Charles Pavarini III with Dakota Jackson's Modern Console Custom Designed Bookcases By Charles Pavarini III Custom-designed Sofa and Chairs by Charles Pavarini III for Avery Boardman Details in Room The LED Lighting in the Vaulted hand plastered Ceiling
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About Charles Pavarini III Design Welcome We have the extraordinary opportunity to work with Charles Pavarini III, and chronicle his journey through the manic pace of building a room for the famed 2009 Kips Bay Decorator Show House. Charles is designing the largest space in this upper East Side mansion and he is participating in this event with Design Icons, Gloria Vanderbilt, Bunny Williams, Charlotte Moss, and Jamie Drake! This is a rare and candid “behind the scenes” look at brilliance, genius, design at work, problem solving, and creative energy. For more on this Grand Dame of the Show House Circuit, click here. Before we open the pages of the Design Diary, take a look at the finished product-The Lounge by Charles Pavarini III. This is truly the magic of design. From his vision to the completion, we have a room best described as the New Contemporary. Charles is sharing with us his CAD drawings, trips to the D&D building for material selections, meetings with contractors, his OWN DESIGN DIARY, his vision and mission to transform this raw space into a masterpiece concept room. FROM CHARLES’ DESIGN DIARY for the 2009 KIPS BAY Decorator Show House Initial Project Review February 10, 2009 Design Development: Phase II February 12-February 23, 2009 Under Construction: Phase III February 24-March 30, 2009 (Link to Phase III) Installation: Phase IV - coming soon Opening: Phase V - coming soon The Kips Bay Selection Committee contacted our office offering us the largest space in this year’s show house, inviting us to participate in this year’s tribute to Albert Hadley. On the morning of February 4th, we were lead into the 45’ wide mansion at 22 E. 71st St. built in 1922-23. Passing through an enormous vestibule and up the flight of stairs we arrive in the Main Entrance Foyer. Souring 20’ ceilings and a grand sweeping staircase lead us up to the second floor and into the room at the top of the stairs to the right (25’x40’), an enormous sheet rock box with 4 windows. The ceiling is completely overrun with track lighting; the room was once an art gallery. High gloss parquet floors shining in the morning sun. 10’ massive ceilings with no architectural detail whatsoever. A rectangular hole at the far West End of the room reveals all of the clues to the plenum space and potential for major architectural improvement. Charles and Randall, Pavarini’s project manager, at first feel overwhelmed. How will we demolish this massive ceiling, completely restructure it, rewire it, close it up, and source and decorate the whole room in five and a half weeks! The room would surely take a major commitment. In a project like this, each and every day is important. The whole process which normally takes months is crammed into a little over a month.Constant project supervision is required as unforeseen challenges develop and immediate refiguring and revision to drawings are necessary. Charles and Randall come around to accepting the challenge and the ideas start to percolate. Charles sees a vision of a telescoping ceiling, vaulting in the center another 2’, with 5’ perimeter soffits, gleaming in lacquer. Charles feels the opportunity to express himself as a lighting designer by illuminating a cove molding around the perimeter. What potential! Two images of CPIII and cousin/contractor Peter Di Natale discuss the possibility of vaulting the ceiling and creating a vertical fireplace mantel that punctures the ceiling plane. This makes for another opportunity to exercise the lighting design muscle. Kitchenette in the back hall is a perfect location for an audio/control rack for the sound and lighting systems. The room began to stir numerous ideas. The big question was, “What do we do with a space so huge?” The idea of a Lounge quickly became a hot topic with our yearning to delve into the contemporary arena and make a statement. Design in a direction where restraint and purity of form and detail create drama and significance. How perfect it would be to design an entertainment space where everyone wants to gather, showing the community our ability to handle grand scale, sharing our passion for both residential and commercial contexts. Comfortable enough to be a home entertainment space and sophisticated enough to be found in the lobby of one of the world’s leading hotels. The process begins immediately.
