Imagination always trumps pretension. That tenet wasn't lost on LTL Architects, formerly Lewis.Tsurumaki.Lewis, when assembling specs for the redo of a 1930's town house in New York. "Rather than using exorbitant or exotic materials in conventional ways, the strategy was to employ basic materials inventively," Marc Tsurumaki explains. The cylinder enclosing the spiral staircase at the center of the 2,000-square-foot house starts out as mere blackened steel. The genius comes in the execution, as CNC water jets cut out random oblongs from the sheet metal, creating the effectof a diaphanous veil or a crumbling mosaic. Downstairs, between the kitchen and dining area, the enclosure's latticework remains open. Up in the master bedroom, the steel is backed by milky-white annealed, laminated glass. A door of the same materials slides around on concealed tracks to close off the stairwell for privacy. And the metamorphosis from stair to sculpture is complete.
Mixed MediaFrom top: Inside the stair enclosure on the New York town house's ground level. The blackened steel, cut out by water jets. The enclosure as seen from the living area. LTL Architects partners Paul Lewis, Marc Tsurumaki, and David J. Lewis.
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