Tour a Washington Heights One-bedroom With a Palisades View

Tour a Washington Heights One-bedroom With a Palisades View

The Living Room: The walls were hand-plastered by Omar Yacoub of Maatsch Finishes. Adam Rolston opened the wall space, continuing the shape of the curved doorways. The industrial desk was pulled from the Columbia Irving Medical Center dumpster in the mid-’90s. The Paint Pour rug was designed by INC. The coffee table is a secondhand custom piece made by Jay Spectre.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

Before architect Adam Rolston and his partner bought their one-bedroom co-op in Washington Heights six years ago, “we had lived on the Lower East Side forever,” says Rolston, who would walk to work as creative and managing director of INC Architecture & Design. His partner is a clinician at Columbia Irving Medical Center uptown, so when they decided to move, it was to be somewhere closer to work for him. Now he can walk to his office.

After looking at 30 places, they found this prewar Art Deco–style co-op with a corner window that framed the George Washington Bridge and views across the river. “It’s like you are in the country,” Rolston says. “There’s virtually no city.” Instead, they can watch “people kayaking, the big boats, bald eagles — I mean there’s a whole population of wildlife that flies by here.”

Rolston’s architecture practice is steeped in green aesthetics and integrating sustainability into projects, most notably the design of 1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge with its living green walls and open lobby that feels like an extension of the waterfront. “I’m a little tiny bit claustrophobic,” admits Rolston, who opened this apartment, much of which hadn’t changed since the 1930s, up to the light and the views.

They were also influenced by a trip to Havana. There, “we were struck by two things: the way the Cubans live with plants and the way they paint their homes,” says Rolston. “They don’t just have house plants. They have internal landscapes, and when they repaint their beautiful old building, they paint only up to a line where the repainting is needed.”

If you stand in the living room and look out the windows across the river, you notice that “the Palisades horizon line dictates the paint-color change throughout,” he says. “It was a way to literally bring the outside in, formally. We brought the line of the Palisades literally into the apartment to pull us out into the landscape.”

Above the bed is one of Rolston’s photographs of the Palisades taken from the bedroom window and printed on raw canvas. He was inspired to create it after seeing the tapestries in the Cloisters.

There are whimsical touches, such as a wall of clocks, none of which tells the correct time. My partner “is obsessed with time,” Rolston says, smiling, “and he’s always late.” On one wall is a 1989 portrait of Rolston by Michael Pearlman, inspired by John Singer Sargent’s Madame X. The original kitchen had a small door, which Rolston opened up a bit like a keyhole to echo the rest of the arched doorways.

The apartment is not designed so much as, as Rolston puts it, “it’s a portrait of two people’s lives together, and that is the way we see design.”

In the living room, there is a portrait of Rolston as Adam X, after the John Singer Sargent portrait Madame X. It was painted in 1989 by Michael Pearlman.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

The Foyer: The entrance hall leading into the living room has an ’80s Westnofa postmodernist chair alongside a sculptural laminated plywood floor lamp of the same era by Michael Gilmartin.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

The View: The living room overlooks the George Washington Bridge. The artist Tom Farina made the bronze nude. The head bust is a vintage find from San Francisco in the aughts; Rolston bought it because he thought it looked like his mother. The flower vase is a medical-beaker stand, and the beaker was found in a dumpster at the Columbia Irving Medical Center.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

The Wall of Clocks: These are decorative and don’t work.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

The Kitchen: The original kitchen from the 1930s had a small door in the wall in front of the clocks. Rolston opened this up to echo the other arched doorways. The kitchen space is so narrow that he had to find the appliances at restaurant-supply stores, and the sink is the type used for extra-small spaces like behind a bar.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

The Bedroom: Inspired by tapestries at the Cloisters, Rolston took a photo with his phone of his bedroom-window view of the Palisades and made an archival inkjet print on canvas of it. The headboard is a secondhand custom piece made by Jay Spectre.
Photo: Joshua McHugh

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A One-Bedroom Inside a Mid-Century Modern Manhattan Landmark

A One-Bedroom Inside a Mid-Century Modern Manhattan Landmark


Listing of the Day

Location: Higher East Aspect, Manhattan

Selling price: $1.895 million

This newly renovated one particular-bedroom condo is on a superior floor in the legendary Mid-Century Present day Manhattan Property, the borough’s initial big white-brick developing and the one-time household of a number of daring-faced names, together with Grace Kelly, Benny Goodman and previous Gov. Hugh Carey.