February 12-23, 2009 Design Development The design team assimilates all of the photographs and begins the coordinated process. The plan is immediately put into CAD so that Charles can start sketching and developing layouts. Multiple concepts for the function of the room are discussed, but what we all agree on is the presence of a piano in the room. We certainly have enough space to create not only a Piano Lounge, but other connected furniture groupings which could interrelate. Banter and discussion brings about thoughts like ‘the feeling of a lobby’ combined with piano entertainment and a dramatic yet intimate conversation setting. The concept of a Lounge draws people in, carried by the music, and it should comfort them with a sumptuous décor that evokes fantasy, luxury, and sultriness! The design evolves. Various layouts ensue, but the one which everyone loves is a three in one plan with a stark and minimalist seating cluster in the center of the room, unifying the casual living zone at the East End and the Piano Lounge by the Fireplace at the West End. The concept is nailed! From there Charles works his way into the details. His genius is clearly in the details! An entire 40’ window elevation in fabric. Drapery, but very tailored and clean in execution. No layering. No trimmings. Just a pure open weave fabric, ripple folding its way across the elevation. The vaulted ceiling takes form. The existing ceiling height of 10’5” is maintained around the 5’ perimeter. Inside, the high ceiling steps up another 15” to the highest point, a great place to showcase either an incredible mural, spectacular pattern or finish, or maybe even…brilliant plasterwork! How perfect an idea in such a spectacular neo-Italian Renaissance house! Immediately we propose a conceptual geometric plan with a dropped crown and lighting cove with which we can wash all of the plasterwork in light. A great detail!Charles gets on the phone with Mike Zimmer, a great contact with Balmer Architectural Moldings (http://www.balmer.com/), who guides us through the possibilities. He proposes a phenomenal geometric layout with a crown along the bottom of the soffit which wraps underneath. Further collaboration results in a discussion of introducing a completely new concept to the world of architectural plaster One which Charles has been exploring for the last year on the Apthorp Restoration, allowing the plaster-moldings to be pierced so they can be lit from behind and further accentuate their brilliant form and pattern. Within days, we have finished drawings on the illuminated plaster lighting system which is destined to be a showstopper! Product research and specification becomes constant. Every step in the market, every turn in Greenwich Village is part of the escapade to be inspired, to purvey, to acquire the most interesting and appropriate product to fill the room. Stark Carpet & Fabrics (www.starkcarpet.com) immediately express commitment to support our endeavors, giving us the entire Lelievre fabric (http://www.lelievre.eu ) line and numerous possibilities in carpet and flooring to tie it all together. Koraseal (http://www.koroseal.com/) offers us anything from their extensive product line, two of which immediately stand out: Zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com/) and Gage Architectural Metal. (http://gagecorp.net/) Zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com) is a phenomenal paint product that gets sprayed into the room. It has extensive color lines that mix paints through splattering in ways to achieve beautiful and durable finishes that are near perfect when properly applied. Because of their properties and ease of cleaning, they are most often used commercially. They have great depth and evenness of color along the surface. Their new Illuminations and Metal line look intriguing in the catalog and we order samples right away. Gage Architectural Metal (http://gagecorp.net/), another predominately commercial source, manufactures metal and metal laminated panels for architectural use. The long elevation opposite the window wall really needs an architectural antidote. It suffers with two uneven punctures in the sheet rock box, one to the Foyer and the other to the small private hall adjacent to our room. A major architectural statement is required to transform the visually banal elevation into the major axis as well an access point it is! Avery Boardman (www.averyboardman.com) and Anthony Lawrence-Belfair (www.anthonylawrence-belfair.com) quickly step up to bat, offering whatever we think would best showcase their product. Charles sees this as a great opportunity to exhibit each vendor at opposite sides of the room. Avery Boardman (http://www.averyboardman.com/index.html) is granted the casual living zone and ALB the piano lounge section and all draperies. Who doesn’t know Avery Boardman? (http://www.averyboardman.com/index.html) They are a leader in custom furniture and famous for what most feel is the most comfortable hideaway bed in the industry. Anthony Lawrence-Belfair (www.anthonylawrence-belfair.com) is much more unique. They operate one of the last surviving traditional drapery workrooms in NYC. They produce the most high end drapery and upholstery products known to man. Their employees are all seasoned professionals with a lifetime of experience. We feel so blessed to have such industry leaders teaming up to make this room sing!Not to mention, they both give us full creative reign and encourage us to design custom pieces. Drawings are developed and submitted within days. A visit to Tribeca and passage through Robert Kuo Studios (www.robertkuo.com) brings a great center table to the middle of the room. It is finished in traditional Chinese lacquer, a four month process by hand! A trio of shadow-boxes housing a collection of three Chinese artifacts present themselves and brings an aura of timelessness to the design concept. Joyce tells us “You can have whatever you want!” Some of the search and acquisition is not so smooth. After much deliberation, Lorin Marsh (www.lorinmarsh.com) offers