A Molteni bookcase defines the living area, with an Edra sofa on the left and Galloti & Radice sofa on the right, along with a Jens Risom chair by Fredericia, Modloft tables, and a floor lamp by Lambert & Fils.
When your apartment sits within a landmark, like Zaha Hadid’s swooping building on the New York City High Line, sometimes the best idea is to not get in the way. At least that’s what clients told Canella Design’s Carlos Canella when the time came to move into a 4,000-square-foot residence in the iconic high-rise. They wanted their 4 bedroom/4 ½ bathroom apartment to carry on the themes of Hadid’s common areas—which made Canella the perfect fit, since he’d worked on them with her.
“I’d worked on its interiors during my tenure as part of the building developer’s design team before opening up my own design firm,” Canella says. “I worked on the building’s interior design—furniture, lighting, and rug selections, and layouts, as well as worked with the Zaha design team on finish selections.” And so many of the materials were already to the clients’ liking: the kitchen’s veiny Calacatta Corchia Marble; the bathrooms’ Statuario floor and walls and Nero Marquina feature shower wall. As was the apartment layout, with an open plan living spaces so inviting they decided to extend it to the kitchen and family room as well, a collaboration with Tuna Architecture, which installed a peninsula with seating across from the stove.
A Morghen Studios chandelier illuminates the dining area, as does the monument painting by George Chaplin.
Other interventions were mostly limited to a few overhead lighting elements to compliment Hadid’s curved soffits, and a feature marble wall in the kitchen to keep the gas and HVAC equipment from view. Hadid’s original “object walls” remain the foyer, and her unmistakable windows frame views in the primary bedroom’s walk-in closet and sitting area. Furniture echoes Hadid’s sinuous curves. “One of the challenges working on the base building was to find contemporary furniture pieces and bring them together to make the interiors feel warm, comfortable, and homey,” Canella says. “The apartment had very similar challenges. So the same approach was used here.” Who says modern has to be fussy?
Step Inside This Sleek Apartment By Canella Design
A Molteni bookcase defines the living area, with an Edra sofa on the left and Galloti & Radice sofa on the right, along with a Jens Risom chair by Fredericia, Modloft tables, and a floor lamp by Lambert & Fils.
The kitchen cabinetry is by Boffi, with a Julien sink and Dornbracht faucet; the ceramic pieces are by Ilona Golovina.
A Flos chandelier hangs above a Restoration Hardware sofa and tables by Blu Dot and Arteriors; the wall unit is through West Out East.
The primary bedroom offers enviable views of the building itself, along with an Artemide lamp, Bernhardt chairs, a CB2 rug, and a painting by Juan Manuel Sanchez above a Restoration Hardware bed.
A kid’s bedroom includes a bed frame by Blu Dot with Inhabit acoustic felt panels for a headboard; Blu Dot also made the bedside storage and chair, and the wall light is by Flos.
The bathroom fittings are by Dornbracht, and the bathtub by Teuco.
A second bathroom includes a Dornbracht faucet, Boffi cabinetry, and a Corian countertop with integrated sink.