Joshua McHugh Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/joshua-mchugh/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Thu, 26 Oct 2023 18:05:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png Joshua McHugh Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/joshua-mchugh/ 32 32 Hines Collective Creates an Artful Museum Tower Apartment https://interiordesign.net/projects/hines-collective-museum-tower-apartment-design/ Fri, 03 Nov 2023 12:04:00 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=217773 An apartment in this condo building (developed in 1982 as part of a redesign of the Museum of Modern Art complex) gets a 1960s, mod-inspired, renovation.

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a floating platform bed in the primary bedroom of an apartment
A vintage Eero Aarnio Ball chair sits opposite Mondo Collection’s floating platform bed in the primary bedroom.

Hines Collective Creates an Artful Museum Tower Apartment

César Pelli’s 52-story condo on West 53rd Street, developed in 1982 as part of a redesign of the Museum of Modern Art complex, is its own kind of masterpiece. Longtime friends of Hines Collective had a 2,000-square-foot, two bedroom/2 ½ bath apartment in the building; it had been untouched since it was originally built, and while an Old Master should be treated to careful restoration, this apartment needed more serious work.

They wanted, says founder Devin Hines, “a 1960s, mod-inspired, gallery-space-meets-space-station.” And they got it. First, the team “stripped [it] to studs and slabs.” Then began an inspired rethink. “They are minimalists with a lot of stuff,” Hines says, including an important collection of vintage and contemporary art and design. “We had to be creative with the floor plan to balance form and function.” The second bedroom soon became an enviable walk-in closet and dressing area; more closets line the hallway to the primary bedroom, all with hidden flush doors.

Toka Builders created a seamless, gloss white epoxy resin floor throughout the apartment in a single pour. Finally, the install, careful as a gallery show: In the living area, a custom section extends some 28 winding feet. “It carves different seating opportunities for conversation, intimacy, and views,” Hines says. “It also carves out a home office space that follows the same path at its back.” A Skeleton desk chair by De Sede and AYALA desk lamp are ready to work, as are a curved desk and floating corner console. Akdo tiles and a banquette upholstered in Dedar’s Flimflam warm up the otherwise whitewashed kitchen, from its custom cabinetry to the Miele white glass appliances. And stupendous objects from the collection are everywhere in view—an untitled Jin Soo Kim sculpture watches over chairs hand-carved from more than 25 hardwoods in the dining area, for example—if you can tear your eyes away from the floor-to-ceiling windows looking down grand Fifth Avenue.

wood chairs and Tulip chairs surround a dining table
Yard Sale Project’s wood Corsican chairs alternate with vintage Eero Saarinen Tulip chairs, their seats upholstered in Vernon Panton fabric by Maharam, around a Vortex table by Mattia Bonetti.
a white sectional in the living room of an apartment in the Museum of Modern Art complex
A custom sectional with Perennials upholstery snakes through the living area, past Peter Ghyczy Garden Egg chairs and a Platform C table by Karen Chekerdjian.
a pendant light hangs above a table in the kitchen of an apartment
A vintage Luigi Massoni pendant illuminates the LeisureMod table and Pinto Paris stool.
a floating platform bed in the primary bedroom of an apartment
A vintage Eero Aarnio Ball chair sits opposite Mondo Collection’s floating platform bed in the primary bedroom.
a custom blue upholstered headboard
The primary bedroom’s custom headboard is upholstered in Maharam fabric, with a hidden light source; the visible light source is a Martinelli Luce Cobra 629 table lamp, upon a custom night table.
looking into the crisp white hallway of an NYC apartment
A vintage Eero Saarinen Tulip stool, with a white leather seat, and a Dino chair by Daniel Arsham delineate the entrance to the hall; the wall sconces are vintage Giotto Stoppino.
a vanity area inside a walk-in closet in an apartment
Along with ample storage space, the walk-in closet offers custom vanity area with a Katie Stout’s “Bonnet Chair 1” and a table lamp by Carmen D’Apollonio called “Don’t Hate Me Because I’m Beautiful.”
the primary bathroom of an apartment at the Museum of Modern Art complex
In the primary bathroom, a custom vanity with Nano White “Glassos” countertop, in a polished finish, sets the stage for Kohler sinks and Hansgrohe faucets.

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Inside Look: Dune CEO’s Southampton Home by Sawyer|Berson https://interiordesign.net/projects/dune-ceo-southampton-home-by-sawyer-berson/ Wed, 28 Jun 2023 19:22:55 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=213642 A Southampton, New York, retreat by Sawyer|Berson is an artful stage for interiors by its design-forward homeowner, Dune CEO and founder Richard Shemtov.