us their latest and greatest glass slab and nickel cocktail table. Not having spent a day on the showroom floor, devoid of price tag, the table immediately catches Charles’ eye and he insists it will be perfect in the room. Equally challenging, securing a pair of 7’tall porcelain standing lamps for on either side of the fireplace makes for some drama. The salesperson and showroom manager of William Switzer (www.williamswitzercollection.com) explain how Allan Knight (http://www.allanknightasso.com) has no interest in lending his lamps to show houses because of how much is returned to them in poor condition.They continue on about how show houses have not helped sales in any way. With that, Randall sits down and writes a letter to Allan Knight (http://www.allanknightasso.com) himself, telling him the direction of the room and the importance of the lamps to the overall design concept. Within a couple hours, three of Allan Knight’s (http://www.allanknightasso.com) staff follow up to assure us that the lamps are in production and that they will make sure they will be delivered in time. Phew! What could be more perfect than a collection of vintage lighting and furniture in a room like this? Multiple visits to John Salibello Antiques (www.johnsalibelloantiques.com) result in finding a splendid bronze doré organic tree like side table and a set of three 1960’s pendants which fit magically into the lighting plan between the rhythms of three windows on the long elevation, lighting the three shadow boxes. The thread is first spun for the organic components to this intricate space. Just a position of obvious man made creation with the organic sentiment. Perfect balance and contrast to create that edginess the room requires. That brings our thoughts to art. What would give the drama and sexiness while engendering the organic sentiment that triggers the mind and brings the spirit to the here and now of current global conditions better than photographs of nature? We start googling. We attend the Bailey House (www.baileyhouse.org) auction. WE become POSSESSED by icebergs! What unbelievable natural creations that speak volumes about our planet and its peril. Their complex form but simplicity in color and concept would make Interior Design magic in the room. What could be more perfect? Purity. Contrast. Coolness. Melting. February 24-27, 2009 Meeting with the house contractor on Feb 24th at 11:15am. I bring the RCP so he can cut open the ceiling and demolish the center portion according to our plan to leave the drop soffits 5’ around the perimeter of the room. A quick handshake and all is quiet for a couple of days. On Thursday, Jim, the owner’s contractor, advises us that he must see Charles on Friday morning to discuss a problem they have encountered: the HVAC ductwork in the ceiling must be re-routed. The owner agrees to do so, and progress continues with the re-supporting of the ceiling and preparation for Peter Di Natale’s work; building the working surfaces to accept the plaster moldings, conceal the old ceiling tracks, and construct the fireplace structure. Charles, Randall and Maria work together to finalize the custom furniture details and work evolves on the custom Pavarini etageres with splay legs and labyrinth shelf detail. Scuderi wins the bid on those, we specify cereused oak, and initiate them immediately. They are designed in reverse, with left and right matching pieces on either side of the custom curved sofa framing an important accessory collection TBD. March 2-6, 2009 Peter begins on Wednesday with a delivery of materials and they begin their work. We meet with electricians to review plans and request an estimate. We meet Ed from All-Pro Painting (http://www.allpropaintingco.com/). He is on board to do whatever we want. Zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com/) is one of his specialties. He plans to give us an estimate after discussing zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com/) walls and perhaps ceiling. We meet Lana of Zero-Lux (http://www.zerolux.com/). She plans to secure suppliers of LED lighting which we have designed into the cove lighting in the ceiling of the room as well as the fireplace. The fireplace cube is designed in a rectangular form, floating 2.5” from the back wall and backlit with LED’s. It continues on through the ceiling, passing through a gap of 3” and lit between the ceiling and cube so it appears to pass through the ceiling.Another great Architectural detail and a vertical one to visually ground what’s happening on the ceiling.Thursday we shop antiques. We visit Delorenzo 1950 (http://delorenzo1950.com/). We decide that the 1950’s were too funky for what we’re developing in this room. We await commitments from vendors to provide recessed lighting and LED systems for our effects. Friday is a big day. One of his bravest of endeavors, Charles walks into Steinway & Sons (www.steinway.com) with the intent of securing a piano. (Prior to, we spend days seeking pianos with no luck finding a vendor who will let us borrow one.) His salesperson shows him all types, and even a white lacquer one as per his request. But Charles doesn’t feel that Steinway understands the level of design. The salesperson speaks of an Art Deco Piano that just left the showroom and Charles’ ears perk-up. She begins to show him images. A hand carved Grand