perennials fabrics Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/perennials-fabrics/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Wed, 13 Dec 2023 18:37:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png perennials fabrics Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/perennials-fabrics/ 32 32 Art and Nature Take Center Stage in This Aspen Residence https://interiordesign.net/projects/aspen-residence-ccy-architects/ Mon, 15 May 2023 21:26:33 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=210563 For a spectacular mountainside residence in Aspen, Colorado, CCY Architects creates a stunning space where the great outdoors meet great art.

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a pool on the terrace of a Colorado home
The pool terrace features a custom Corten fireplace and Richard Schultz seating.

Art and Nature Take Center Stage in This Aspen Residence

CCY Architects does not typically design a long entry sequence for houses in Aspen, Colorado, which gets over 12 feet of snow a year. But for a mountainside residence overlooking the Roaring Fork Vall­ey, the firm built a 90-foot path between the parking area and the front door. By local standards, “That’s a long, long walk,” says CCY principal Alex Klumb. But the clients, an art-collecting couple, sought to highlight a recent acquisition: a reflective PVD-coated stainless-steel head by the Swiss artist Not Vital. CCY placed the sculpture at the end of an allée of aspens leading to the entrance. “It frames nature, draws you to the door, and slows everybody down before releasing to an incredible view,” Klumb explains. It also establishes the home’s focus on art and the outdoors.

The isolated 6-acre site straddles an aspen grove and forests of evergreens and Gambel oaks. The clients envisioned a modern house that would honor the setting and display their collection, including works by Alexander Calder, Sol LeWitt, and Robert Rauschenberg. CCY conceived two volumes of weathered steel and board-formed concrete connected by a glass-walled corridor. The two-story main house—with the primary bedroom, living areas, and downstairs rec room—sits at the front of the site; a single-story guest wing is in the back. The layout “allows nature to bleed through the house,” Klumb says, and ensures that the 10,750-square-foot, five-bedroom property feels comfortable for either two or 16 people.

The only downside of the location was that it faced north—ideal for hanging paintings, but not for creating a bright vacation home. CCY designed winged roofs with south-facing clerestory windows to capture a little light. For the pool and terrace, the team calculated which spot got the most sun, paradoxically installing them on the north side of the house.

For interiors, CCY collaborated with Interior Design Hall of Fame member and the eponymous founding partner of David Kleinberg Design Associates, who had worked with the couple on two other homes. They selected a limited, neutral palette of black porcelain-tile flooring and white-oak ceilings and millwork; triple-pane full-height windows provide panoramic valley views and close-ups of the woods. “There’s always an event at the end of a room, where your eye is either directed at an art wall or a window wall,” Kleinberg says.

aspens line a concrete walkway up to a house
Aspens line a concrete path leading toward a reflective stainless-steel head by the Swiss artist Not Vital at the house’s entrance.

Besides the Not Vital sculpture, the clients hadn’t earmarked specific pieces for the house, so they worked with Kleinberg to see which fit best: a Calder over a guest-room bed, a James Rosenquist at the top of the stairs. In the dining room, a David Hockney drawing echoes the moun­tains outside the window. It hangs above three square oak tables that can be joined or separated depending on the size of the group—the sort of practical touch that makes the home livable. The paintings and views may be spectacular, Kleinberg says, “but the interiors have to hold their own.” The result is as layered as a work of art.

