST.GALLEN. © RASHID JOHNSON.
JEAN-MICHEL FRANK; LAVASTONE COCKTAIL TABLE (CENTER) BY LAPLACE; ALUMINUM CURIAL CHAIR BY RICK OWENS.
ART: © PHYLLIDA BARLOW. BELA SILVA/SPAZIO NOBILE. © 2023 THE EASTON FOUNDATION / LICENSED BY VAGA AT
a
88
s the in-demand architect for
art institutions such as Hauser
& Wirth and an ever-constant
slew of private commissions
stretching from Majorca to
Mexico, it took Luis Laplace
and his partner in life and
business, Christophe Comoy,
15 years to find the time to
fully renovate their own home,
in Paris’s 9th arrondissement.
The couple moved into the
2,000-square-foot apartment on the elegant Place Saint-Georges
in 2007 and worked from here until they expanded their
offices to the twin building next door, where their AD100 firm
is now spread over three floors.
Constructed in the Haussmannian style, much of their two-
bedroom home retains its original flamboyance with a series
of bombastic reception rooms decked out with herringbone
floors, wainscoting, and soaring 11-foot ceilings with elaborate
moldings. It’s in step with its neighbors on the historic square:
Next door is an ornate neo-Gothic meets neo-Renaissance
A R C H D I G E S T.COM
mansion that was once home to the infamous French cour-
tesan known as La Païva, and opposite is a grand hôtel
particulier rebuilt in 1873 for the first president of the Third
Republic, Adolphe Thiers, and now housing the Dosne-Thiers
Foundation, a resource library on French history.
“The apartment has a lot of personality. The reception
rooms are very ornamental, almost vulgar—but it would have
been a shame to impose ourselves or create something con-
temporary,” Laplace says of the existing trappings, which the
couple have juxtaposed in their typical elegant and engaging
style, mixing antiques and contemporary furniture by Laplace
with artworks by friends like Cindy Sherman, Keith Tyson,
Martin Creed, and Rashid Johnson.
To create more intimacy and highlight the four distinct
living and entertaining areas that flow off the hallway, Laplace
and Comoy chose to forgo the original enfilade layout between
the rooms and block the doors. The largest of these rooms now
serves as a welcoming salon that highlights their collector
sensibility with the kind of antique gems—the type collectors
wait decades to snap up—their clients seek them out for.
(Sourcing such special antiques for clients is a growing aspect
of their interior business).
A DAUM VASE AND A
PLASTER EAGLE BY
MARCEL LÉMAR, BOTH
FROM THE 1930s, STAND
ON THE MANTEL. THE
1920s COBRA ANDIRONS
ARE BY EDGAR BRANDT.
A TALL VASE BY GEORGES
JOUVE FROM THE 1940s
STANDS ON THE FLOOR
UNDER A PAINTING
BY PHYLLIDA BARLOW.
A NEON WORK BY MARTIN CREED GLOWS
IN THE DINING ROOM. THE WALNUT AND
MARBLE TABLE AND PENDANT LIGHT ARE
BY LAPLACE DESIGN. THE 1960s CHAIRS
ARE CUSHIONED IN A PIERRE FREY VELVET.
ABOVE LUIS LAPLACE AND
CHRISTOPHE COMOY. RIGHT IN
THE STUDY, A 1950s JEAN
TOURET CARVED OAK SIDEBOARD
HOLDS VARIOUS OBJETS D’ART.
1955 MATHIEU MATÉGOT FLOOR
LAMP; 1967 VICO MAGISTRETTI
PENTACLINIO HANGING LIGHT.
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 91
“Having
objects
around is like
being
surrounded
by friends.”
THREE PIECES BY
PHYLLIDA BARLOW
HANG IN THE BEDROOM.