Piano by a John Eric Byers (www.johnericbyers.com). It’s white and the labor intensive hand carved pattern reminiscent of a checker board covers every inch of the piece. It’s SPECTACULAR! To top the day, we get confirmation that the order is in production with Allan Knight (http://www.allanknightasso.com/). Dakota Jackson (www.dakotajackson.com)offers us an astounding console with our choice of leather drawers. Susan Sokolov calls to tell us Fabrizio of Casa del Bianco (http://www.casadelbianco.com/) would do anything for us. We are off to a great start! March 9-14, 2009 We are still waiting for direction from Jesco Lighting company (http://www.jescolighting.com/html/) about how to wire their LED systems we are using to float the fireplace and wash the ceiling and penetrate the crown. An entire week goes by and still no information from the lighting supplier. The contractor pushes his work along, and is forced to sheet rock the ceiling before the electrical work is completed. We are under the gun now with the Kips Bay Deadline. It is Friday, our contractor is having the fireplace framed, yet since he cannot guarantee that the work will be completely sheet rocked by the end of the day, and the management orders us to remove all framing. Peter Di Natale, our contractor, is furious. Not to mention, the management orders us to work all weekend to get the entire ceiling closed up. Four men work all Saturday morning and manage to complete the requested task by 1:30 on Saturday. The contractor is upset, but has paid his men overtime to meet the demands. Unfortunately, the electricians have yet to begin their work. We leave the sheet rock on the soffits loosely attached with minimal screws to ensure easy removal for the electricians.The construction project is then put on hold until the following week until Jesco (http://www.jescolighting.com/html/) submits wiring diagrams. Regarding furnishings, it was a long week of hunting and gathering with little success. There were some good developments though. We are in pursuit of Dakota Jackson (http://www.dakotajackson.com/) to produce a piece for us. His modern console in Macassar Ebony and leather drawers would be stunning in the room in white lacquer against the silvery walls. We meet with Gwyneth in the showroom and she tells us that Dakota is not in support of our idea to showcase his piece in a lacquer rather than a stained wood. We all feel the Macassar Ebony to be out of vogue and too heavy in the space. We go back and forth with Gwyneth stating our perspective and the importance his piece will have in the room as we wish to design it. We visit Edelman leather (www.edelmanleather.com) in search of leather for the drawer fronts of the Dakota Jackson (http://www.dakotajackson.com/) console and for Charles’ 1930’s leather back Mahogany lounge chair. Sheryl graciously offers whatever leather she has in stock for our use. It is wonderful working with vendors like Edelman (www.edelmanleather.com). They do whatever they can to be represented in the Kips Bay Show house in hopes that only Edelman leather (www.edelmanleather.com) is used. We find a stunning white ostrich leather for the console and a soft white leather for the lounge chair. Avery Boardman (http://www.averyboardman.com/index.html) offers to do additional custom pieces in the room to make more of a presence. We decide to modify a chair in their line by having the front legs made in acrylic and to have the back swoop down to meet the floor in lieu of having rear legs. We feel this will give a custom look to the chair that will be very much in keeping with the overall design concept. Charles talks to Luigi Gentile about needing one chair to stand out amongst the rest in the plan. An art-chair if you will. He suggests a new Vladimir Kagan (www.vladimirkagan.com) chair, the first piece that Kagan has produced in the 21st Century. Charles feels it’s perfect. It features a white lacquer exoskeleton like frame supporting a tub chair. Whimsical yet sophisticated; an ideal art-chair to sit juxtaposed to Charles’ 1930’s leather curved back Mahogany lounge chair he has in the warehouse. The team is excited to have the honor of introducing the Kagan chair to the US market. This will be its debut, and what a better place to show it off! On Friday, Charles meets with Michael and Lana Lawrence of Anthony Lawrence-Belfair.(http://www.anthonylawrence-belfair.com) They discuss the window treatments and the ripple fold header and how it attaches to the custom acrylic pole. While designed to be visually simple, there are complexities to pull off the minimalist concept successfully. Fabric must be hand sewn to fall just right, and the mechanics of the hardware must make all the drapery to look as if it’s floating mysteriously in front of the drapery pole! Charles’ vision for the couture look is completely understood by Lana as always. His background in theater, costume, and couture fashion design immerges with his treatment of fabric and how it speaks when properly structured. Charles’ intent is for the draperies to flow with the suppleness of a Schiarparelli Gown: very structured yet very soft and unencumbered. Such detail requires acute knowledge of garment construction, where Charles has extensive experience. Here his talents from his days in theatre get exercised as he directs the master seamstresses