Thứ Năm, 11 tháng 8, 2016

If Henry VIII called New York home, he’d live here

If Henry VIII ever wanted a place in the Big Apple, this luxury apartment with ornate interiors and stained glass windows would suit a royal in Manhattan. 
This $US5.5million Gramercy Park North condo has been dubbed an “architectural masterpiece” by New York Magazine for its Tudor Revival design.
GramercyParkNorth_lounge
The main reception room has a high ceiling. Picture: Realtor.com
Architects Schwartz and Gross designed the apartment for the current owner, who has lived at the property for 50 years. 
The two-bedroom apartment features vaulted ceilings, stained glass windows, carved wood panels, decorative ceilings and antique furnishings spread over 172 sqm.
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A look at one of the bedrooms. Picture: Realtor.com
The apartment also features three bedrooms, carved statues, paintings, chandeliers and a large terrace.
From the stained glass windows to the hand-crafted features, the 1929 apartment has been turned into something that wouldn’t look out of place on TV’s Wolf Hall.
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Despite the heavy furnishings, the interiors are filled with natural light. Picture: Realtor.com
But despite the impressive interiors, it seems potential buyers are unwilling to “get lost in the endless array of carved statues moldings and vignettes” mentioned in the listing.
The apartment was first listed for $US7 million in 2014 and the asking price has been slashed several times.
Interested parties would now need to pay $US5.5 million for this architectural gem.
Resource: realestate.com.au

Parker Posey sells her New York apartment

Indie movie queen Parker Posey has sold her cute one-bedroom New York apartment, which means her tactic of posing for the real estate photos might have paid off.
The star of cult movie hits like Best In Show and A Mighty Wind posed lounging in a chair with her bichon frise, Gracie, reading a book  in the bedroom of the apartment.
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Posey appeared in the real estate ads for her apartment with her pooch. Picture: Yael Dunsky Real Estate
 The pre-war apartment at the enviable location of 30 Fifth Avenue, Greenwich Village, only has one bedroom, but a large living room, separate dining and kitchen.
30 Fifth Avenue
The galley style kitchen. Picture: Yael Dunsky Real Estate
As reported by Prue Miller of Sky News Real Estate, the apartment was priced at $US1.4 million and listed through Yael Dunsky Real Estate. It also boasts a charming entrance foyer and ample storage.
The galley style kitchen has top-end appliances, while the entire apartment has lots of natural light from its corner aspect.
The actress reportedly bought the apartment for $US1.35 million in 2008.
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The living area is surprisingly spacious for a one-bedroom apartment. Picture: Yael Dunsky Real Estate
It’s been an exciting month for Posey, whose new movie, Cafe Society, premiered in the US. The movie is directed by Woody Allen and also stars Blake Lively and Kristen Stewart.
Resource: realestate.com.au

Cat house sells for $15K above asking price

The Kurralta Park maisonette with the distinctive cat motifs and extensive doll collection has sold for $15,000 above the asking price at $365,000.
“The other agent they had in told them, they’d be lucky to get $310,000 so they’re pretty happy,” says agent Neil Wilson, principal at Wilson Real Estate. 
Cat house - 4 Gordon Street Kurralta Park
This cat-themed decor proved popular with feline fans online.
Serious potential buyers were happy to look past the colourful interior and the young couple who purchased the home plan to renovate.
“It was priced at a point where a lot of people thought ‘yeah, it could still be a fixer-upperer’ and that’s why these people have bought it. They’re going to fix it up and live in it,” says Wilson.

What happens to the cat pictures & dolls now?

The current owners, an elderly couple with one cat, will keep the many pictures in the home as each image is attached to cardboard and can easily be removed.
“They’re taking it (the decor) with them, but I think they might give me a portion of it to keep,” jokes Wilson.
Doll fans had contacted the couple after seeing the listing photographs on realestate.com.au and offered to give them more porcelain dolls, but the couple will sell some of their dolls, possibly at a future garage sale or online.
Cat house - 4 Gordon Street Kurralta Park
The pictures and colourful items can be easily removed.