LAPLACE DESIGN BED;
1960s VICO MAGISTRETTI
CEILING LIGHT; 1950s
FULVIO BIANCONI FLOOR
LAMP FOR VENINI.
the gilded ceiling in an effect that evokes a decadent block of to sit in the center of the room and concealed the wall-to-wall
chocolate. Intimate dinner parties happen here under the glow closet with deep green curtains instead of installing doors.
of a flashing pink Martin Creed neon and around the Laplace- Colorful glazed lamps and a series of works by the British
designed red-marble-topped dining table. Lunch is often taken artist Phyllida Barlow, whose drawings have an architectural
in the work studio in the adjacent building, where there is quality, punctuate the space.
another fully equipped kitchen and a spacious dining area that Next door there is a modern 130-square-foot bath. Even
opens onto a sunlit garden. here, with a blank canvas, the couple married the best of today
with treasures of yesterday. Pieces include a bespoke patch-
WITH THAT SECOND AREA FOR ENTERTAINING, the couple work marble-clad shower designed by Laplace in “Mondrian
made peace with a small galley kitchen at home and decided style” and another of their rare acquisitions: a century-old,
to allocate more space to their private quarters, where they gilded-wood openwork suspension light by Armand-Albert
ART: © PHYLLIDA BARLOW.
have a bedroom and en suite overlooking the back courtyard. Rateau that was once owned by couturier Jeanne Lanvin and
This is where they carried out the most significant work: later by designer Karl Lagerfeld. This room, specifically the
removing a fireplace and stripping back cornices and orna- large freestanding tub, is Comoy’s happy place. “In the begin-
ments in favor of pure finishings. “It was important for it to ning, Luis thought the bathroom was a bit exaggerated because
feel laid-back, so we made these spaces more generous and the kitchen is small, but I love it, ” says Comoy, adding: “We
welcoming,” Laplace says. He designed a bed and headboard don’t always agree, but we agree on how to get there.”
92 AR C H D I GES T.COM
THE 1925 ARMAND-ALBERT
RATEAU GILTWOOD PENDANT
LIGHT IN THE BATH WAS
ORIGINALLY CREATED FOR
JEANNE LANVIN AND WAS LATER
OWNED BY KARL LAGERFELD.
TUB BY THE WATER MONOPOLY
WITH VOLEVATCH FITTINGS.
THE LIVING ROOM FEATURES AN
INDIA CHAIR, SOHO SOFA, AND
LONDON FLOOR PLAN RUG ALL
H
BY ARSHAM LIVING, AVAILABLE
THROUGH FRIEDMAN BENDA.
THE SPIRAL PAINTING IS BY
JOSH SPERLING. OTHER PIECES
INCLUDE A CRYSTALLIZED
BULBASAUR FIGURE BY ARSHAM
ATOP A SNARKITECTURE x
GUFRAM BENCH AND A KAWS
x CAMPANA CHAIR.
OT HOUSE Artist Daniel Arsham revs up the decor—
and scores impressive parking—at a
decommissioned firehouse in Lower Manhattan
TEXT BY GAY GASSMANN PHOTOGRAPHY BY JASON SCHMIDT STYLED BY COLIN KING
ART: JOSH SPERLING/PERROTIN. DANIEL ARSHAM.
LEFT A MINT GREEN 1991
PORSCHE 964 CARRERA 2 IS
PARKED IN THE HOME STUDIO/
GARAGE. OPPOSITE DANIEL
ARSHAM STANDS NEXT TO
THE FIREHOUSE’S ORIGINAL
CAST-IRON SPIRAL STAIRCASE,
WHICH IS NOW PAINTED IN
ARSHAM GREEN. ARSHAM
PIECES INCLUDE FALLING CLOCK
ABOVE A SNARKITECTURE x
GUFRAM BROKEN MIRROR AND
R2-D2 CRYSTALLIZED RELIC
STATUE, AND THE TWO WORKS
ON THE WALL.
w
96
hen contemporary,
multidisciplinary
artist Daniel Arsham
was looking for a new
home in Manhattan,
he had one “big
desire”: There had to
be a garage. Arsham
drives back and forth
to his Long Island
City studio every day so, he stresses, “the car is really important
to me. I’m very particular, and the garage needs to be clean
and protected.” Quite a tall order for NYC housing no matter
the borough, but during the summer of 2022 it all clicked.