A Mountainside Vacation Home Designed by CCY Architects

the entrance to an Aspen home
A mirror in steel and oxidized glass by Nicolas and Sébastien Reese hangs inside the entrance.
a corridor of triple-glazed windows connects the guest house with the main house
A corridor lined with triple-glazed windows connects the guest wing with the main house; the exterior pairs Corten sheet siding and board-formed concrete.
an Aspen's home guest sitting room with views of the trees
DKDA’s custom sectional and a Gerrit Rietveld armchair furnish the guest sitting room.
the dining room of an Aspen home with mountain views out the windows
A David Hockney iPad drawing, Yosemite I, October 16, 2011, overlooks custom brass-inlaid tables in the dining room; Ingo Maurer’s Luce Volante pendant fixtures float above.
a pool on the terrace of a Colorado home
The pool terrace features a custom Corten fireplace and Richard Schultz seating.
An Alexander Calder tapestry above a bed in a guest room
An Alexander Calder tapestry hangs on a plaster-finished wall in a guest bedroom, where a blackened-brass sconce is custom.
a living room with a custom sectional inside an Aspen home
A Robert Rauschenberg painting hangs over a custom sectional in the living room, with Francois Monnet’s stainless-steel chairs from the 1970’s.
a daybed and desk are made of white oak in this home's study
A built-in day­bed and custom desk, both white oak, outfit the study, illuminated by a Jason Miller Endless pendant.
in the corridor of a Colorado home, a James Rosenquist painting hangs on the wall
Por­ce­lain tile floors a cor­ridor, accented with a James Rosen­quist painting and an Offset Cube bench by Videre Licet.
a man walks up the stairs from a rec room inside a Colorado home
The downstairs rec room includes a custom billiards table; wine storage is hidden below the staircase.
the bar room area of a recreation room in an Aspen, Colorado home
Mill­work of rift-sawn European white oak joins a custom sectional in the rec room’s bar area.
FROM FRONT
through galerie carole decombe: mirror (entry)
apparatus studio: con­sole
11 ravens: custom billiards table (rec room)
adam otlewski: side table
soane britain: chairs (dining room)
minotti: pendant fixtures
focus fireplaces: fireplace (guest sitting room)
perennials fabrics: sectional fabric
through 1stdibs: lamp, coffee table, chair
cassina: armchair
romo fabrics: armchair fabric
scott group studio: rugs (guest sitting room, living room)
colorado pool designs: custom pool, spa (terrace)
zachary a. design: tables
knoll: sofas, lounges, chaises
a.r.s.antiqua: custom wood cocktail tables (living room)
fernando mastrangelo studio: custom square side tables
blanche jelly: round side table
through valerie goodman gallery: custom floor lamp
cowtan & tout; edelman leather: sectional fabrics
glant textiles: lounge chair fabric
wud furniture: nightstand (bedroom)
bourgeois boheme: custom sconce
dune: custom bed
nobilis paris: headboard fabric
through twentieth gallery: bench (hall)
Roll & Hill: pendant fixture (study)
warp & weft: custom rug
nada debs: side table
charles h. beckley: daybed cushions
mark alexander fabrics: cushion fabric
Design Within Reach: chairs
token: barstools (rec room)
arabel fabrics: sectional fabric
adam otlewski: side tables
THROUGHOUT
arrigoni woods: wood flooring
ergon engineered stone: tile flooring
grabill windows and doors: windows, doors
lift studio: land­scape architect
ls group: lighting design
kl&a engineers: structural engineer
woody creek engineering: civil engineer
anthony lawrence-belfair: custom furniture work­shop
structural associates: general contractor

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Meyer Davis Designs a Sprawling Manhattan Penthouse https://interiordesign.net/projects/meyer-davis-nyc-penthouse-design/ Thu, 13 Apr 2023 17:34:16 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=208785 Meyer Davis brings the signature welcoming luxury of its five-star hotel projects to the design of a sprawling NYC penthouse crowning a 57-story tower.

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an airy bedroom in a penthouse by Meyer Davis
Pierre Paulin lounge chairs gather beneath an Ingo Mauer pendant in the main bedroom.

Meyer Davis Designs a Sprawling Manhattan Penthouse

2023 Best of Year Honoree for Large Apartment

A chance encounter started the ball rolling on the redesign of a full-floor penthouse atop one of New York’s most avant-garde structures. The glittering 56 Leonard in TriBeCa, completed in 2017 by Herzog & de Meuron, is often affectionately likened to a stack of Jenga blocks. The cantilevered upper floors make the 57-story building a standout on the downtown skyline and give its lucky residents uninterrupted 360-degree views.

“One weeknight, I was out having drinks with friends when a potential client happened to pop in,” recalls Will Meyer, principal of Meyer Davis. The men were acquainted but had not seen each other in years. “It was midnight, but he said, ‘I just bought this new apartment. Let’s go look at it.’” Up they went several dozen stories, emerging into a 5,500-square-foot aerie surrounded by 14-foot-tall windows. “Imagine coming out of the elevator and seeing these outrageous views. It was a white box with nothing going on but also the most amazing blank slate possible.”