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an in-ground pool surrounded by porcelain pavers at this home
Porcelain pavers surround the pool while a standing-seam zinc roof caps the 8,000-square-foot house.

Inside Look: Dune CEO’s Southampton Home by Sawyer|Berson

Over the past few decades, the New York architecture firm Sawyer|Berson has designed a bevy of houses in the Hamptons. Admired for their stylistic versatility, founding partners Brian Sawyer and John Berson have masterminded everything from stately Colonial Revival residences to bold, contemporary compounds. But never before had the studio worked on a home quite like the one proposed by Richard Shemtov for a wooded single-acre property in Southampton.

Shemtov, the CEO and founder of furniture company Dune, was looking to build a weekend retreat to share with his wife, Dominique, and their three daughters, who range in age from 14 to 26. He envisioned something modestly scaled, modeled after traditional gable-roof barns but in a rigorously pared-down style. Key inspirations were Herzog & de Meuron’s Parrish Art Museum in nearby Water Mill and the Baron House in Sweden by John Pawson.

“It wasn’t our typical commission,” says Sawyer, who has known and worked with Shemtov for years. “It was an exercise in discipline, really, a fun puzzle to work out. We could fit a certain amount of program in the box.” Adds Berson, “As it turned out, that was a deceptively simple idea, to coordinate the plan and section and make the entire composition sing.”

A Southampton Home Three Years in the Making

a lounge area inside the home of Dune CEO Richard Shemtov designed by Sawyer|Benson
With architecture and landscaping by Sawyer | Berson, the lower-level lounge in the Southampton, New York, home of Richard and Dominique Shemtov and family is outfitted with a Delta sectional, Toiny swivel chairs, a Jardin cocktail table, and a Torque side table, all from Shemtov’s furniture company, Dune. He also designed the home’s interiors.

To create a crisp silhouette, Sawyer and Berson sunk one of the structure’s two main levels entirely below-grade and devised the standing-seam roof, a weathered-gray zinc, so that it is flush with the perimeter edges and has hidden gutters. Expanses of 10-foot-high, black-painted aluminum–framed glass—most of which slide open—line much of the front and rear facades, while the rest of the exterior is clad in a distinctive recycled-glass brick.

The house’s ground floor encompasses an open living/dining area, the kitchen, and four bedrooms. The loftlike basement level—housing several entertaining areas, Shemtov’s home office, a laundry room, a gym, and a kitchenette—is completely column-free, which added significantly to the engineering complexity of the project. The house also expanded a bit as plans developed: A custom-fabricated carport was tacked on and room was carved out below the eaves to create a half level, a cozy attic den that can double as a guest bedroom. “It’s the house we wanted,” Shemtov says. “But we went way over budget and it took nearly three years to build.”

Interiors are by Homeowner Richard Shemtov

A big chunk of that time was devoted to fitting out the 8,000-square-foot interiors. It’s not uncommon for Sawyer|Berson to handle every aspect of a project—architecture, interiors, landscape—as can be seen in the duo’s forthcoming monograph, to be published by Rizzoli this fall in advance of the firm’s 25th anniversary. But in this case Shemtov oversaw the interiors himself, his first time designing a project of this scale. “Every inch of the house was considered and thought out, almost to the point where it was obsessive,” he admits.

Architectural detailing was kept to a minimum—just simple baseboard trim and crisp custom millwork in select spots. In the double-height living area, Shemtov devised a striking fireplace surround in richly grained wenge and, opposite, built-in bookshelves with a hand-glazed faux-linen finish, their back panels lined with mirror or hair-on hide to add layers of texture. On the ground level, 8-inch-wide pine floor planks were treated using a wire-brushed effect and then treated to a milky glaze. “You walk barefoot on it and it feels like a massage,” Shemtov enthuses.

All built-ins and seating and most of the tables were made by Dune, which employs some 60 full-time furniture makers at its New Jersey facility. Shemtov used a mix of Dune Collection pieces and original designs—some of which have since been added to the line, like the living area’s amoeba-shape ottoman/table, upholstered in harlequin-pattern panels of coral leather, and the dining area’s Donald Judd–inspired teal-aluminum sideboard. Downstairs, which offers billiards, ping-pong, Pac-Man, and pinball, two separate seating areas are anchored by exuberant Dune sectionals, one covered in a rusty-hued chenille and the other, a channel-tufted circular model inspired by Pierre Paulin, in a lemony suede.

a 21 feet tall vaulted ceiling in the home of Dune's CEO designed by Sawyer|Benson
The vaulted ceiling rises to 21 feet.

