miércoles, 25 de julio de 2012

Albergo de la Civita

A romantic cave hotel in rural Italy where past meets present in a spectacular and unforgettable setting
Le Grotte della Civita is a truly unique hotel, set in the troglodytic, Unesco-listed town of Matera. Its old quarters (sassi) are built into and over limestone caves, and interwoven by narrow cobbled streets. Inhabited since prehistoric times, these remarkable underground spaces include rock-hewn churches and many half-carved, half-built dwellings looking out onto the arresting Gravina gorge. photos jordicanosa 


martes, 24 de julio de 2012

An Abandoned Men’s Club Is Now a Home

The Harmony Club was originally built in 1909 and was operated as a social club by the Jewish community of Selma, Alabama.  It is situated on a high bank that overlooks the Alabama River.  The project was then headed by B.J. Schuster, a prominent merchant and later the President of the Harmony Men’s Club.   The 20,000 square foot layout of the Harmony Club was given use according to the floor; the first floor operated as two retail spaces, the second floor was a restaurant up front and a Men’s Lounge in the back.  The Men’s Lounge was off limits to the public back then; it had a pool table, poker games, slot machines, cigar chomping and of course the wives were never allowed, nonetheless “ladies” were occasionally allowed.  The third floor operated as a ballroom that over the decades experienced many dances and parties.  The club functioned for several years non-stop till in the late 1930’s it turned into the Elks Club, where it eventually disbanded in the 1960’s and the building boarded up.  
Hurlbut who is now 47 first saw the property a decade ago, he immediately knew that it was what he had been searching for.  He envisioned the completed building and saw beyond the then current state of the building.  “The building’s sole inhabitants were a flock of pigeons that left behind what he estimates to be about 140 cubic yards of guano.  There was no plumbing, and the electrical wiring was in shambles,” he said.  Still, he knew he’d found his home. “I thought it would be a perfect clubhouse for me,” he said. “It’s probably a guy thing.”  After a small number of visits he purchased the property for a little less than $100,000.
David Hurlbut who works as an industrial designer and an architectural consultant saw things differently due to the nature of his work and his experience.  It took him nearly two years to make Harmony Club a “remotely habitable by most people’s standards.  So far, ten years down the road he spent nearly $150,000 and has taken great care to preserve the architectural details.


Today, Hurlbut operates the first floor as an Arts Revive Show space along with a commercial space where hopefully an Italian restaurant will open there sometime in the next year.  The first floor color palette is in hues of bordeaux, black, and brick walls, while the dark hardwood floor and ceiling revive an era of the past; the restaurant space connects to a courtyard.  The first floor connects to the second through a large dark stained wooden staircase which preserves the glamour of the former Harmony Club.  Neo-classical Corinthian style pillars in dark stained wood with golden detailing add a stylish and sophisticated appearance and a contrast with the preserved polyurethane gloss walls.  The wooden surfaces have been treated in such a way that it seems as if a day has not gone by.
The second floor consists of a large entrance space, a large kitchen, the great room, bedrooms, a smoking lounge, a large lounge, a very large bathroom and the hallway.  The interiors of the second floor have been furnished with large scale furniture so that the furniture pieces do not lose their scale within the outsized second floor. 
The third floor is a ballroom area with 30-foot ceilings, where Hurlbut and Tomey “host movie nights and an annual Beaux-Arts Ball. “A lot of people call us the Studio 54 of Selma,” he said.
via yatzer 

Two Is Company

Like two princesses in a luxury castle, designer Dianna Karvounis and architect Vivian Philippa are surrounded by their self-produced beauty in an elevated studio in uptown Athens, Greece
The only difference is that these two have no intention of waiting for the proverbial white knight, because they’ve already found what they were looking for in each other. Their fated meeting through a common friend led to a successful business partnership, whose origin was almost poetic: ''Our partnership was very organic,'' says Philippa, ''based on countless hours of productive conversation.'' Inspired by a sociological study on the Kalahari dessert - brought to their attention by an ambitious client – their first joint venture was to create a collection that would translate a theoretical text into a series of representative objects. The client was supposed to take her favorite designs into the next phase of large-scale production, but the negotiations broke down half way through. Not that this had any effect on their creative flow: ''We liked the idea so much that we kept working on it regardless, and once the Kalahari Collection was finished about six months later, we decided to display some of the items in our shop window,'' says Karvounis. ''Next thing you know, I receive a phone call from that same client, telling me she had seen something she wanted from our window display. As it turns out, it was the exact same thing we had designed for her, although she’d never actually laid eyes on the finished product!''
via www.yatzer.com     









lunes, 23 de julio de 2012

Roger Davies