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Metropolitan Home – Nov / Dec 2000
Ship Shape
This South Beach penthouse condo was actually opened up from its
original floor plan and outfitted as smartly as a deco liner to
be a "decompression zone" for an active and peripatetic
couple.
High above the bustle of South Beach is an apartment so trim and
shipshape that it might be the cabin of an elegant oceangoing yacht.
Look out the window and, indeed, there is the ocean blue; but the
intervening dunes and the art deco sky-line silhouetted beyond
offer an urban reality check, an intimation o the lively city scene
below.
Roger and Nydia Stone – he’s a public affairs consultant
and she’s a photographer – are out-and-about types
who think nothing of dancing till dawn, so an apartment in the
thick of things suited them fine. The building, a nondescript 1960s
high rise, sits at the gateway to South Beach, right on the Atlantic,
a perfect venue for a subtropical pied-a-terre.
At first the stones lived on a lower floor, but they seized the
opportunity to move on up when a tiny penthouse became available.
The apartment had been carved up into many rooms, which turned
a small space into unlivable smaller ones. The walls were painted
turquoise, yellow and red. "I’d say it had a Mexican
restaurant motif", says Roger. The Stones called in another
husband-and-wife team: architecture William Taylor and designer
Phyllis Taylor (of Taylor and Taylor), who collaborated with their
associate partner, Juan Carlos Menendez remembers his first encounter
with the Stones’ new place: "it was schizophrenic."
The couple wanted a retreat that was a transition point between
their hurried schedules in New York and Washington, D.C., (where
they have an apartment and a house, respectively) and the animated
activity of South Beach – basically a decompression zone.
They asked Taylor and Taylor for an apartment "that was minimalist
but not ridiculously so, a clean design that referred to the streamlined,
to art deco."
The apartment was gutted and turned into a single L-shaped space,
with areas for dining, living and sleeping. What was once a foyer
is now a compact dining room, with a table from Holly Hunt (the
Chicago retailer recently opened a second showroom in Miami). With
its "X" legs, it’s a take on the traditional
captain’s table.
Because the Stones are not serious cooks, all they wanted were
the bare necessities. A wall kitchen was hidden behind broad doors
paneled in pale woven raffia. Fling them open and there it all
is: granite countertops , microwave / convection oven, undercounter
refrigerator, doll-size dishwasher and full-size espresso machine.
Close the paneled doors, and all that is left is an elegant, subtly
patterned wall. The raffia paneling continues around the dining
area, covering the doorway and hiding mechanical systems.
In the rest of the space, the walls were paneled in maple, "chosen
because it came the closest to the bamboo we used on the floors",
says Menendez. He established a geometric wall pattern, large vertical
panels juxtaposed against smaller horizontal ones, to create a
subtle rhythm and a balance.
As on a boat, efficiency is a real key here. Storage is behind
the paneling. The clothes closet is large – "my wife
and I are both clothes horses," admits Roger – but
the bathroom is compact. A custom-made curved partition separates
the living and sleeping areas. The cleverly designed partition
functions as a headboard on one side and in the living room as
a compact cabinet for the television and sound components.
The cacophony of colors that the Stones inherited inspired the
new palate, which is as fresh as it is light. "All that color
was the last thing you’d want in an apartment this size," says
Menendez. "Neutralizing it was my very first instinct."
A trademark of Phyllis Taylor’s interiors is the mix of antiques
and modern pieces. Thus, the side tables next to the sofa are vintage
art deco – a nod to the more than 800 classic buildings in
the national historic district just downstairs. But the wood and
corrugated-glass coffee table is from Details in Miami.
Since the apartment only has two windows, Menendez did all that
he could to maximize the view. The large mirror over the sofa is
strategically placed to imply another eye on the world. Look into
either window or mirror and the ocean looks back at you. "We
were trying to create a sense of openness by bringing the ocean
view into the apartment," he says.
The design of the mirror is intended, Menendez continues, "to
allude to the Afro-Caribbean style that influenced Parisian deco." The
patterned, geometric rug is Tibetan. These references to Parisian
ethno-deco are what Menendez calls "Zen abstractions – the
furniture allows for that because it’s unspecific."
The chairs and sofa are upholstered in earthy "new neutrals" of
beige, green and brown. "It’s almost monochromatic," schemes
that actually works – all because of the diminutive size
of the apartment."
Just as the raffia from the dining room walls was carried into
the living room area’s barrel chairs, so the maple from the
wall paneling was used in the built-in desk that sits against one
wall – a desk with a beach view. It’s used again on
the casework for the headboard / entertainment console / room divider.
Outside of the apartment, says Nydia Stone, "there’s
South Beach. Inside there’s a view of both the water and
the great art deco architecture – but this is an escape.
Up here, other than the occasional boom box going by, you don’t
hear a thing."
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