A Courtyard Garden by Sawyer|Berson Brightens the Lower Level

The art is mostly things the homeowners have collected over years, works by friends or that have a personal resonance. One new acquisition is the Bernardo Siciliano painting of a restaurant interior that hangs in the dining area. The scene felt distinctly familiar to Shemtov, who learned after he bought it that the artist had based it on Lincoln, a restaurant in Lincoln Center where Dune created a custom banquette.

To bring light down into the lower level, Sawyer|Berson, which oversaw landscaping, created a courtyard garden with a series of amphitheater-style concrete terraces that are arrayed with a profusion of potted plants. “I originally saw it as a kind of hanging garden with things tumbling down,” says Sawyer. “Richard came up with the idea of lining it with pots, which I think is fun and punchy.”

The focal point of the rear grounds is a minimalist swimming pool, surrounded by porcelain-tile coping and a sweep of precisely graded lawn. There’s an outdoor kitchen and a poolside dining pergola, as well as a covered terrace that’s become one of the family’s favorite hangout spots. Shemtov imagines spending weekends and summers here with the girls—and, eventually, their families—for many years to come. “Labor of love is a commonly used term,” he says, “but with this house, it resonates a lot.”

Inside a Southampton Home by Sawyer|Berson 

a bronze-tube console topped with a sculpture
In the foyer, a Michel Gribinski oil and a Paula Hayes sculpture accent Geo, a textured bronze–tube console that was a Dune prototype and is now available as a commission-only piece.
a living area with a sectional and accent chairs with a glass wall with views of trees
In the living area, a Brian Schmitt chandelier overlooks Dune’s DaBomb sectional and Cloud swivel chairs, a pair of Rick Owens antler side tables, and a hand-carved sycamore cocktail table by Caleb Woodard.
a built-in oak banquette in the mudroom of this home includes an Anna Navasardian painting
The colorway of Romo’s Kuba Cay pattern covering the mudroom’s built-in oak banquette coordinates with an Anna Navasardian painting.
an open concept kitchen with custom oak cabinetry
Custom oak cabinetry surrounds much of the kitchen, with Corian countertops, Piet Boon stools, and tractor headlight–inspired Outsider pendants by Jacco Maris.
a dining room surrounded by glass walls looks over a pool at this home
Dune’s Rhapsody table, Dash chairs, and Mason sideboard gather beneath an Anna Karlin pendant fixture in the dining area.
Dune's Stellar chair and ottoman face the bed in the primary bedroom
In the main bedroom, Dune’s Stellar chair and ottoman face the custom walnut-based bed and nightstands integrated into a linen-upholstered wall; the drapery fabric is Kelly Wearstler’s Grafitto.
butterfly kaleidoscope wallpaper accents a wall next to a built-in bed in this girls bedroom
Damien Hirst’s Butterfly Kaleidoscope wallpaper and a Samantha Gallacher rug animate the built-in bed and storage in a daughter’s room.
an electric guitar hangs on the wall of this girl's bedroom with a Lindsay Cowles wallcovering behind it
A Lindsay Cowles wallcovering enlivens another daughter’s bedroom, with a Patty bench by Lievore Altherr Molina and Dune’s Monolith desk.
a gold-tinted stainless steel wardrobe's doors are covered in lacquered rings
Beyond Dune’s Float bench in the guest bedroom, the console and the gold-tinted stainless-steel wardrobe doors with lacquered rings are custom.
an in-ground pool surrounded by porcelain pavers at this home
Porcelain pavers surround the pool while a standing-seam zinc roof caps the 8,000-square-foot house.
the exterior of a home designed by Sawyer|Benson that is built of recycled-glass brick
The house is built of recycled-glass brick.
a mint-green pergola
The pergola’s mint-green color is custom.
freestanding partitions separate a game table
Free­standing Modernica screens partition the lower level’s custom game table and chairs, joined by Bertjan Pot’s Non Random pendant and a Liz Collins wall work.
dark marble tile lines the walls of the main bathroom in this home
Variegated marble tile lines the main bathroom.
a cowhide rug in front of a red sofa in a lounge area of this home
Also on the lower level, a hair-on cowhide rug anchors a sitting area composed of Dune’s Yaz sofa and Peanut coffee table.
the attic den of the Dune CEO's home with sectional and ottomans
Built-in beds double as lounging spots in the attic den, where Dune’s Faux cork-patterned wallpaper, Turbo sectional, and Bump ottoman flank the custom oak TV cabinet.
PROJECT TEAM
sawyer|berson: alex taylor wilk
blue sky design: structural engineer
bk kuck construction: general contractor
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
toulemonde bochart: rug (lounge)
normann copenhagen: small side table
romo: chair fabric (lounge), drapery sheers (living area, dining area), banquette fabric (mudroom), bench fabric, window-treatment fabric (guest bedroom), settee fabric (main bedroom)
anna karlin: pendant fixture (dining area)
élitis: chair fabric
crosby street studios: rugs (dining area, guest bedroom)
schmitt design: chandelier (living area)
pollack: sectional fabric
kerry joyce: chair fabric
through jeff lincoln art & design: cocktail table, side tables
Ortal: fireplace
foro marble: fireplace stone
stone source: floor tile (mudroom)
renson: custom carport, custom pergola (exterior)
damien hirst: wallpaper (bedroom)
art + loom: rug
Knoll Textiles: wall fabric
robert allen: headboard fabric
brinklicht: pendant fix­tures (kitchen)
corian: countertops
piet boon: stools
wolf: oven
California Faucets: sink fittings
through lee jofa: drapery fabric (main bedroom)
c & c milano: bed fabric
céline wright: pendant fixture
beadlight: sconces
jab: chair fabric, ottoman fabric (main bedroom), chair fabric (game area)
mgs milano: outdoor shower (guest bedroom)
pelican pools: pool (terrace)
ceramiche refin: pavers
lindsay cowles: wallpaper (bedroom)
paul smith: lamp
loro piana: chair fabric
verzelloni: bench
jane churchill: bench fabric
modernica: screens (game area)
Moooi: pendant fixture
salvatori: wall tile (bathroom)
concrete collaborative: countertop stone
ann sacks: floor tile
brizo: sink fittings
&tradition: lamp (den)
THROUGHOUT
fleetwood windows & doors: windows, exterior doors
rheinzink: roof
harbour outdoor: outdoor furniture
Stonhard: resin floor coating
benjamin moore & co.: paint

