210 W. 29th Street Ninth Floor New York, NY 10001 T 212.807.0981 F 212.807.0948 Hell's Kitchen Loft The client, a dealer of photographs, requested a zen feeling for her loft. We achieved this with natural colors and simple clean architectural elements. At 100 feet long and 25feet wide the space also needed something to moderate its proportions.
Yes, why keep the art and visual uniqueness to the rooms? No matter where we're going or how fast or how slow and what time of day and with who or by ourselves we all of us pass through a hallway to get there.
Clean architectural lines meet with a cozy functionality. This space has been created meticulously and yet looks very lived in. The bookshelves and photos add warmth and detail, kept uncomplicated by their organized arrangement. And that hallway lighting, oh man.
framed pictures of various sizes hanging from one rail -- anchor points are all at the same height. (in our case, could be a rough barn beam or perhaps a branch from the backyard.)
Like the row of hanging photos on the right hand side - could see doing that using the Ikea hanging thingers in the upstairs hallway - might need more lighting though
Yes, why keep the art and visual uniqueness to the rooms? No matter where we're going or how fast or how slow and what time of day and with who or by ourselves we all of us pass through a hallway to get there.
This is a great way to hang artwork in a long hallway or the like. Note the single long strip of metal that all the art hangs from. And on the wall nearer, the frames are hung in varying heights to mimic the other hangings.
The low-lying built-in bookshelf is a beautiful way to keep an overflow of books organized, plus it's a perfect place to drop your keys and mail as you come in the door. Add in a couple baskets to catch it all.