carnegie hill north salem park avenue upper west
Transcription
carnegie hill north salem park avenue upper west
new york cottages & gardens october 2015 New York Cottages and Gardens CARNEGIE HILL NORTH SALEM PARK AVENUE UPPER WEST SIDE WESTCHESTER COUNTY cottagesgardens.com LUXE LAIRS COTTAGESGARDENS.COM | OCTOBER 2015 JEWEL BOX A two-bedroom apartment in Carnegie Hill gets a shimmery update, thanks to designer Garrow Kedigian’s discriminating eye BY CINDI COOK PHOTOGRAPHS BY FRAN PARENTE 100 nyc&g cottagesgardens.com october 2015 Palette Pleaser The living room includes a sofa upholstered in Lee Jofa’s Spectrum Velvet, a Jessica Charles swivel chair, and a Garrow Kedigian–designed wood and linen cocktail table. The walls are painted Benjamin Moore’s Rattan, mixed with black; the mirror is from Bardin Palomo. See Resources. Objets Of Affection In the dining area (near left and opposite), a Kedigian-designed banquette, covered in a Cowtan & Tout velvet, and metal klismos chairs sit below a Marlowe 16 lantern from Remains Lighting. The bust rests on a column from Hamptons Antique Galleries. The 1920s carpet in the living room (below) is from Turkmenistan; the Gustavian-style cocktail table features a Calacatta marble top. See Resources. T he quintessential New York apartment: To many people, it’s a smart, sophisticated abode, neatly tucked inside a handsome building on a picturesque uptown block. But when Chris Franklin went searching for his version, what he found didn’t quite match the vision—at first. The petite two-bedroom, located in a circa-1980s building on a leafy block just off Central Park, was chock-full of parquet floors, stark white walls, and awkward closets that took up space, rather than saved it. However, the floor-through unit, which sits opposite the Beaux-Arts Cartier Mansion in Carnegie Hill, had immense potential, and Franklin knew he had found a diamond in the rough. To make his Manhattan dream come true, he turned to Garrow Kedigian, an interior designer he had met at the Kips Bay Decorator Show House in 2009. Franklin had liked Kedigian’s work so much that he kept the designer’s card tucked into a mirror, knowing it might come in handy someday. “His design was inspira- 102 nyc&g cottagesgardens.com october 2015 october 2015 cottagesgardens.com nyc&g 103 “A FEW DAYS AFTER I CALLED GARROW, I HAD A STACK OF HAND-DRAWN DESIGNS” Second To None A papier-mâché bust of Julius Caesar surveys the second bedroom (this spread), which includes a Kedigian-designed daybed and a trio of Grace Kelly Warhol plates that homeowner Chris Franklin bought in Monaco. The walls are painted Benjamin Moore’s Spanish Red; the side chair, purchased at Christie’s, is covered in a Brunschwig & Fils bee print. See Resources. october 2015 cottagesgardens.com nyc&g 105 KEDIGIAN’S CLIENT WANTED FORMAL, BUT WITH A CASUAL UNDERCURRENT, “WHICH WAS EXACTLY IN LINE WITH MY THINKING. I DON’T DO FUSSY” tional, and aspirational,” says Franklin, a finance executive. “A few days after I called Garrow, I had a stack of hand-drawn designs that became the blueprint for everything we did.” “Chris and I were very much in sync,” says Kedigian, who also makes his home on the Upper East Side—in Fred Astaire’s former digs, no less—and who embraces an aesthetic he calls “streamlined classic.” His client wanted formal, but with a casual undercurrent, “which was exactly in line with my thinking. I don’t do fussy.” The renovation and design program took a little more than a year to complete, giving Kedigian ample opportunities to experiment. Color came first and foremost, from accent pillows in shades of khaki and burnt yellow to master bedroom walls doused in a metallic-finish gray/green to the second bedroom’s statement-making ultra-high-gloss persimmon. (The luxurious, laborious paint job throughout was done by Jenny Schueler of J. Gordon Painted Finishes—“true artisans,” 106 nyc&g cottagesgardens.com october 2015 Kedigian says.) To unify the open kitchen, dining area, and living room—which converge into one space—Kedigian created height where there wasn’t any, applying high-gloss paint in two tones that stretch up and across the ceiling. “The colors physically suggest distinct regions,” he explains. “An open kitchen can be challenging when it comes to maintaining a sense of elegance, but I think we pulled it off.” Kedigian knows a thing or two about elegance. Prior to bceoming a designer, he was a nationally ranked figure skater in his native Canada (he won gold at nationals at the age of ten) and is a classical pianist as well. “When I was three, I told my parents that I wanted a grand piano for my birthday, and they bought me one!” he recalls. Raised in Montreal by a Canadian-Armenian father and a French-Armenian mother, he visited his grandmother annually at her chic 12-room apartment in Paris. Growing up in such beautiful surroundings led to Kedigian’s passion for interiors, which he indulged Bespoke Affair In the master bedroom (this spread), vintage Jansen bureaus flank an Edward Ferrell + Lewis Mittman Honey bed; the pelmet canopy and bed curtain are made from an Armani Casa fabric. The Kedigian-designed blue-velvet Hadley chair is trimmed in Clarence House’s Grand Galon Athenee. The sconce is from Circa Lighting and the carpet is Patterson Flynn Martin. See Resources. in as a young adult after landing a gig working for William Hodgins, the respected Boston-based decorator. Following in his mentor’s formidable footsteps, Kedigian fashioned a tour de force in Franklin’s dining area, a cocoon-like corner hugged by built-in bookcases with turquoise backing and an old-world air, dramatically separated from the living room by a heavy, theatrical curtain. But the pièce de résistance is what Kedigian terms “the foreign element,” the unexpected component that turns a room on its head—in this case, the linencovered cocktail table in the living room, carved from a single piece of wood and painted a bright turquoise. In an apartment laden with treasures, it’s most certainly the crown jewel. “I wanted my home to be warm and welcoming without it looking outdated ten years from now,” Franklin enthuses. “It was an amazing transformation, but not what I envisioned at all. It’s so much better.” ✹ october 2015 cottagesgardens.com nyc&g 107