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A New York Townhouse Inspired by the 1970s Folk Music Scene https://interiordesign.net/projects/mckay-ny-townhouse/ Wed, 07 Jun 2023 14:03:12 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=212302 With interiors by McKay, this Federal-era home in Manhattan's Greenwich Village is an ode to the 1960s-’70s folk music scene, melding past and present.

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a living room with a view of a conservatory through the windows
The living room includes both modern and vintage furnishings, and includes views of the conservatory on one side.

A New York Townhouse Inspired by the 1970s Folk Music Scene

Originally built in 1828, this Federal-era property located in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village features interior spaces transformed by Matt McKay—founder of McKay—for his longtime friends, a couple in their mid-30s. “This was my first large-scale residential project,” confesses McKay. “I worked hard to retain the character of the townhouse, while minimizing any formal elements.”

The 1960s-’70s folk music scene in Laurel Canyon, Los Angeles, was the main source of inspiration for this project that aims to foster connection and community through entertaining. “The objective consisted in creating a place that would invite groups of friends to get together, stay for a while, and be present with each other,” says McKay.

Warm neutral tones combine with accents and fabrics in deep rusts, blues and greens against walls coated in Benjamin Moore’s Distant Gray. Materials such as reclaimed wood for the floors, herringbone terracotta brick and natural oak millwork, among others, nod to the history of the house while modern updates reflect the lifestyle, tastes and needs of the homeowners. For example, the mechanical room with a barrel-vaulted ceiling is now a steam room. Another notable update: the conservatory/greenhouse on the main floor is paired with a newly added wet bar and opens onto a rear patio. The primary suite with its fireplace and bath occupies the second level and a communal space, which can act as a home office and guest area, is on the third floor.

Brimming with historic character and inventive updates, this sophisticated home offers the right dose of irreverence to feel as youthful and energizing as its owners.

a dining area with brick flooring, banquette seating, and dining chairs
The dining area’s brick flooring is from Clé Tile.
a Manhattan home's kitchen with neutral earth tones
Warm, neutral earth tones are found in the home’s kitchen.
a primary bedroom with earth tones and bohemian furnishings
A bedside table in the primary bedroom is by Hiroyuki Nishimura from Somewhere Tokyo.
a home's conservatory with large plants and teak lounge chairs
The conservatory features vintage teak lounge chairs upholstered with vintage fabric sourced from Paula Rubenstein NYC.
a primary bathroom with light wood cabinets and a row of wall sconces
Sconces by Workstead light up the primary bathroom.
a living room with a view of a conservatory through the windows
The living room includes both modern and vintage furnishings with views of the conservatory on one side.
green velvet chairs in front of fireplace in an earthy toned living room
A pair of vintage Móveis Cimo chairs upholstered in ZAK+FOX velvet.
a black tile shower in a steam room/guest bathroom
The cellar guest bath (also a subterranean steam/sauna bath), with shower tile by Heath and brick flooring by Clé Tile.

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