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Architectural Digest - November 2006
Breathing lessons on fifth Avenue
A fresh approach for an apartment in a McKim, Mead & White building

Few buildings in New York have a more distinguished
history than the 12-story, Italian Renaissance Revival palazzo designed
by McKim, Mead & White on Fifth Avenue across the street from The
Metropolitan Museum of Art. When it was completed in 1912, New York
patricians were still suspicious, if not contemptuous, of vertical
living, and the architects had to compete with the private mansions
on Millionaire's Row. But the monumental elegance of the facade,
the incomparable park views, the solidity and grandeur of the rooms
and the opulence of the amenities converted them to a new style
of life.
Every generation, however, redefines modern
luxury. A banker, who is now focusing, he says, "on my kids, friendship,
cooking, art, baseball and philanthropy," bought one of the finest
apartments in the building - 7,000 square feet on the equivalent
of the etage noble, with French doors that open to a stone balustrade
and higher ceilings than on any other floor. The previous owner
was a grande dame of the old school, and her decor was a predictable
stage set heavy on the passementerie, with a stuffy dining room,
a drafty entrance gallery, a nondescript kitchen she may or may
not ever have visited, with a warren of staff rooms behind it, and
- as Stephen Sills puts it -
"Louis, Louis everywhere."
Sills and his partner, James Huniford, who met
their client through a mutual friend, eagerly accepted his challenge
to make the apartment more "casual and family-friendly" as Huniford
describes it, while respecting its inherent nobility. "Modern design
is perspective, not a period," Sills says. "If you look at the past
with a fresh but well-educated eye, it clarifies your sense of the
present. A poetic juxtaposition of colors and textures with classical
furnishings can be more original than the kind of shock-and-awe
tactics that strip a room of its soul. The essence of poetry, after
all, is revelation. Ford and I aim to orchestrate subtle composition
that unsettles conventional expectations."
The designers felt the apartment merited "a
total transformation," Huniford says. "the bones were great, but
the flesh was slack." Their client agreed. The staff wing was remade
into additional bedrooms and a gym. A service corridor was demolished
to create a handsome chef's kitchen and informal dining area. The
doorways were raised and widened, and a team of master artisans
restored the original plasterwork - "beautiful, Louis XV-style ceilings
medallions and Regence crown moldings," Sills explains. They recast
the missing pieces on-site, then limed and gilded them. They also
stripped the oak parquet de Versailles of its gloomy varnish and
refinished it by hand to let the grain breathe. "Breathing room,"
Sills notes succinctly, "was our theme."
For nearly a century, however, the entrance
gallery hogged a bit too much oxygen. It served no useful function
beyond, perhaps, announcing to guests that their hostess had room
to waste. The partners reinvented the space as the library for a
gentleman scholar, anchored at one end by a lemonwood desk designed
to resemble a Greek temple and at the other by round, Neoclassical
table, "Books and reading are central to my life," the owner says,
"and much of my philanthropy goes to education."
The refinement of this masculine lair sets the
tone for the adjoining dining/family room, which has the artfully
rusticated elegance of a ducal hunting lodge. Bugatti brackets burnish
the mahogany of a French Empire cabinet; Art Deco armchairs by Ruhlmann,
covered in silk, surround a dining table that expands to seat 12
people. An elemental sculpture by Louise Nevelson hanging over the
sofa relates, across the millennia, to the 1st-century Roman bas-relief
of a bull above the mantel: One is an artist's homage to human tool
making, the other to primal muscle power.
The antique-chestnut paneling - made of wood
salvaged from a barn - was, in this context, an inspiration. "we
found the beams in the collection of a Midwestern restorationist,"
Sills explains, "and he remilled them to our drawings." The Ionic
columns carved into the paneling "are a nod to the kind of prestigious
woodwork you would expect here," he adds, "but we bleached the wood
and preserved the wormholes and the rust stains from old nails.
Our client was as passionate about the craftsmanship involved as
we were, and he followed its progress on a computer."
A digital image, however, is like a literal
translation: useful but flat. One can only appreciate the poetics
of the living room by crossing its threshold. Sills and Huniford
skim-coated the walls with gossamer-tissue paper squares applied
directly to the wet paint (a pale honey-dew green) that wrinkled
as they dried - and hung the windows with two layers of unlined
taffeta to heighten the translucence. The effect, in Sill's words,
is "magically watery and ethereal." A custom needlepoint rug in
Hermes orange, designed by the firm, French alabaster lanterns and
a serene, architectural abstraction by Robert Mangold contribute
to the glow.
"The volume and light are so dramatic," Sills
says, "that we made them our focal point. The decor alludes to the
museum streetscape below - An American fantasy of the 19th century
Paris - but imagined in a timeless way. Most of the furnishings
are antique, although we chose them for their graphic simplicity.
We wanted to endow the room with a richness of texture without making
it precious."
"What is most precious to me," their client
says, "is the combination of beauty and comfort with a feeling of
home."

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