Prøve GULL - Gratis
Rule of Threes
January / February 2026
|Architectural Digest US
On the Upper West Side of Manhattan, a trio of AD100 talents bring rigor and romance to a historic town house
Any project involving multiple designers requires plenty of open conversation and some healthy design diplomacy, but all the more so in the case of a recent renovation to an Upper West Side town house. When a French-born couple purchased the property as a home for themselves and their school-age children, they enlisted a trifecta of AD100 firms: Elizabeth Roberts Architects (ERA), landscape designer Grace Fuller Marroquin, and decorator Leonora Hamill. “We felt very fortunate to work with ‘three graces,’ each with their own personality,” says the husband.
IN THE LIVING ROOM, DMITRIY & CO SOFAS FLANK A BESPOKE OTTOMAN IN DÉCORS BARBARES FABRIC; ARTWORKS BY JEAN DUBUFFET, RAOUL DUFY, AND OSSIP ZADKINE.Ideas bounced back and forth among the seasoned trio. “It was a real dialogue,” Hamill reflects of the collaboration. Add to that conversation the homeowners themselves (both aesthetes from art-collecting families), and you had many opinionated parties, often spanning time zones, with unique points of view. The trick became balancing Hamill’s maximalist inclinations, shared by the wife, with the pared-back sensibility favored by the husband, which was more in line with ERA’s clean-lined style. Adds Hamill: “It was putting pieces together into a puzzle they loved.”

Denne historien er fra January / February 2026-utgaven av Architectural Digest US.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Architectural Digest US
Architectural Digest US
PARADISE FOUND
AT NORTHERN CALIFORNIA'S ICONIC SEA RANCH, HARD BY THE PACIFIC, COMMUNE DESIGN HELPS A YOUNG CREATIVE COUPLE MANIFEST THEIR DREAM OF COASTAL BLISS
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
CUTTING A RUG
Even during Sweden's famously long and bitter-cold winter, the dining room at Beata Heuman’s 18th-century family farmhouse bursts with life thanks to the hand-painted mural of tulips, lilies, dahlias, and fruit trees—all a nod to flora on the property grounds, much of it planted by her mom. Now, the AD100 designer has teamed up with the British wall covering brand de Gournay to bring that tableau (ever so slightly tweaked) into production. Heuman says of the collaboration, which also includes Delft Folly, her riff on the classic Dutch blue-and-white tiles. degournay.com
1 min
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Passing the Torch
At Milan's new Olympic Village, architects Skidmore, Owings & Merrill envision community well beyond the Games
1 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Meet the AD100
Today's top talents in interior decoration, architecture, and landscape design
6 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Call of the Wild
Designed by Tom Kundig, the new One&Only Moonlight Basin resort brings nature and nurture face-to-face
2 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Tools for Living
Rethinking the instruments of our everyday, Thomas Yang handcrafts objects with something to say
2 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Comfort Zone
Kendall Jenner's quirky, colorful country house crafted with Heidi Caillier-pushes the supermodel into new decorative territory
5 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Pool Party
Tweaked for today, a beloved 1950s suite of Vladimir Kagan outdoor furniture returns with a splash
1 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Classical Order
Is the klismos chair the most ancient piece of furniture still in rotation?
2 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
What a Feast
For their upcoming restaurant at Manhattan's Breuer building, Roman and Williams partners with Sotheby's to deliver multisensory meals like no other
3 mins
January / February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