Soon after, Meyer and fellow principal Gray Davis—jointly inducted last year into the Interior Design Hall of Fame—met with the homeowner to share their thoughts on making the vast residence more human-scale and inviting. “The client appreciates good design,” Davis says, “and loves music and hosting parties. But the apartment also had to feel comfortable when he’s there alone or with his kids.”

Meyer Davis Creates a Warm and Approachable Penthouse Design

the living room of an NYC penthouse apartment with views of the city
In a 5,500-square-foot New York penthouse apartment renovated by Meyer Davis, a raised oak platform furnished with beanbags covered in recycled sheep­skin and a custom shelving unit encircling an existing concrete column create one of three sitting groups that help temper the living area’s vast open plan.

“The client had a clear idea of how it should feel: warm and approachable,” says Meyer Davis associate Shannon Senyk, senior design lead on the project and at the firm. “The views were there, but the space itself was quite cold and austere. We needed to add layers through architectural finishes and soft, lush textures.” Conjuring welcome is a practiced skill for the firm, which places not only 60th on our 100 Giants list but also 24th among the Hospitality Giants.

Meyer Davis Transforms a Loftlike Layout into Functional Zones

The team devised a number of strategies to tame the open, loftlike layout, which is augmented by two terraces and a balcony totaling 1,600 square feet of outdoor real estate. “A super-large space should be zoned in subtle ways, making rooms without making walls,” Meyer observes. The designers arranged the furniture informally, with three separate seating groups in the main living area “so you can hop around and sit in different places,” as Davis puts it. Chief among the architectural upgrades—and there were many, including four-and-a-half renovated baths and an oak-and-marble kitchen beneath an existing statement stove hood—was a zoning gesture Meyer reports “made all the difference in the world”: a raised oak platform that spans about a quarter of the living area.

a teak console holds a planter in the entry way of an NYC penthouse apartment
In the entry, a Jenni Kayne leather vase sits on a burnt teak console by Andrianna Shamaris.

One prime corner of the platform, groovily furnished with furry beanbags on a nubby Moroccan rug, became “the spot people gravitate to,” Senyk notes, lured by its casual coziness. (The sunset views aren’t bad, either.) Nearby, a custom shelving unit lightly encircles a hefty concrete column. “It divides the space and adds function,” Meyer says of the freestanding structure, which incorporates a bar and a professional-level sound system that make the area emphatically party-ready. The column is one of a dozen that march rhythmically along the apartment’s outer walls. “The rules we set were all about letting the architecture be what it is,” Meyer continues. “We wanted a delicate piece of millwork that wrapped around the column but didn’t touch it, didn’t diminish its importance.”

Wherever Meyer Davis made interventions, it introduced sensuous, luxe materials and finishes. The partition separating the entry from the dining area was refinished in graphite-colored Venetian plaster and the existing gas fireplace in it reframed with blackened-steel panels. “We liked the hand-finished quality,” Senyk says. “It’s another layer,” and the dark massing is a striking contrast to the abundant light everywhere else. Closet doors at the entry were upholstered in leather. Pale cerused-oak wall panels turned one of the four bedrooms into a chill-out den that doubles as a guest room. And by installing the same paneling and a row of glowing pendant fixtures in the door-lined central hallway, a difficult space that Davis says “felt like a service corridor” is now experienced as an atmospheric passage terminating in thrilling city views.

Furnishings Reflect a Relaxed Luxury Aesthetic 

The furnishings—predominantly new or custom pieces with a couple of vintage items thrown into the mix—all contribute to Meyer Davis’s trademark relaxed luxury, providing deep comfort while hold­ing their own against the grandeur of the architecture and the glory of the setting. Modern classics like Pierre Paulin lounge chairs and Ingo Mauer pendant fixtures join such contemporary pieces as a BassamFellows daybed and a Kelly Wearstler desk, the ensemble arranged so as not to disturb the pervasive feeling of cloud-borne calm. At the same time, the designers were mindful of placing the furniture in a way that, Meyer notes, “enhances your ability to take it all in.” The overall palette is neutral but far from colorless, comprising mostly blues, grays, and browns. The rust color of the velvet upholstery on a sofa in the den is the boldest hue in the apartment. “We brought in colors from the city and the sky,” Meyer concludes, “so as not to compete with the main event.”


