New York-based GRT Architects has rearranged the layout of an apartment in the East Village and added warm materials during its renovation.Goals for the renovation included reorganising rooms to improve sightlines through the apartment and optimising the natural light available in each room."Our renovation completely rethought the apartment's layout while preserving its turn-of-the-century disposition," said the GRT Architects team. "The space is neither more open nor closed than when we found it."
The kitchen, living and dining areas are all connected but intended to be read as separate rooms.The first move was to straighten a corridor from the entrance, to provide a view of an east-facing window from the front door.To enable this, a shallow-arched opening was created in a load-bearing brick wall – the only structural change made during the overhaul.
A full storage wall in the living room includes a panel that hides the TV."The journey down this corridor celebrates the building's irregularity with asymmetrical niches and rounded openings in thick plaster walls," GRT Architects said.This journey ends at the semi-open kitchen, which was relocated from diagonally across the apartment, to an area with better light and improved integration into the rest of the home.
A textured sliding door reveals a small office behind.An island clad in oxblood-coloured tiles sits at the centre, surrounded by white oak cabinetry with oversized handles and a satin white countertop.Chequerboard two-inch mosaic tiling across the kitchen floor ends below a storage unit suspended from brass bars, clearly defining this space from the adjacent dining room.
The primary bedroom now sits where the kitchen once was.A minimal brass pendant hangs above the walnut dining table, while the living room is found through a cased opening and also demarcated by a strip of herringbone parquet flooring.Largely decorated in a cooler grey hue compared to the warmer tones elsewhere, the living room features accents like a yellow armchair that matches the upholstery of the dining chairs, and a storage wall backed with sienna-coloured panels.A series of complementary colours emphasise the relief of this composition while oak pulls tie it back to the kitchen.
The second bedroom acts as both an office and a sleeping area thanks to a retractable murphy bed.Tucked behind a sliding textured glass door, a small office continues the same sienna shade across all four walls.An adjacent bathroom combines a variety of hard and soft materials, ranging from flecked terrazzo and green mosaic tiles to oak cabinet doors that visually tie back to the kitchen.
Interiors:GRTArchitects
Photos:NicoleFranzen
Words:倩倩