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8 Simply Amazing Closets
This article showcases eight exceptional closet designs, transforming functional spaces into luxurious and well-organized areas within various residential settings. The first example features a 1,200-square-foot master suite dressing room in a Greenwich Village town house designed by Harry Heissmann. This opulent space includes a Finnish mid-century chandelier, a plywood desk, and custom glass sliding doors painted with a glittering giant circle motif, fulfilling the client's request for glamour.
Next, Workshop/APD's Highline Apartment presents a dressing room off the master bedroom of a 2,300-square-foot New York apartment. This design incorporates custom hemlock millwork and a herringbone-pattern calf-hair rug in various gray hues, ensuring a cohesive aesthetic with the rest of the apartment. Andrew Kotchen, a partner at Workshop/APD, emphasizes the narrative flow of the design, where all elements contribute to a unified story rather than isolated vignettes.
A 1930s Belgian house, remodeled by B-Architecten, features a modernist master suite dressing room. This space is distinguished by purple fabric-covered closet doors and an innovative vanity with mirrors that revolve like reflective planets on a round pedestal table. Alexander Gorlin and Larsen Design's Chelsea Apartment includes a master bedroom where a dresser strategically placed behind the headboard creates a semi-private changing area within a Chelsea loft.
RDK Design's update of a Chicago high-rise apartment includes a practical yet stylish solution for a daughter's bedroom. IKEA storage units are cleverly utilized to create an organized and visually appealing shoe display. In John Bricker’s West Village Apartment, Gensler's creative director transformed a standard closet into a two-room dressing area. Bricker modified his 850-square-foot apartment by removing a short hallway connecting the bedroom, bathroom, and walk-in closet, thereby opening up the flow and creating a proper dressing room.
Messana O’Rorke’s Flatiron Factory Loft demonstrates how an 800-square-foot factory loft’s walk-in closet adheres to a principle of “primitive minimalism.” This closet is designed to accommodate 200 pairs of shoes on rows of wood shelves, combining high capacity with a streamlined aesthetic. Finally, a New York Pied-à-Terre designed by Eric J. Smith and Erik R. Smith features a master bedroom with a dressing room equipped with bleached anigre built-in cabinetry, highlighting sophisticated material use and integrated storage solutions.
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