Death Star Loft / Raad Studio
Death Star Loft contains a series of unexpected experiences and spatial moves that challenge the typical layout of a split level New York City apartment.
Death Star Loft contains a series of unexpected experiences and spatial moves that challenge the typical layout of a split level New York City apartment.
This midcentury modern-inspired Riverside Drive Apartment is a combined 2,500-square-foot apartment. It is designed as a home for a family of five that would continue to accommodate the children as they grow older.
The challenge for this 7,500 square foot home on a two acre, waterfront lot in North Haven was to create a design that would take full advantage of the views across Sag Harbor
Something Out of Nothing Architecture Studio (SOON) has renovated a house in the southern Catskills town of Eldred, New York.
This modernist interpretation of the quintessential Upstate cabin evolves the classic form and materials into this two story architect designed retreat, clad in cedar shake with walls of glass and iconic dormers.
This three-story, 5,280-square-foot rowhouse is located in Brooklyn’s Park Slope Historic District. It was built in the first decade of the twentieth century, and was designed Neo-Federal style.
The design of this weekend family retreat on Shelter Island, NY responds to the location’s wistful beauty. Mature trees, hedgerows and rolling lawns extend to a narrow sandy beach and the water beyond.
Nestled in Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, a block of captivating houses designed by Frank S. Lowe for the Kingston Realty Company in 1906 continues to charm residents today.
Located on a flat, four and one half acre flag lot with views of Sagg Pond, this 17,000 square foot family compound is conceived of as a ‘garden wall’ in the landscape that connects agrarian-inspired ‘outbuildings’.
For the Tribeca Family Residence, GRADE has created a family-friendly home within the sophisticated backdrop of 443 Greenwich.
Though it’s located on 5.5 acres of pristine oceanfront in Southampton, this project came with inherent challenges. The clients had purchased the property with approvals in place, which locked in the size and location of the main house and accessory structure.
This project seeks to honor the agricultural traditions of the area by applying the fundamental principles of agriculture to architecture: placing order on nature and maximizing access to light and air.