Spaces: Michael Haverland + Alan Tranksley: Ellenbogen Triplex: Grammercy Park

. Wednesday, October 20, 2010

















An incredible renovation by architect Michael Haverland and interior designer Alan Tanksley.

From an article by Jane Margolies:

"In all of New York, there's no place like Gramercy Park, an impeccably tended gated square to which only lucky residents of the surrounding town houses and apartments have a key. Behind those gracious facades, you'd expect to find dimly lit parlors draped in damask. But in the case of one six-story Greek revival house, nothing could be further from the truth. Imag ine entering the 1865 building and taking the elevator to the apartment on the top three floors, where you encounter a decidedly untraditional, unconventional space. Sunshine from an enormous skylight bathes a dramatic travertine staircase. Pedigreed mid-century furniture and large-format contemporary photography fill the rooms on either side. That's the scenario envisioned by the house's owner, Classic Media cofounder and co-CEO Eric Ellenbogen, who has bought, fixed up, and sold multiple Manhattan residences as well as owning a William F. Cody house in Palm Springs, California.
Renovating the Gramercy property involved a multiphase, multiyear collaboration with Michael Haverland Architect. The house was a complete eyesore at the outset-stripped of its original stoop, encrusted with peeling lime-green paint, and chopped up into eight apartments in which nary a mantel, molding, or ceiling medallion remained. While tenants were relocated, Michael Haverland began restoring the redbrick facade to the exacting standards of the Landmarks Preservation Commission. He stripped and re-pointed the brick, reinstated the stoop, and reproduced the original ironwork and cornice. As for the interior, it was devoid of details and dark like most town houses, having windows only on the front and rear. Gutting the space and starting from scratch was the only solution. "I'm all for economy and salvaging," Haverland says. "In this case, though, there was nothing to save."
.....
Alan Tanksley, a Gramercy-area resident whose namesake interiors firm was called in to help "stage" the upper triplex in a sluggish market, consulted on finishes and light fixtures to "soften the architecture's hard edges," he notes. Most of the rooms he painted in light neutrals, and softly colored grass cloth covers walls in two of the bedrooms and the home office. Tanksley's other reason for keeping the background restrained was the distinctive mid-century furniture that Ellenbogen has been collecting for 25 years: rare, iconic examples of the genre, some of them stored in a climate-controlled warehouse. Although Tanksley found some of the furnishings at auction in Los Angeles, Chicago, and New Jersey and added such inexpensive purchases as the Isamu Noguchi paper orb hanging from the raked ceiling of the living room, the project was largely, Tanksley explains, "a matter of working with what Eric already had." Designer, client, and a stylist, Rogelio Garcia, arranged the furniture, playing straight lines against curves and juxtaposing pieces with a machined quality against those that look handmade. To complete the "lived-in" illusion, the Julie Saul Gallery installed a selection of contemporary photography in advance of a cocktail party thrown by Ellenbogen's real-estate agent to entice potential purchasers. Someone came forward soon after, a man who found the turnkey arrangement appealing enough to buy the place, lock, stock, and barrel.
"

The fine collection of 20th Century design includes vintage freeform brass sconces, Jacques Adnet desk and chair, biomorphic Italian lounge chairs by Erberto Carboni Delfino flank an Piero Fornasetti table, Andrée Putman floor lamp beside a Paul Laszlo sofa and a Paul Evans coffee table, Edvard and Tove Kindt-Larsen cabinet, Jean Pascaud armchair, Gio Ponti chair, a Robert Sonneman lamp, John Risley bench, Hans Wegner Valet chair, George Nakashima daybed, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Tugenhat chair, Pierre Paulin desk with a Harry Bertoia wire chair, George Nelson bed, Eames Eiffel Armchair,  Paul McCobb credenza, outdoor furniture by Harry Bertoia and Walter Lamb. The contemporary photography collection includes works by Sarah Anne Johnson, Bill Jacobson, Sally Gall, and Orit Raff.

Photography by Eric Laignel.

Via Interior Design.

1 comments:

Tyler (plastolux) said...

Wow this place is perfect. Love it!

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