in the Belfair Lawrence factory to construct his vision. Regarding the recessed lighting, we were unable to use the Lucifer lighting (http://www.luciferlighting.com/) we had secured because the ceiling is now closed up and they do not make a remodeler housing. Lana Lenar of Zerolux (http://www.zerolux.com/) pulls through with USA Illuminations, (www.usaillumination.com ) a lighting manufacturer that makes innovative products and offers their square hole recessed adjustable MR-16’s for our use. Randall immediately jumps in the car and heads to upstate New York, by West Point, to pick up the lighting so the electrician can install them on Tuesday. Meanwhile, all of the focus of the lighting becomes the wiring of the LED’s which should have been figured out before we had to close up the ceiling. While the sheet rock is left un taped with a few screws, the electricians can now access their work easily by removing the sheetrock panels. The contractor feels the pressure of needing to close up the soffits and start finishing off the ceiling to be ready for the plaster ceiling installation, which is due to start the following Monday. It is suggested at 8:30 pm on Friday night that if we snake ‘smurf’ tubes from the contact points in the soffits and around the fireplace running back to the system’s control hub outside the room, we could allow the construction to be finalized and electricians could easily pass their wires back to the hub without the need to snake, and we could advance the project two-fold. ‘Smurf tubes’. “You’ve got to be kidding,” Charles says. So Charles gets up early to hit Home Depot looking for smurf tubes. Most people are watching them on TV Saturday morning. No luck. The tube needs to be flexible, plastic, and at least 1” in interior diameter to fit the wires through. Charles calls Randall and asks him to source the product at electric supply houses while burning daylight. It’s Saturday, and most close by 1pm! Randall finds a place on the Upper-West Side that carries various plastic and rubber tubes and such, but no one on the lighting team can calculate whether or not the cluster of needed wires will definitely fit through the tube! Suppose we had snaked all these smurf tubes, patched, taped and skim coated the ceiling, only to discover that not all of the wires could fit inside the smurf tube at once! Charles and Randall start to panic as precious hours go by and Kips Bay demands the ceiling be sealed up.We must move on. YIKES! Jesco lighting (http://www.jescolighting.com/html/), the manufacturer, commits to submitting the necessary technical information by Monday so that the lighting professionals can sort out all of their selections and order the product. Three days are lost, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, on the progress that could have been made on the construction. We fell behind. The team fears a potential domino of trades as the clock ticks… March 16-21, 2009 Under Construction The team patiently waits for a response from Jesco lighting (http://www.jescolighting.com/html/) with specifications of all devices so the electricians can wire the LED lighting. The lighting team is having trouble agreeing on how best to wire the space. After numerous conversations between David Bourgeois of Greenlight solutions, Jesco, and Andrew Scarpinello, electrical engineer of Hig Electricians, it is decided the type of cable containing the precise number of wires that will be needed to carry all of the signal relays from the lighting control system. The equipment selected is the newest of their line, and there is limited information available to share. Much dialogue as a collaborative effort is necessary to understand the needs of the demanding system. By Tuesday, the electrician has most of the wiring complete, and the contractors follow behind the electricians closing up and taping the soffits. The recessed remodeler housings gets placed and the plasterer begins to feather the underside of the soffits. A visit to John Salibello Antiques is always an experience. (www.johnsalibelloantiques.com ) The collection is an enormous one of vintage lighting and furnishings. There is no greater or more generous source for phenomenal art-glass original lighting pieces from the1960’s. Charles finds three cylindrical clear glass pendants with brass overlay. Absolutely perfect for the window elevation above the Chinese Shadowboxes from Robert Kuo (http://www.robertkuo.com/). Randall finds a phenomenal bronze doré round end table that looks like a tree with a glass top. The perfect piece to reinforce the organic thread that is developing within the room and to blend with the vintage furnishings secured thus far. Charles also has his eyes on a Barovier sconce from the 1960’s but is told that it is not to be represented as a single sconce since it is being sold as a pair. Charles takes a memo and continues searching for another, knowing in his heart that this one would be perfect for the room. After finalizing the layout of the entry elevation, Randall has discussions with Koraseal (http://www.koroseal.com/) about creating a surround around the entry doors in Gage Architectural metal (http://gagecorp.net/) sheeting. He shares a drawing with them indicating a metal casing be applied away from the recesses to the door openings and laminated with sheets of woven