AR C H D I GES T.COM
A friend called Arsham to tell him about a place in SoHo—
a former firehouse—that he had to go see right away. There
was already an offer on it, but he just might be able to snag it.
Intrigued, the artist ran over and jumped at the opportunity.
Nothing else had spoken to him like this. “You know it when
you see it,” he declares. “I imagined the firehouse from
Ghostbusters. It’s so unique, and I’ve been around New York
long enough to know that this was the spot for me.”
The prolific artist is perhaps best known for creating works
that evoke a poetic conversation between past and future.
Embracing sculpture, painting, and drawing, Arsham utilizes
materials ranging from plaster to rock crystal and bronze and
takes inspiration from a broad spectrum of sources, including
sports, cartoons, automobiles, and classical sculpture.
ART: DANIEL ARSHAM.
“I imagined the firehouse
from Ghostbusters,”
Arsham recalls.
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 99
ABOVE IN THE BEDROOM, ALL BY ARSHAM LIVING
A CUSTOM DESIGN MADE AND A PIERRE PAULIN CHAIR.
BY CALICO WALLPAPER LEFT THE PRIMARY BATH
FORMS THE BACKDROP DISPLAYS A 3D-PRINTED
TO A SITTING AREA THAT ROCK SINK BY ARSHAM FOR
INCLUDES A MIRROR, KOHLER AND HIS ERODED
FLOOR LAMP, AND SOFA VENUS DE MILO SCULPTURE.
amid all of this creative activity, and what seems like nonstop
travel, one thing hasn’t gotten old: this new place.
“Driving back and opening the door—every time, every
day—is a moment,” he says, sounding like a kid on Christmas.
“I can’t believe I get to live here!”
“I’ve been around
New York long enough
to know that this
was the spot for me.”
a polychrome stained-glass
folding screen designed by the
late visionary Italian architect
and theorist Paolo Portoghesi
inhabits a corner of the living
room in Jonah Disend’s magical
Hollywood Hills aerie. “I’ve
for every Eckart Muthesius, a Maharaja of Indore. Admittedly,
the comparison of these landmark collaborations to Disend’s
idiosyncratic LA Shangri-la might seem a tad grandiose, but the
essential truth remains the same: It takes two to tango.
“I’d followed The Archers for a long time, and I was impressed
not just by their aesthetic decisions but by the intellectual
foundations of their work,” says Disend, a former New York
ART: MARTIN MCMURRAY/VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES
been trying to place that screen branding executive who migrated west to pursue his career
for 15 years. Jonah is the first as a film and television producer. “They were open to theoreti-
person I thought would really cal discussions. They understood architectural context. Our
get it,” recalls Richard Petit earliest conversations focused on how I actually live, and how
of the AD100 design firm The to make sense of the property,” he continues. “We talked about
Archers. “Jonah’s home became a repository for objects and how we could avoid the obvious.”
ideas we’ve had for decades but never had the right client,” The site for these ruminations is a cluster of three buildings
the designer adds. “Let’s just say he’s open to unusual things.” that descend a hillside high above the LA Basin, with the
Great houses—the ones that fire the imagination of true city spread out like a kaleidoscopic carpet below: a detached
aesthetes and aficionados—invariably arise from the union of studio just off the street; a small modernist post-and-beam
an ambitious, artful designer and an equally inspired, invested house from 1950; and, at the bottom of the lot, an eccentric
client. For every John Fowler, there’s a Pauline de Rothschild; architectural folly designed by architect Frederick Fisher for
ARCH DI G E S T. CO M 105
screenwriter Kim Jorgensen in 1980. “LA had always con-
founded me, but the first time I walked through the gate and
took in the view and the landscape, I thought, ‘This is doing
LA.’ The property felt modest and spectacular at the same
time,” Disend recalls.