Beige decor wouldn’t have sold this property

While most real estate stylists tend to advise clients against displaying such unique decorfound at the two-bedroom property, Wilson says taking down the pictures “would have sterilised the property”.
“I do think it would never have ever got any interest if we’d had one of these makeover businesses go through the property and just make it look just like any other home,” he says.
He says he’s never seen interest in a property like the buzz generated once the internet got wind of the eye-catching cat pictures and other motifs hanging in every room.
Cat house - 4 Gordon Street Kurralta Park
The couple who purchased the house were looking for a property in the area for a while, says Wilson.
“From the owner’s point of view, it was short, sharp and shiny and they achieved well above what their expectations were.  However that came about, it’s good,” says Wilson.
Resource: realestate.com.au

Thứ Tư, 10 tháng 8, 2016

The giant toilet & other odd Chinese buildings

Does this building look like anything to you?  What if we told you it was the new home of North China University of Water Conservancy and Electric Power?
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But this giant toilet isn’t the only unusual shaped building in China.
The construction phase of building for The People’s Daily HQ got a bit awkward in 2013 when photos of the scaffolding creating this rather striking image:
China Phallus buiding
In fact in February 2016, China’s State Council put out an edict banning “bizarre” and “odd-shaped” buildings.  
This followed the revelation that in 2014 President Xi Jinping called for less “weird architecture”. Just how odd looking are buildings in that part of the world?
Here’s a look at eye-catching designs from China:
Resource: realestate.com.au





Patrick Dempsey’s wife is selling her luxury home

Hollywood couple Patrick and Jillian Dempsey have kissed and made up and as a result, the Pacific Palisades home she bought while the pair were estranged is now on the market.
View gallery (8)
Dempsey’s wife Jillian, a make-up artist, bought the 1600sqm property in the LA neighbourhood six months after filing for divorce from her husband in January 2015.
McDreamy, the attractive actor is known to fans of Grey’s Anatomy, has recently said things are looking up for the pair and the coastal home has hit the market again.
Patrick and Jillian Dempsey
The couple have made amends. Picture: Getty Images
With five bedrooms, four bathrooms and an open-plan living area featuring a vaulted ceiling, the home is every bit as dreamy as its co-owner.
Jillian redesigned the traditional home with “a warm, modern influence”, the listing states.
Presumably, this is why the price has increased from the $US6.1 million she bought it for in July 2015 to the current listing price of $US8 million.
The home’s new look is influenced by the French provincial style, with living spaces decked out with French oak floorboards, French doors and multi-paned windows.
The kitchen is a cook’s dream with on-trend Carrara marble bench tops, a spacious butler’s pantry and wine cooler.
A tree-shaded terrace leads on to the large hedge-lined backyard and swimming pool.
But it’s the master suite, with its fireplace complete with an antique marble mantle and Carrie Bradshaw-esque wardrobe, that listing agents at Hilton & Hyland will have no trouble selling to potential buyers.
It’s not known where the now loved-up Dempseys plan to settle their newly reunited family, but the couple currently own a compound designed by noted architect Frank Gehry near Venice Beach.
Resource: realestate.com.au