metal. The concept will give importance to the weak entry elevation and unify the discordant entrances with dissimilar proportions. Gage (http://gagecorp.net/), unfortunately cannot meet the deadline and offers another line of product which gets vetoed by the design team. The decision is made to have the casing made of wood and to coat it and all walls within, in Venetian Plaster. That same finish will also be applied to the underside of the soffits, giving that glass-like smoothness to contrast the textured metallic Zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com/) paint.Fanuka Construction (www.fanuka.com) and Decorfin are then pursued to execute the details, and they both gladly comply with the request to be seen in ‘The Lounge’ at the Kips Bay Show house. Bam! Wednesday, Thursday and Friday are dedicated to search and acquisitions. The team starts-off on a lead from a woman at another table at the Moonstruck Diner. She is working with a colleague of Charles, Iris Dankner, and they ask him about the progress on the show house. Charles and Iris became close friends when they shared in The Holiday House in November of 2008 where Pavarini designed the “Thanksgiving Dining Room” which won great accolades. See (www.designintuit.com/community/?page_id=60). He expresses the need to secure lighting fixtures and they send him to the Manhattan Art and Antiques Center (www.the-maac.com ) We go all through the building but never find what we came for. What does stand out is the lighting in Paul Stamati Gallery (www.stamati.com)….as always. Pavarini has worked with Stamati on many show houses. He’s a purveyor of fine art deco lighting which so often fits in the context of the Pavarini style. Charles has his heart set on a pair of spheres made of sand blasted glass pieces connected by metal clasps. The fixtures are remarkable Lalique crystal, but they are just too small. Measuring only 20” in diameter, Pavarini realizes he needs something so much more dramatic coming from such a huge ornamental ceiling. Charles’ keen eye for lighting and how he uses lighting as a design tool continues to guide us on our quest for the most appropriate fixtures. His experience from over 16 years with the Designers Lighting Forum of New York, a.k.a. The DLF, (producing the best programs throughout the tri-state area on continuing education on lighting design), pushes us onward. We continue on to one of the greatest antique shop streets in NYC, 10th between University and 5th. We begin at Ritter Antik. Although a pair of 1960’s Italian armchairs would be perfect in the room, they on no condition will permit any of their pieces to be borrowed for the show. They had an experience over 10 years ago that has to this day left a sour taste in their memories. A designer borrowed multiple pieces and returned the furniture in deplorable condition. It’s a shame how one bad experience could destroy numerous opportunities for decades to come.That’s one of the challenges with putting together a room in a show house. The Design Team keeps in mind the necessity to keep all of our vendors happy while remaining conscious of our relationships with them, as we shop and put reputation and liability at stake. There are no guarantees the designer will be able to procure the very pieces he/she desires to show. The climate at Maison Gerard and Karl Kemp is very different. Their staffs are both extremely accommodating and knowledgeable having had successful experiences with designers in the past who showcase their treasures and bring new interest to their stores.At Karl Kemp, the team finds some great 1960’s vintage pottery by Celine and Heinreich, a standing lamp from the 50’s, and a pair of sconces from the Modernist Era. All pieces are gladly offered by Karl Kemp himself, a premier antique dealer of the century with shops on both 10th St. and Madison Avenue. (www.karlkemp.com). He knows the sort of exposure the endeavor will bring to his exquisite 20th Century treasures. They continue on to Bernd Goeckler (www.bgoecklerantiques.com ), a vintage and early 20th An incredible Italian standing lamp by Stilnovo that looks like a spear passing through three upturned bowls of lacquered metal and a marvelous crystal quartz geode catch the eyes of the team. They keep their fingers crossed for the entire week before they hear back from Goeckler with his support. century dealer with a very different look about his furnishings. The search continues in Chelsea. In Old Goode Things, Randall finds a tremendous Venini pendant from the mid sixties. It features a giant bunch of milk glass discs with polished chrome spheres in the center. It looks like a giant bouquet of flowers. It would be stunning in the room! Unfortunately, there is only one of them. Ugh! The search continues….to Silas Seandel (www.silasseandel.com). He’s a well established metal sculptor whose pieces have become extremely sought after and valuable. Charles has used his phenomenal works of art in his interiors for years. In Silas’s short 35 year career, he has started a business and put exquisite product on the market, watching it gain in value as it is traded in the secondary markets. There are many pieces that could work in the room, and Silas offers us whatever we would like, so long as we don’t clean out his showroom! From there we head to Hudson furniture, intrigued by