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A Blended Home For A Blended Family On The Upper West Side

This brownstone apartment, steps from Central Park, is the pied-a-terre for an empty-nester blended family who reside primarily in Seattle, with a palette drawn from Pacific Northwest tones of greens, blues, deep grays, and white oak paneling. The clients had occupied the rear garden duplex for a number of years when the front triplex became available. The two units connected only at the garden level, with front stairs leading up to the parlor and down to the cellar, and rear circulation leading down to the cellar and out to a two-level outdoor garden.

The design approach, led by Barker Architecture Office, sought to blur the boundary between the two units, while creating private suites at different levels that would enable visitors to come and go independently.

Divisions between the units were removed to provide a clear view from the front through to the garden at the rear. The living room at the front was centered around a working fireplace, while white oak shelving surrounds the street-facing windows. The stairs connecting the three front levels were resurfaced and screened with a reeded glass wall.

A white oak tambour banquette with a black wood table and white oak chairs creates an informal dining area. White oak reappears in the kitchen, where the oak island is surfaced in a terrazzo slab. A wall of deep blue-green cabinets, inset with brushed copper. is lined with a fantasy soapstone work surface. The rear façade was replaced with a glass door and sidelight. The door opens out onto a bridge over a cellar areaway that was added to allow the living spaces to connect directly to the garden without going through the bedroom.

Throughout the home, smaller spaces boast bold colors and wallcoverings. A wallpapered powder room features a seaside scene, a custom soapstone vanity, and blue-green penny tiles. While the rear guest bedroom is lined in a mural wallpaper with a playful woodland scene. 

The reeded glass wall conceals the front stair, which leads down to a work-from-home space on the lower level. There, mural wallpaper depicting a tree canopy envelops the room.

Photography by Gieves Anderson.

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