White Street Loft / WORKac

White Street Loft / WORKac - Image 2 of 19White Street Loft / WORKac - Shelving, ChairWhite Street Loft / WORKac - Image 4 of 19White Street Loft / WORKac - Sink, BathroomWhite Street Loft / WORKac - More Images+ 14

  • Architects: WORKac
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  6000 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2011
  • Photographs

Text description provided by the architects. The 6,000 sqf White Street Loft apartment encompasses a full ground floor, half a basement and one third of a sub-basement. The client, a family of four, love to entertain, and for more than four years WORKac collaborated with the family to create a new space for urban living that embraces diversity of materials and spaces, kinetic interventions to transform spaces and a highly developed sense of whimsy and the unexpected.

White Street Loft / WORKac - Windows, Door, Facade
© Elizabeth Felicella

The classic New York minimalist loft was considered too constraining and inflexible. The concept therefore was to divide the space into a series of programmatic “stripes” to accommodate different functions, moods and materials and break down the length of the apartment into a promenade of experiences, from most public at the front to most private in the back. This is combined with a shifting of the rear floors to allow for three full-height levels.

White Street Loft / WORKac - Table, Windows, Beam
© Elizabeth Felicella

The stripes consist of: the Living Room at the front of the apartment, with white resin floors and a loft-lke minimalist feel; the bamboo Shaker Box which has built-in storage and Japanese-style tables set in the floor - it can double as a stage or dance floor; the Kitchen/Dining room with plum-colored concrete floors and walls and a more formal arrangement of a table for 12 to 16 and an enormous kitchen; the Media Room where curved felt-covered walls, floor and ceiling provide a comfy nook for hanging out - a kids-only sleeping loft above provides space for sleep-overs.

White Street Loft / WORKac - Shelving, Chair
© Elizabeth Felicella

The Void is an indoor light shaft with a mesquite-tiled floor that accommodates the circulation as well as a “Stitchevator” (named after the family dog) carrying tired dogs, snacks or toys between levels and a translucent bridge connecting the Master to a megacloset behind; the Bedrooms zone contains two kids rooms at the top, Master at the basement level and Nanny and Guestroom at the bottom; the Skylight strip employs a number devices (glass, voids, an outdoor courtyard) to distribute light among all of the levels; the rear Garden is a small stripe of green – and chicken coop.

White Street Loft / WORKac - Windows, Beam
© Elizabeth Felicella

All of the ground-floor stripes are connected by a series of unique tables. The Dining Room table can be extended with a leaf, the Shaker Box tables can be raised or lowered, the Living Room table doubles as a chandelier and can be lowered from the ceiling. All of the tables can be joined together for huge dinners, or twice a year to form a catwalk that can connect to the stairway in the void for the fashion designer’s new collections.

White Street Loft / WORKac - Table, Windows
© Elizabeth Felicella

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Project location

Address:New York, NY, USA

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About this office
Cite: "White Street Loft / WORKac" 21 Feb 2011. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/113567/white-street-loft-workac> ISSN 0719-8884

© Elizabeth Felicella

怀特街阁楼 / WORKac

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