their new line of lighting fixtures we find in some of their advertisements. They are very original, with ribbons and cords of metal loosely formed into whimsical shapes and forming candles and bobeches in interpretive ways. The biggest problem is getting them here from the Netherlands…and then sending them back! We are told that would be our responsibility…too much of a financial responsibility for such a large room…so we take some memos and move on. While we are out scouting for furnishings, Charles takes a trip to Anthony Lawrence-Belfair (www.anthonylawrence-belfair.com) drapery and upholstery workroom to see the mock up with Lana Lawrence. He’s extremely excited, as always, to see his designs come to life in brilliant workmanship. Magically, the mock up Lana presents gives a clear indication of how the fabric will drape along the long window elevation. The suppleness of the wool woven fabric proudly drapes, showing great ripple-folds and softness. It’s always amazing to visit the perfectly dustless workrooms of their enterprise and witness their tenured ‘elves’ busy at work. You can’t imagine a more old world approach to perfection. Every chair is horsehair sprung, every hem is hand-sewn; the only way to reach such suppleness and subtle couture look.Superb! All-Pro painting (http://www.allpropaintingco.com/) company starts on Friday morning, touching up some of the walls and Stephen begins to prime in preparation for spraying the Zolatone (http://www.zolatone.com/) Metal finish in the afternoon. Coat #1 is complete on Friday, and they return on Saturday to apply coat #2. March 23-28th Under Construction The hand cast plaster ceiling is scheduled to arrive at 7 am on an overnight express tractor trailer coming in from Toronto. Peter Di Natale, the contractor, sends his man to help Randall unload the truck. He’s there promptly at 7 am. At 7:15, Randall emails the Balmer rep. to check on the ETA. The rep. says the driver is very near and should be arriving within 10-15 minutes. Randall grabs a hot cup of tea from the street corner vendor to help beat the cold. At 7:45, the two Canadian installers arrive explaining that it will be only another few minutes before the truck is to arrive. They wait another 30 minutes or so with no sign of the truck. Randall sends another email to the rep. who assures them the truck is only blocks away. At 9:15, we get a call from the rep saying the driver is four blocks away and should be pulling in momentarily. My man the helper has to leave by 10am. Great! So Randall and he have literally sat on their hands for 2-1/2 hours with nothing to do but wait, and now that truck has finally arrived, they are going to be down to three movers to unload all of the individual plaster pieces weighing in at a combined 4900lbs! The truck actually shows about 10 minutes later to the meter spots Randall had been safeguarding from other cars parking in them. The driver steps out apologizing that he had fallen asleep at the last rest area in Jersey and that he had set his alarm but not his clock! The team begins like ants forming a trail from the truck, into the service entrance, down the flight of stairs into the basement, down the long hallway and up the four flights of stairs through the back door to the room. There are 64 individual 3’x3’ interlocking tiles weighing about 35 lbs. each and three crates weighing over 150lbs each. The unloading process takes about three hours, at which point the installers can start to map out the mounting locations on the ceiling. The process is explained to be a long one, involving a week of actual field tile installation and another week of installing the crown molding, custom pierced molding, and plastering all of the joints to create one connected ceiling. The installers still appear very energetic and motivated to get it done by the end of next week. Explaining that the carpet installation is scheduled for next Thursday and Friday April 2-3rd, Randall puts the pressure on from the start, only to be met with long faces as the laborers still sweat from the unloading process! The installers lay out the ceiling tiles and discover that one of the chandelier boxes needs to be moved again. It’s ½” off! Believe it or not, such an elaborate ceiling cannot allow for more than ¼ in tolerance to avoid disrupting its pattern. It has been a challenge from the beginning for the electricians who have been forced to work around the contractors with little information from the supplier about the technicalities of the LED wiring. Now they have to move a post which is now buried in the ceiling beneath sheetrock and plywood. They agree to do it right away after a short argument. Charles arrives at the site mid morning to check progress. He walks into the room and is taken completely by surprise by the condition of the paint job. The metallic paint appears to have exaggerated every single discrepancy in the walls to the point where you can even see the roller marks from the primer application!We all get wrapped up into this problem which could domino into a catastrophic one! The plaster ceiling installers are now going to work straight through until they are complete, which we were expecting to take nearly two weeks! So when would it get repainted? It’s already March 23, and if the plaster ceiling installation does actually take two weeks, which