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Inside the Manhattan Penthouse With Expansive Views

the dining area of an NYC penthouse with a large sculptural stove hood
Beneath the kitchen’s original plaster hood, Hugo stools by William Gray, Meyer Davis’s furniture line, pull up to an island of cerused oak and marble, while David Regestam’s Viva chairs furnish the breakfast dining area.
the center hallway of an apartment with tubular sconces and hanging pendants
Oscar pendants by Roman and Williams and Tassel sconces by Apparatus illuminate the center hall.
a table holds the book Meyer Davis: Made to Measure, a 2014 monograph by Dan Shaw
Meyer Davis: Made to Measure, a 2014 monograph by Dan Shaw, rests on a living-area table.
a seating group in a living room made of gray sectionals
EÆ lounge chairs by Erickson Æsthetics face a Timothy Oulton Cloud sectional in the living area’s second seating group; matching custom pendant fixtures with linen shades tie it to the third grouping beyond.
a dining area in front of a fireplace wall clad in Venetian plaster and steel plates
Crown chairs by Masspro­ductions surround a custom oak table in the dining area, where the fireplace wall is clad in glossy Venetian plaster and blackened-steel plates.
a free standing tub in the bathroom of an NYC penthouse overlooking the city
Allied Maker’s Grand Aperture chandelier joins an existing tub in the main bathroom.
a bedroom in an apartment with an ombre blue wall
In a child’s bedroom, Damo table lamps by Chen, Chao-Cheng and Studio Dunn’s Sorenthia pendant fixture are back­dropped by a painted wall echoing the colors outside.
an orange velvet sectional across from a blue daybed
Under a silk-covered pendant by Ruemmler in the den, the niche’s custom daybed accommodates overnight guests while plush velvet upholsters the custom sectional.
a desk is viewed through the open door of the closet in a New York apartment
Viewed from the closet, a Kelly Wearstler desk occupies a prime window spot in the main bedroom.
the main bathroom of an NYC penthouse apartment with a custom dual vanity
The main bathroom’s vanity is custom.
the exterior of 56 Leonard, a tower in TriBeCa
The apartment tops 56 Leonard, a 57-story tower in TriBeCa by Herzog & de Meuron.
a bed with a custom leather headboard in an apartment by Meyer Davis
The bed is outfitted with a custom leather headboard backed by fabric-covered panels.
a powder room with a carved stone vanity
The powder room’s carved-stone vanity was existing but the Circuit sconce by Apparatus is new.
the terrace of an NYC penthouse designed by Meyer Davis
The terrace hosts a Paloma teak sectional by Mario Ruiz.
an airy bedroom in a penthouse by Meyer Davis
Pierre Paulin lounge chairs gather beneath an Ingo Mauer pendant in the main bedroom.
PROJECT TEAM
meyer davis: anastasia bersetova; lindsay leonard
daniel demarco & associates; premium millwork: woodwork
silverlining: general contractor
PROJECT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
jg switzer: beanbags (platform)
contardi: floor lamp
mellah: rug
William Gray: stools (kit­chen)
troscan design: table
gärsnäs: armchairs
erickson æsthetics: lounge chairs (living area)
tibetano: rug
BassamFellows: day­bed
rh: sectionals (living area, terrace)
andrianna shamaris: black side table (living area), console (entry)
jenni kayne: vase (entry)
flos: pen­dant fixture
sacco: rugs (entry, main bedroom)
rw guild: pendant fixtures (hall)
apparatus: sconces (hall, powder room), pendant fixtures (dining area, closet)
armada new york: custom table (dining area)
massproductions: chairs
Allied Maker: pendant fixture (bathroom)
seed design: table lamps (bedroom)
studio dunn: pendant fixture
castel; pollack: daybed fabric, pillow fabrics (den)
Montauk: sectional
ruemmler: pendant fixture
brooklyn workroom: custom daybed (den), custom headboard, custom sofa (main bedroom)
mokum: sectional fab­ric (Den), curtain fabric
menu design shop: mirrors (closet, powder room)
phillip jeffries: wallcovering (closet, powder room)
Gubi: chairs (main bedroom)
blackcreek mercantile & trading co.: coffee table
Ingo Maurer: pendant fixture
perennials fabrics: wallcovering
THROUGHOUT
c&m shade: curtains
benjamin moore & co.: paint

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This MKDA-Designed Headquarters in Miami Features Museum-Ready Art https://interiordesign.net/projects/mkda-jorge-m-perez-headquarters-miami/ Mon, 29 Aug 2022 18:01:08 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=199368 Pieces from developer and philanthropist Jorge M. Pérez’s museum-ready collection fill Related Group’s MKDA-designed headquarters in Miami.