Rupert Murdoch sells his New York townhouse

Rupert Murdoch has reportedly sold his West Village townhouse for $US28 million.
Murdoch, who married former model turned actress Jerry Hall in London earlier this year, had relisted the property in early April with an asking price of $US28.9 million.
Rupert Murdoch townhouse - 278 W 11th St New York
The townhouse has several outdoor spaces. Picture: Realtor.com
Agent Dolly Lenz says the buyer is a local:”The winner of the bidding war is a domestic buyer.”
Murdoch first purchased the townhouse back in 2015 from developer George Agiovlasitis for $US25 million.
It was initially put on the market just a few months later.
Rupert Murdoch townhouse - 278 W 11th St New York
The kitchen. Picture: Realtor.com
The four-bedroom seven-bathroom property  is set over four floors with a roof terrace and basement.
It has high-end features such as a wine cellar, marble floors, mechanical drawers, an elevator, and a stunning elliptical staircase.
Rupert Murdoch townhouse - 278 W 11th St New York
This sitting room. Picture: Realtor.com
Renovated in 2011, the listing described the “exquisite townhouse” as  “a one-of-a-kind home for the discerning purchaser seeking a lifestyle consistent with downtown living”.
The large windows, skylights and the generous open plan living spaces allow for plenty of natural light to flow through the property.
Rupert Murdoch townhouse - 278 W 11th St New York
A look at one of the bedrooms. Picture: Realtor.com
The 454sqm townhouse was originally built for silversmith William Bogert with construction beginning in 1853.
The master bedroom takes up an entire level and includes a marble fireplace, dressing room and terrace.
Rupert Murdoch townhouse - 278 W 11th St New York
The home has seven bathrooms. Picture: Realtor.com
Resource: realestate.com.au

Inside the Fitzroy loft that used to be a chocolate factory

The architects behind this award-winning warehouse conversion did not exactly follow a detailed brief.
The loft – built inside the iconic MacRobertson chocolate factory in Fitzroy, Melbourne – is the product of constant editing and redesigning along the way.
“When building with history like this, architects make a lot of alterations to suit what you find during the construction,” says Albert Mo, director of Architects EAT, who designed the loft.
The casual approach won the firm the residential design award at the Australian Interior Design Awards this year.
View gallery (17)
Here the architects share their favourite features of the loft.

The history

The heritage-listed MacRobertson chocolate factory was first subdivided in the mid ’80s and then again in the mid ’90s.
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The 125-year-old warehouse is now mostly residential, although the site for the loft was being used as an advertising agency before the current owners purchased it. Before that it was Melbourne’s first Akido Dojo, a type of martial arts centre.
The converted chocolate factory from the outside.
“The building came with a fair bit of history,” Mo says. “The residents that form the Body Corporate are quite passionate about it.”
To retain the building’s historical integrity, the builders were instructed by Mo to not touch the boundary walls. This also meant keeping the original bricks, timber columns and the existing roof structure, which is bound by timber trusses.
“If you buy a historical warehouse, why hide it?” he says.

The archeology

Secret doors and fire alarms are just a couple of historical discoveries that builders came across during construction.
Mo and associate at Architects EAT, Emma Gaudner, would often receive phone calls from the builders asking them to “get down here, quick!”
“It was like an archeological site.” Gauder jokes.
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These wooden beams were retained from the original structure: Picture: Derek Swalwell
In order to respect the building’s rich past, the initial plans were often changed to work around the new findings.

The suspended bridge

There is a steel bridge made from a perforated steel base and stringers that connects the upstairs mezzanine on either side of the loft.
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The steel bridge. Picture: Derek Swalwell
Mo and Gauder nominate this as their favourite feature – mostly because of the engineering feat it represents. The structural engineers and builders weren’t initially thrilled with the concept.
“The original idea was to build a rope bridge,” Gauder says. “We wanted that play element.”
There is still a bit of bounce when you walk along it, but the use of steel made the structural engineers, and the clients, a young couple with plans to create a family, a lot happier.

The ceiling heights

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Experimenting with height allowed the architects to create clear living zones. Picture: Derek Swalwell
With its cathedral-like ceiling heights, the warehouse was unique but lacked the intimacy of a place you would want to call home.
The architects responded to the challenge by creating two mezzanine levels, connected by the suspended bridge that sectioned off into smaller, private rooms.
“We inserted the cosiness with those mezzanines,” Gauder says.
“Having shorter ceiling height gives the space more intimacy.”

The narrow ensuite

The ensuite bathroom is only a slither of a space – just one and a half metres wide. The existing roof structure, which is four metres high at its apex, makes the narrow room feel spacious.
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The ensuite bathroom is the perfect place to unwind. Picture: Derek Swalwell
Having windows face east also gives the room beautiful morning sunlight, which is great for when you’re getting ready for the day, Mo says.
“It’s also a beautiful intimate place to have a bath.”
Resource: realestate.com.au