The Simple Life: A Montauk Beach House for a Creative Couple

At the point when Elisa Restrepo, prime supporter of the shoe line Dieppa Restrepo, and her significant other Dylan Dodd, who possesses NYC eateries Karasu, Walter's, Walter Foods, and Barrio Chino, went searching for a spot to get away from the city, they picked a three-story split-level house in the "lethargic surfing town" of Montauk and contracted Brooklyn modelers Space Exploration to redesign it.

They'd cooperated before: Space Exploration had redesigned the couple's Brooklyn condo (whose kitchen, by chance, won Remodelista's 2014 Best Professional Kitchen Design recompense). The firm likewise planned two of Dodd's eateries—Walter's and Karasu, both in Brooklyn.

In spite of the fact that the house was standing, it required a full gut redesign that included supplanting windows, moving sky facing windows, changing the deck and carport, and broad arranging, in an area "that still feels untamed by advancement." The rebuild took a year's work, from initially meeting to the keep going thing on the punch list. Firm chief Kevin Greenberg strolled us through the progressions.

Photography by Kevin Greenberg, kindness of Space Exploration..


The eating table in the back is made of a repurposed marble section from the proprietors' Brooklyn home, with legs found on Etsy.

The kitchen cabinets are high-gloss Ringhult from Ikea, and the cabinet pulls are JapaneseFutagami Brass Towel Bars. The Miele vent hood is concealed behind a cabinet, and its exhaust duct is hidden behind a custom cabinet detail on top.
The kitchen ledges are marine-grade Baltic birch plywood, which were planned as a placeholder yet in the end won over the proprietors. The metal kitchen spigot and overskirt sink are both from Rohl. A solitary kitchen window outlines a perspective of the encompassing spruce and sumac trees. 

The house's principle door is on the center floor, off the winding deck. Greta Grossman's Cobra Sconce for Gubi lights up the foot of the stairs. 


Space Exploration moved and amplified windows all through the house to better edge perspectives and take in all the more light. They picked outlines with negligible enumerating "to stress the association amongst inside and out." 


The base floor contains an office, children's room, and the indented lounge space, or "solarium," appeared here. It opens straightforwardly onto the grounds by means of the glass entryways at the most distant end of the room. The walnut racking framework at left is by Atlas Industries.


The floorplan of the bottom level, with office, kids’ bedroom, and sun room.
The middle floor with entryway and master bedroom is shown at left, and the top floor with kitchen and living space at right.

Share on Google Plus

About Unknown

    Blogger Comment
    Facebook Comment

0 comments:

Post a Comment