Tala Fustok Studio used completely different mineral textures and supplies to melt the exhausting edges of this industrial residence in New York’s West Village.
Designed for a single feminine occupant, the residence is positioned on a five-block stretch on Bleecker Road inside a restored late 1800s constructing that was initially designed to deal with the Schumacher and Ettlinger lithographic printing enterprise.

The 348-square-metre three-bedroom residence is break up over two flooring linked by a corten metal staircase.
The shopper requested London designers Tala Fustok Studio to create a peaceful, up to date area utilizing artisanal and mineral supplies impressed by town.




The designers reorganised the area to emphasize the residence’s tall ceilings, outsized home windows and pure daylight.
To create higher readability within the area, the staircase that connects the 2 flooring was additionally designed to separate the kitchen from the lounge.
This monolithic piece is wrapped in a patchwork of welded corten metal produced by Brooklyn-based metallic fabricator Gabrielle Shelton.
The studio additionally added a maple and glass wall that homes a Patagonia stone workspace and a show cupboard that showcases the shopper’s vase and classic crockery assortment.
Patagonia stone was additionally used within the kitchen, whereas the residence’s partitions had been rendered in limestone and textured glass was chosen to dapple the pure gentle, making a serene and calm atmosphere.




It was essential to the studio and the shopper to work with native artisans like Shelton. Different locally-made items embody the liquid metallic bespoke bathtub and dwelling space partitions by New York-based atelier Courbet.
The reclaimed walnut flooring was sourced regionally and an array of various metals within the kitchen, such because the blackened metal cupboards and brass cooker hood, had been all handcrafted by native artisans.




The London studio beforehand created an workplace with a blood-red bar and all-blue cinema room for a BAFTA-winning sport developer in Cambridge.
The pictures is by Isabel Parra.