ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 15 seconds.
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

With Flying Colors

With alumni including Interior Design Hall of Fame members Mica Ertegun, Mariette Himes Gomez, and Rose Tarlow, the New York School of Interior Design has come a long way since its founding in 1916.

Nicholas Tamarin -- Interior Design, 2/1/2011 1:09:00 PM

With Flying Colors

View Slideshow

 

firm: gensler
site: new york

 

With alumni including Interior Design Hall of Fame members Mica Ertegun, Mariette Himes Gomez, and Rose Tarlow, the New York School of Interior Design has come a long way since its founding in 1916. But with only 1,400 square feet for MFA students at the main location-a connected pair of Renaissance and Colonial revival buildings-president Christopher Cyphers knew he'd need to lease much more square footage to accommodate additional graduate programs, which he recognized had the greatest potential for growth. Budget constraints ruled out finding something nearby, on the Upper East Side. So Cyphers looked at spaces throughout the city before finding a 20,000-square-foot light-filled loft a quick subway ride away. After interviewing a dozen design firms, he and his board committee chose Gensler.


Principal Mark Morton placed the new design studios along window walls, as daylighting would be a key component in the pursuit of LEED-CI Platinum certification. Ditto for a computerized light-harvesting system, LED track lighting and ceiling panels, sustainable rubber flooring, recyclable nylon carpet tiles, and low-VOC paint and adhesive. On the tech side, features include WiFi for all those student laptops, a 3-D printer, and a laser-cutter. "We don't even have a laser-cutter at our office," Morton laments. He also confesses to "lots of pressure, designing a school for designers."


Time pressure was intense, too. Morton had only six months, between the signing of the lease and the opening of the school year, to get the graduate center up and running. And there's no spring break in sight. He's now busy renovating another 20,000-square-foot space, one story below.

 

Photography by Mark LaRosa.

Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

On the Phone

From the Magazine:
Gensler dialed up bright color for Nokia in Silicon Valley--and the IIDA answered with an award.
+ Read the Article

Just for Kids

From the Magazine:
Two schools in the southern German town of Tuttlingen share this student center, one of the few that's both freestanding and purpose-built.
Firm: Heinisch Lembach Huber Architekten
Site: Tuttlingen, Germany
+ Read the Article

A Cinematic Moment

From the Magazine:
In Vila do Conde, Portugal, a mansion from the 1500's now houses the Saint Roch Solar Gallery cultural center, as well as a dormitory for the Superior School of Industrial Studies and Managment.
+ Read the Article