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1. Vaccaro Loft Kitchen pull out cabinets 2061 px 1547 px 2 MB Print - Low res only |
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2. Vaccaro Loft Kitchen details 2608 px 1684 px 2 MB Print - Low res only |
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3. Vaccaro Loft Kitchen and dining area 2608 px 1684 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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4. Vaccaro Loft Sleeping loft 2608 px 1684 px 4 MB Print - Low res only |
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5. Vaccaro Loft Living room and dining area 2608 px 1684 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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6. Vaccaro Loft View from dining to living area 2608 px 1684 px 3 MB Print - Low res only |
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7. Vaccaro Loft Sleeping loft 1024 px 768 px 566 KB Print - Low res only |
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8. Vaccaro Loft Pull out closets 594 px 768 px 283 KB Print - Low res only |
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9. Vaccaro Loft Kitchen 1024 px 768 px 510 KB Print - Low res only |
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10. Vaccaro Loft Stair to sleeping loft 594 px 768 px 245 KB Print - Low res only |
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11. Vaccaro Loft View of living room 1024 px 768 px 487 KB Print - Low res only |
The Vaccaro family of four approached Leeser Architecture with the request to re-imagine their living space as a series of compact and rigorously engineered open zones within a typical New York industrial loft building. One apartment wall is thickened to contain the bathrooms. Within the resulting volume, a sleeping loft, kitchen, and storage areas are integrated into one piece of domestic furniture by taut, lacquered surfaces, which stretch over them. One surface forms the cabinet faces, kitchen backsplash, and the loft underside, while the other forms its topside, featuring a long, low walkway, which allows for unobstructed headroom to access the sleeping areas of the platform.
The walkway creates a unique sectional interlock as it drops below the line of the platform underside to accommodate a standing occupant above. Tapering and meeting at a single long edge facing the dining and entry zones, the surfaces announce their thinness and de-emphasize the depth of the platform internal structure. This domestic fixture defines the zones of the daily domestic ritual, while the remaining volume of the apartment is devoted to living, dining, and play space, and is open to full height ceilings.
What was the brief?
Optimize a very tight and small loft with almost double height ceilings
What were the key challenges?
The ceiling height not quite being enough for two full height levels
What were the solutions?
To use the not full height kitchen closets as a passage for the upper level, allowing just enough headroom upstairs.
Project size | 1400 ft2 |
Completion date | 2004 |
Building levels | 2 |
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Leeser Architecture New York | Design |