YINJISPACE use media professional’s unique perspective,try to explore the essence of life behind the design works.

© logo 粤ICP备19077098号

YINJISPACE use media professional’s unique perspective,try to explore the essence of life behind the design works.

© logo 粤ICP备19077098号
Drake / Anderson

Weekend Residence

       Drake and Anderson’s previous hits may be recognized for their heady mix of glamour and color, but when it came to decorating this 11-year-old glass box—surrounded by 267 acres of woodland—they played it cool. A soft, woodsy color palette and a mix of cozy textures define this gentle woodland home.
       The transparency of the building and the beauty of the land around it are what first attracted the owners, who are two founders and board members of several technology companies. The owners embrace the ability to live so visually connected to nature and have chosen to not obscure the glass in any way.
       When work started, nature had infiltrated inside. Literally: The flat roof had leaked for years and bestowed a gift of thick green and black mold behind the walls and ceiling. At one point, the contractor found a snake nest plus lots of “things you don’t typically find here in Manhattan,” jokes Drake.
       Once structural work was complete, Drake and Anderson blurred the aesthetic boundaries between the outside and inside using natural materials. Stained white oak ceilings and floors, an onyx wall in the bathroom, a giant sheared-lambskin rug in the living room, and custom woven upholstery were implemented to soften the space. The project was a balance of using texture and materials to counter some of the severe materials such as concrete, metal, and glass to give it a cozy, comfortable feeling.
       There are inevitably a number of templates of glass houses to follow—including the Farnsworth house by Mies van der Rohe or Philip Johnson’s in New Canaan, Connecticut—yet the designers resisted the urge to do a midcentury pastiche. “Some of our projects lean toward modern, some lean traditional, but there are always multiple references,” says Drake. Midcentury pieces mix here with contemporary and custom to create interesting dialogues. “It would have been cheesy otherwise,” Drake concludes.
       The onyx wall in the master bathroom is a nod to Mies van der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion. He brought in lavish materials to counter the minimal architecture, just as Drake Anderson do here.“This was a unique project for our clients and a unique project for us, It’s really all just about nature and what’s outside,” says Anderson.

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