106 A R C H D IG E S T.COM
ABOVE ICO PARISI CHAIRS PULL UP TO A CUSTOM MARBLE TABLE BENEATH AN ANTONI AROLA LIGHT
FOR SANTA & COLE IN THE DINING AREA. THE PHOTOGRAPH IS BY STAN DOUGLAS. OPPOSITE STANDARD POODLES FLOYD
(ABOVE) AND HANSEL STRIKE A POSE ON A SUPERSTUDIO DESK. STONE FLOORS THROUGHOUT ARE CEPPO DI GRÉ.
LEFT AN ICO AND LUISA ARCHERS’ CROCHETED LINEN
PARISI VALET STANDS IN THE BEDSPREAD IS BASED ON
NEW CORK-LINED POWDER A 19TH-CENTURY PATTERN.
ROOM. ABOVE A CUSTOM BELOW VIEW FROM THE
BED HAS SCONCES BY LUIGI LOWER LEVEL OF THE MAIN
CACCIA DOMINIONI, THE HOUSE TO FREDERICK
WALLS ARE COVERED IN FISHER’S RESTORED 1980
KVADRAT WOOL, AND THE JORGENSEN HOUSE.
on a single column mounted to the floor. In the primary program by Fred, who was incredibly supportive,” Disend says
bedroom, the walls are covered in purple wool, and the custom of his and Petit’s plans for a painstakingly faithful restoration
headboard has integrated sconces by the Italian architect and that nevertheless allowed room for subtle updates (notably a
furniture designer Luigi Caccia Dominioni, an Archers favorite. new powder room and kitchen) as well as a decorative layer
“The Caccia lamps are another thing that most clients don’t uniquely attuned to the homeowner’s quietly kooky spirit.
respond to,” Petit says, again stressing his client’s adventurous, That polyglot finishing gloss includes a whimsical Elizabeth
sophisticated tastes. “Jonah didn’t recoil at the idea of putting Garouste swing hanging from the rafters, a claw-foot table
a floral fabric on the Albini chair in the living room.” by T.H. Robsjohn-Gibbings, a Biedermeier commode, a Marco
Before work began on the renovation of Fisher’s Jorgensen Zanini throne chair of sparkly fiberglass, a custom broken-
house (now a guesthouse and hangout spot), Petit and Disend column bed, and a massive kilim depicting a kind of queer fan-
visited the LA architect in his landmark office to align their tasia in Elysium by artist Silvi Naçi. Set against the backdrop of
approach with Fisher’s original vision of a home built on a ruin, Fisher’s rugged masonry blocks and corrugated metal columns,
buffeted by the forces of fire and earthquakes, a meditation Disend’s feast of decorative delights will surely quicken the
on the ephemeral nature of life in the hills. “We ran the whole hearts of design junkies addicted to the weird and wonderful.
ABOVE THE LIVING ROOM FEATURES AN ELIZABETH GAROUSTE SWING FROM RALPH PUCCI, A GAROUSTE & BONETTI
COCKTAIL TABLE FROM DAVID GILL GALLERY, A LUIGI CACCIA DOMINIONI ARMCHAIR, A T.H. ROBSJOHN-GIBBINGS SIDE TABLE,
PILLOWS BY CHARLAP HYMAN & HERRERO, AND CARPET BY ARTIST SILVI NAÇI.