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MKDA puts a modern spin on a classic coffered ceiling in the art-filled lobby of developer Related Group’s headquarters building in Miami; the colorful statue is by Niki de Saint Phalle.
MKDA puts a modern spin on a classic coffered ceiling in the art-filled lobby of developer Related Group’s headquarters building in Miami; the colorful statue is by Niki de Saint Phalle.

This MKDA-Designed Headquarters in Miami Features Museum-Ready Art

If you live in Miami and care about art and architecture, you’ll be familiar with Jorge M. Pérez and Related Group, the development company he founded in 1979. Born in 1949 in Argentina to Cuban parents, and raised in Colombia, Pérez emigrated in 1968 to this country. After earning a master’s degree in urban planning from the University of Michigan, he began his career by constructing affordable housing, graduating to high-rise apartment buildings in both North and South America. Now a billionaire art collector and philanthropist, the “King of the Condo,” as some call him, made such a transformative gift to the former Miami Art Museum that the institution was renamed the Pérez Art Museum Miami when it moved into its new Herzog & de Meuron home in 2013.

In 2021, Related relocated its headquarters to the top two floors of a new LEED-certified concrete-and-glass building in Coconut Grove, Miami’s historically art-minded neighborhood, where Pérez and his wife, Darlene, live—as do Bernardo Fort-Brescia and Laurinda Spear, the founding principals of Arquitectonica, which designed the eight-story gem. To create the building’s interiors, Pérez turned to the Miami studio of MKDA, a multicity firm that made its reputation by revolutionizing the fashion showrooms of Manhattan’s Garment District. Regional managing principal Amanda Hertzler and her team joined the project early on, working most closely with Related senior vice president Nicholas Pérez, Jorge’s son (his brother Jon Paul is the company’s president), but much of the proceedings were driven by the founder and CEO himself.

“In addition to the building lobby and the Related offices, we also designed the elevator lobbies, the elevator cabs, restrooms, and a law firm on the fourth floor,” Hertzler reports. “Because we were going to install a lot of art, we kept the materials muted and neutral.” In the ground-floor lobby, for instance, she covered walls with slabs of matte porcelain that resemble marble but used scored, sandblasted gray limestone on the reception desk and other surfaces to create a softening contrast. She then added flashes of Champagne-finished stainless steel for some inimitable Miami elan.

Even more playful is the lobby’s coffered ceiling, a modernized nod to the carved-wood versions found in Coconut Grove’s historic Mediterranean-style mansions. “We changed the shapes of the coffers, so they’re all different,” notes Hertzler, who backed each recess with a sheet of LumaFilm—a flexible, paper-thin membrane incorporating tiny LEDs—to provide soft, ambient light overhead. The building’s mechanical systems are hidden above the glowing fabric, but the lobby’s rotating display of artworks is accommodated with visible gallery-style track lights that can be refocused remotely.

Artworks near the base of the stair­case include Robb Pruitt’s Untitled, a sculpture com­prising a stack of four painted tires and, on the left, Ai Weiwei’s Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (LEGO), a “painting” composed of the interlocking plastic bricks.
Artworks near the base of the stair­case include Robb Pruitt’s Untitled, a sculpture com­prising a stack of four painted tires and, on the left, Ai Weiwei’s Dropping a Han Dynasty Urn (LEGO), a “painting” composed of the interlocking plastic bricks.
Italian marble forms the grand staircase, which also functions as a platform for a rotating display of artworks, such as Donna Huanca’s sculpture Cliona Chilenis on the left.
Italian marble forms the grand staircase, which also functions as a platform for a rotating display of artworks, such as Donna Huanca’s sculpture Cliona Chilenis on the left.