Intended by the architect Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore Owings and Merrill and completed in 1951, the 21-story constructing occupies a comprehensive metropolis block concerning 2nd and 3rd avenues and East 65th and 66th streets on the Upper East Aspect. It was declared a New York City Landmark in 2007. 

This tree-lined block is added extensive, with two-way site visitors, and the setting up has a pair of porte-cocheres.

Created by the architect Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore Owings and Merrill, Manhattan Residence was concluded in 1951.


Evan Joseph/The Assouline Workforce

A lot more: Total-Flooring SoHo Loft Will come With a Hidden Brick Terrace ‘Reminiscent of Roman Ruins’

“It’s beautifully landscaped and it is normally straightforward to get a taxi and unload your vehicle,” reported listing agent Ruthie Assouline, of Douglas Elliman. Manhattan House “appears to be one particular large setting up, but it’s in fact five different towers,” every single with its personal separate entrance desk and significantly less than 100 units, she stated. “So you have all of the positive aspects of a large making,” like relatively low HOA fees and utility payments, “while emotion like you’re dwelling in a little developing.”

This 14th-ground condominium, for case in point, only has two neighbors on its flooring, Ms. Assouline stated. And the setting up has these a nutritious reserve fund that they have been equipped to completely renovate the building’s gym, doubling its measurement, and playroom devoid of assessing inhabitants, she mentioned.

“The constructing has a lot of conveniences that make for uncomplicated, functional dwelling,” she claimed. “People really don’t depart the building—they trade up or down based on their desires.”

Much more: Fifty percent-Floor Penthouse at Manhattan’s Star-Studded  Condo Lists for $18.5 Million

This condominium is in the A tower, which is closest to 3rd Avenue. It characteristics a cantilevered balcony, outsized home windows, new millwork, a new household business with storage, and “beautiful new radiator handles that give it a a lot more elevated glance and truly feel,” Ms. Assouline stated.

“The household business is a genuinely functional and perfectly-created house,” she added.

The condominium has hardwood flooring in the community areas and new wall-to-wall carpeting in the bed room, which also has a walk-in closet, according to the listing.

The windowed kitchen area characteristics a new tiled backsplash and Viking appliances. The renovated lavatory presents marble tiles, a floating vanity, and a soaking tub with a glass door enclosure and a rain-shower head. 

The lobby has two walk-in closets, just one with a stacked washer and dryer, and the dwelling/dining location is huge more than enough that a 2nd bed room could be carved out of the room, in accordance to the listing. 


Stats 

The 1,113-sq.-foot condo has one particular bedroom and just one whole lavatory.

Amenities 

Amenities consist of 24-hour doormen, a entire-time home manager, on-site valet parking, a fitness studio, a gym, a yoga studio, massage rooms, a rooftop lounge, a children’s playroom and bicycle storage. 

Manhattan House also has “one of the major private gardens in New York Metropolis, and it’s beautifully preserved,” Ms. Assouline mentioned. “It spans the entire width of the setting up,” from Second to Third avenues.

Community Notes 



“The area itself is so good,” Ms. Assouline mentioned. “You’re so close to both Midtown and the Higher East Aspect.”

Third Avenue is recognised for its superior shopping and dining places, and other close by sights include things like St. Catherine’s Park, Hunter University, Bloomingdale’s, the Park Avenue Armory and Central Park.

Agents: Ruthie and Ethan Assouline, Douglas Elliman

View the unique listing.