“Our idea was ‘gay Pompeii,’ ” the producer notes wryly. Both Disend and Petit credit landscape designer Eric
“You can feel the vision when you’re in the space so there’s Nagelmann, renowned for his work at Montecito’s Lotusland
no need to explain it.” and other high-profile projects, for the botanical connective
tissue that unites the home’s disparate structures, terraces,
AS ONE MIGHT EXPECT, DISEND’S ART COLLECTION—which and pool into a proper compound. “Eric played a huge part in
includes works by Stan Douglas, Al Taylor, Lisa Yuskavage, shaping my life here. I have an excuse to use every part of the
Brian Calvin, Cary Kwok, and Jules de Balincourt—is as property, and it’s the same for my friends—the smokers find
meticulously considered and personal as the furnishings. their spot, the drinkers find their spot, everything is open for
“I’m not a collector in a traditional way. I tend to be interested exploration,” Disend says. “There’s a mix of things that don’t
in the artist first, their own story and motivation, and then necessarily make sense, but it all works. This place is nobody’s
the artwork,” the homeowner states. taste, yet everyone loves it.”
AR C H DI G E S T. CO M 111
ABOVE THE JORGENSEN HOUSE
BEDROOM IS CENTERED ON A
CUSTOM BED BY THE ARCHERS THAT
NODS TO FISHER’S CONCEIT OF A
HOUSE SET ON A RUIN. LEFT THE
ORIGINAL BATH WAS DISASSEMBLED
AND METICULOUSLY RESTORED.
black
RADOSTIN BEKIRSKI
IN THE FOYER, A 1960s
ITALIAN LAMP SITS ATOP A
VINTAGE BLACK LACQUER
CABINET BY LELLA AND
MASSIMO VIGNELLI. STOOL BY
JEAN-GUILLAUME MATHIAUT
FOR CARINE ROITFELD FROM
JEAN-MARC HERVIER;
PHOTOGRAPH AND DRAWINGS
BY KARL LAGERFELD.
OPPOSITE ROITFELD NEXT
TO A PORTRAIT BY
RADOSTIN BEKIRSKI.
magic
W
116
elcome to my garçonnière!”
says iconic French magazine editor and stylist Carine
Roitfeld with a laugh as she opens the door of her cozy new
Paris bachelorette pad on a late August evening. Roitfeld
is standing in a black T-shirt and her brother’s 1960s Levi’s,
cinched up. “I never wear jeans,” she says, apologetically.
“I’m still on vacation.”
AR C H D IGES T.COM
What she does wear is black. And, as a quick sweep of
the 1,000-square-foot one-bedroom flat proves, she lives in
it, too. “My home is like a black box,” she concedes, as she
settles into her vintage black Willy Rizzo sectional sofa, next
to her friend and partner-in-design, the decorator Jean-Marc
Hervier, and stubs out her cigarette in a black leather push-
down ashtray.
Roitfeld bought the place a year and a half ago, when she
decided it was time to start anew. She edited down what she
would live with—only keeping art, photographs, and fashion
she absolutely loved. Then she called Hervier, who over the
years has worked for Thierry Mugler, helped produce George
Michael’s “Too Funky” music video and the French television
program Paris Modes, and now has two galleries (one at the
Marché Paul Bert and another nearby, also in Saint-Ouen), to
help her “Roitfeld” the boring midcentury box.
For the decor,
Roitfeld wanted
a ’70s vibe,
inspired by
Pierre Paulin’s
mod redo of
the Élysée
Palace in 1972.
pieces by her friend, the Paris-based American designer Rick Tom Ford; Roitfeld and Ford collaborated for 27 years. On
Owens, and tables from Jean-Guillaume Mathiaut for Carine another, a sketch of her by Karl Lagerfeld—she worked with
Roitfeld, a collection of oak furniture she conceived with the him for a decade at Chanel and Karl Lagerfeld, and stayed
acclaimed French sculptor and which is distributed by Hervier. on at his namesake brand for three years after his death in 2019.
“Brutalism, with sophistication,” Hervier says. In the corner, in front of a wall of mirrors, is her ballet barre—
“It gives the apartment a bit of a rock feel,” Roitfeld says. she practiced classical dance when she was young. There’s also
For her cave-like bedroom, with walls in black Japanese a mirror—black, of course—set in the decorative black chimney.
paper—which Hervier bought in its natural state and painted “The reflections in it at night are very beautiful,” she says.
a very specific black “because we couldn’t find paper in the She sits back, lights up another smoke, and takes it all in.
right black,” he explains—she has a custom-made black leather “Less things, easier is the life.”