Related’s main reception area—its massive stainless-steel and marble desk set off by a wall of backlit rosewood panels—and executive offices occupy the top floor, while employee work spaces and facilities, including a collaborative area and a lounge, fill the floor below. “The building has an offset core,” Hertzler observes, “which would tend to make the interior of each floor quite dark.” On the other hand, it allowed Arquitectonica to sink a two-story glass-enclosed atrium at the center of the headquarters. “Related has a traditional corporate culture,” continues Hertzler, “so we installed the usual per­imeter offices, but the atrium floods the interiors with light. The transparency comes with a connectivity, because you can see people working on the other side.” On both floors, she created communal spaces that take full advantage of the atrium’s natural light.

There is art everywhere, some 300 pieces that range in form from the traditional oil on canvas to every imaginable “alternative” medium, including an Ai Weiwei “painting” composed of Lego bricks. A 16-foot-long bench in reception that appears to be a cast-bronze version of a Mies van der Rohe Barcelona daybed is, in fact, a metallic-painted fiberglass-and-steel piece created by Judy Niedermaier in the 1990’s for the lobby of the Mies-designed IBM building in Chicago. The bench had to be craned into place because it wouldn’t fit in the freight elevator.

Arqui­tectonica designed the eight-story, concrete-and-glass building, the top two floors of which house Related’s headquarters.
Arqui­tectonica designed the eight-story, concrete-and-glass building, the top two floors of which house Related’s headquarters.
Untitled #1 by John Castles dominates the ground-floor elevator lobby.
Untitled #1 by John Castles dominates the ground-floor elevator lobby.

The bench sits next to the grand Calacatta Toscana marble staircase that connects the floors and also acts as a platform for artworks, which undergo a monthly rotation. “That doesn’t mean every piece is changed every month,” Hertzler explains, “but a lot of the art travels and needs to be swapped out.” Pérez has promised his collection to the museum that now bears his name. “One of the nicest things about the art installation is how approachable it is, even in the common areas.”

Along with their own lounge, employees get two outdoor spaces in which to relax: a courtyard terrace at the base of the atrium and an expansive Arquitectonica-designed roof garden, which includes a covered area and open zones with enviable views of Biscayne Bay. “The roof is lush and eclectic, with beautiful, old, exterior-grade furniture,” Hertzler concludes. “At Related, even the seating is art.”

The Well, a 13-foot-tall bronze sculpture by Enrique Martínez Celaya, sits in the rooftop garden overlooking the two-story atrium.
The Well, a 13-foot-tall bronze sculpture by Enrique Martínez Celaya, sits in the rooftop garden overlooking the two-story atrium.
David Geckeler chairs supplement a wall of built-in banquettes in the employee lounge.
David Geckeler chairs supplement a wall of built-in banquettes in the employee lounge.
project team
MKDA: kamilah bermudez; tonya watts; erin london
jalrw engineering group: mep
hyton engineering: civil engineer
advanced millwork: woodwork
city construction: general contractor
product sources from front
knoll: chairs, daybed (lobby)
Rimex Metals: reception desk (lobby), paneling (elevator lobby)
galaxy glass: glass panels (ele­vator lobby)
through 1stdibs: custom bench (reception)
exotic hardwoods + veneers: paneling
Coalesse: stools (collaboration)
Kvadrat Maharam: stool fabric
cf stinson: lounge chair fabric
acoufelt: ceiling baffles
gable roofs: lounge chairs, high tables (collaboration), desks (offices)
besa lighting: sconces (employee lounge)
perennials fabrics: booth fabric
woodtech: custom table (conference room), custom desk (ceo office)
stylex seating: task chairs
muuto: chairs (employee lounge)
designtex: banquette fabric
ben soleimani: sofa (ceo office)
carl hansen & søn: lounge chairs
piero lissoni: coffee table
robert kuo: red table (lounge)
throughout
empire office: furniture supplier
muraflex: storefront systems
florim: floor tile, wall slabs
architile: marble, quartz, terrazzo supplier
universal tile & marble enterprises: lime­stone supplier
heilux: stretch fabric lighting
Finelite: lighting
lightheaded: lighting
liton lighting:: lighting
bentley: carpet
benjamin moore & co.: paint

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