118 AR C H D IG E S T.COM
“I like black because
it’s easy—everything
goes well with it,
and you see the details,”
Roitfeld explains.
EXPERT EYE
Art world insider Yana Peel enlists an expert
design team to transform a former industrial
building in NYC into a warm home for her
family—and her collection
TEXT BY GAY GASSMANN PHOTOGRAPHY BY PERNILLE LOOF STYLED BY MARTIN BOURNE
LEFT A BRONZE PUMPKIN
BY YAYOI KUSAMA STANDS
IN THE GREAT ROOM.
OPPOSITE IN THE LIBRARY,
AN ARTWORK BY MATT
CONNORS HANGS NEXT
TO SHELVES DISPLAYING
PAINTINGS BY ETEL ADNAN
(ABOVE) AND STANLEY
WHITNEY. OSVALDO
BORSANI CHAIR; HERMÈS
SOFA; DIURNE RUG. WALLS
IN GREEN MARMORINO
BY ATELIER PREMIERE.
© MATT CONNORS/HERALD ST, LONDON; AND THE MODERN INSTITUTE, GLASGOW. © STANLEY WHITNEY.
IMAGINE.
Just as the architect charged with renovating this building in
Lower Manhattan was wrapping up the final construction
drawings, the structure was landmarked. “It happened over
a weekend,” says Jean-Gabriel Neukomm, “but we pivoted.
served as CEO of The Serpentine Galleries in London and
was a cofounder of Outset Contemporary Art Fund, which is
dedicated to pioneering new philanthropic initiatives in
support of the arts. She is also a member of the international
ART: © YAYOI KUSAMA/DAVID ZWIRNER, OTA FINE ARTS, AND VICTORIA MIRO.
We retooled an entire 100-page document in three weeks. councils of London’s Tate galleries, and the Metropolitan
We weren’t going to lose a beat, and we still finished on time Museum of Art and American Ballet Theatre in New York
and on budget. It was mind-boggling!” City, among many other accomplishments.
Client Yana Peel took the complication in stride and Born in St. Petersburg, Russia, and educated at Montreal’s
showed total trust in her team, which also included AD100 McGill University and the London School of Economics, Peel is
designer Francis Sultana, a longtime friend. Equanimity in a true citizen of the world. She stayed on in the UK, then spent
the face of shifting priorities seems to come naturally to her. seven years in Hong Kong, eventually returning to London,
As the global head of arts and culture at Chanel, Peel is com- where she still maintains a residence. But frequent long-term
mitted to amplifying platforms for talent, whatever the form, stays in the US over the years hatched a long-standing desire
wherever she finds it. Before taking on her current role, she to find a place where she and her family could hang their hats
in New York City. When they finally moved in last year after WALKING INTO THE SPACE, the light, height, and size of the
a nearly three-year renovation process, that mission was ground level is indeed breathtaking and unexpected. Visitors
finally accomplished. enter through a vestibule embellished with bronze doors
ART: © NICOLE EISENMAN. JORGE PARDO/PETZEL, NEW YORK.
Peel wanted something with a downtown vibe within that are more than 11½ feet tall crafted by artist Michele Oka
walking distance of the Whitney and the New Museum. Good Doner, who lives nearby. “We wanted a bit of a WOW factor
coffee and access to athletic outlets was also important. The when you come off the street,” says Sultana. “They are a feat
family of four loves cycling and running along the West Side of engineering!”
Highway, and gallery hopping in Chelsea. For this space, the Those monumental doors open into a gallery-like space
brief was to create something urban, sexy, arty, and design showcasing some of the pieces in Peel’s stellar collection of art
focused, but always keeping the entire family in mind. and design. A frosted-glass skylight embedded in the ceiling—
While the landmarked façade was preserved, the interior that also serves as the terrace floor—gently filters light into
was gutted and rebuilt from scratch. There is now a terrace, the space. “I was keen to give space to artworks,” Peel notes
roof-deck, and an enlarged cellar. “The building used to be a of the grand scale. “But with a lack of formality.”
bakery,” Peel points out. Once zoned for commercial use, the Sultana, who also did Peel’s London residence, helped
structure is a typical city lot wide but had been able to utilize coordinate the deployment of so many stunning pieces to
the entire depth. “This is why it is 80 feet long!” she says. create spaces that still feel welcoming. “Yana was my first real
“This was part of the charm.” client when I went out on my own,” the designer recalls.
ARCH DI G E S T. CO M 125
“It’s a special kind of
patron who has the
strength of conviction
to commission because
it’s not the same
as seeing something
and buying it,” says
Francis Sultana.
LEFT IN THE SON’S BORSANI NIGHTSTAND;
ROOM, A CHANTAL JOFFE TOM DIXON LAMP
PAINTING RESTS ATOP A AND STOOL. BELOW A
FRANCIS SULTANA– SCULPTURAL PIECE BY
DESIGNED HEADBOARD EMANOEL ARAÚJO (LEFT)
COVERED IN A LORO PIANA AND A WORK BY HUGO
FABRIC. BEDCOVER BY McCLOUD (RIGHT) ARE
GAYLE WARWICK; OSVALDO DISPLAYED IN THE STAIRWELL.
A FORMAFANTASMA
LIGHT FIXTURE HANGS
ABOVE A FRANCIS
SULTANA NIGHTSTAND IN
THE PRIMARY BEDROOM. NYLON ROTATING
STOOL BY PHILIPPE
MALOUIN FOR SALON
94 DESIGN; PRICE
UPON REQUEST.
SALON94DESIGN.COM
BRONZE ROOT 6;
$13,800.
JULIANWATTS
STUDIO.COM
EUGENE RUG BY
FRANCIS SULTANA
FOR GALERIE
DIURNE; PRICE
UPON REQUEST.
DIURNE.COM
NIC WEBB/SARAH MYERSCOUGH GALLERY. RUG: VINCENT LEROUX. BRONZE ROOT: MARIO GALLUCCI. ALL OTHERS COURTESY OF THE COMPANIES.
INTERIORS: PERNILLE LOOF. ART: © CINDY SHERMAN. LYNETTE YIADOM-BOAKYE. JULIAN WATTS/SARAH MYERSCOUGH GALLERY.
SELLIER 2-SEATER SOFA; $65,800
AS SHOWN. HERMES.COM
CHANEL
BRACELET,
CRUISE 2023/24;
$2,100.
CHANEL.COM
INDOOR-OUTDOOR
SIDE CHAIR BY HARRY
BERTOIA FOR KNOLL;
$867. DWR.COM Zaha Hadid, an incredible
friend and mentor, always said,
BRUSSELS LAMP #14 BY JORGE ‘There is always 360 degrees so
PARDO FOR TASCHEN; $5,000.
ARTWAREEDITIONS.COM why look at just one.’ ” —Yana Peel
RESIN PUMPKIN
BY YAYOI KUSAMA;
$295. STORE
.MOMA.ORG
to hear what it had to say.” Richly decorated— only to peer into the space through open
with painted woodwork, gesso relief, tin shutters but also step inside of it, immersing
and brass leaf, Arabic inscriptions, and stone themselves within its four ornately detailed
inlay—the interior would have been the walls. “It’s not really a period room per se,”
centerpiece of its Ottoman-era home, con- Komaroff reflects, comparing the experience
structed at a time of economic prosperity. to standard diorama-style installations.
The house survived until 1978 when the room “People tend to think of the past in black and
was disassembled, traveling to Beirut then white. But this is kaleidoscopic.” lacma.org
London before ultimately being acquired by —SAM COCHRAN