means that when they are complete, we will have only two days before Penelope Green of the New York Times is expected to make her visit! Not to mention, we have to tile the fireplace, do a Venetian Plaster on the ceiling and door surround, and paint the ceiling! Tuesday morning we meet Larry of Morgik Metal at the show house. Steven of All-Pro painting (http://www.allpropaintingco.com/) is in the room. He and Randall had set up an appointment to discuss the room. And what could be done about the finish. He suggests skim coating all elevations except the window elevation, which is in pretty good shape. That means we need to have the room turned back into a spray booth as soon as the fireplace mantle is tiled. That will give us two less days to complete our work for Penelope Green! Going back to Larry, we discuss the drawing we had prepared with a mitered bullnose frame around the rectangular ‘fire box’ and agree on comprising the design because of the time it would take to manufacture. To form stainless steel into a bullnose requires intense machinery and finishing which we do not have time for. We go with just a flat metal 1” mirror finish stainless steel band that wraps the opening and has a blind mounting detail so no screws are seen. Charles has an idea to ‘float’ birch logs within the black firebox. After discussing various affects, Charles decides that he wants three stacked logs to levitate in the middle of the box with no visible connection to the box. He suggests fabricating a metal band anchored into the wall behind with two metal spikes projecting from the band to support the logs. The first log will slide onto the spikes through holes drilled into the log, and the second log will slide partially onto the spikes so they don’t penetrate the log. The third log will simply sit on top of the other two. The effect will be genius! What one would think is a fireplace that doesn’t function has become an artistic element, drawing reference to a fireplace executed in a rather magical artistic way. Everyone on the team is ‘wide-eyed’ at the concept and eager to see it assembled. Effects like these are typical of Charles’ work and really test the boundaries of perception, of gravity, and of convention. The plaster ceiling installation continues throughout the week, as the design team scrambles to and from around the city visiting all of the antique stores and studios. A trip to Tribeca proves encouraging yet doesn’t leave the team with much direction. While many great things present themselves throughout the stylish stores and galleries, the precise genre of sleek new and vintage product we are targeting proves to be a narrow market. The end of the week focuses on refining the scheme, continuing to shop chandeliers with utmost priority.Those will be important elements in the room, as they originate from a highly detailed ceiling and are meant to express in light the tailored and refined style the room embodies. While the best of John Salibello (http://www.johnsalibelloantiques.com/) and Venfield prove to be strong possibilities, they are overly strong as statements of their own period rather than types possessing that malleable simplistic quality that a great pear of lampshades could augment! That’s it! Lampshades!! One of Pavarini’s most important custom interior elements!! With that in mind, Charles continues to shop at Carlos de la Puente (www.delapuenteantiques.com) looking for a simple 1960’s era chandeliers that could be augmented with lampshades. After visiting two of the three stores on 60th St., he comes across some which have tiers of glass ‘icicles’. The fixtures are so simple that they would have no connection with the ornate plaster ceiling. Perfect! Immediately Charles envisions them hanging them from huge lampshades with sparkling trimmings. Randall immediately calls Ed from Oriental Lampshade Co. on West 79th St. (www.orientallampshade.com ) to discuss the possibility. Ed explains that in order to produce the shades in time for installation, he would need the precise dimensions immediately so the frames could be made and leave enough time for the seamstresses to apply the fabric and trim. Given that something of this nature is completely handmade and hand sewn, the time it will take to produce the shades is two weeks, which leaves no time for deliberation. The next day, Charles heads to the garment district looking for a wool bouclé and some ‘razzle-dazzle’ trimmings! He immediately finds the fabric at B&J Fabrics (www.bandjfabrics.com ) and an incredible acrylic chain trim are (www.mjtrim.com) to be applied to the top of the shade. Unfortunately, there is not sufficient stock and an inquiry must be made for additional yardage to the factory in Italy to see if they can send it overnight. The following day, we learn that the trim is unfortunately not in stock, and that a reselection must be made to keep the deadline. On Friday, Charles returns and selects another; this one is a flat tape with rows of faceted acrylic beads which turns out to be a better choice than the last! As is frequently with Interior Design, things happen for a reason; and it is because of this mystery that one should not invest too much content with an item before it is secured. There is no telling what may or may not be available! On a trip around the house, Charles introduces himself to a painter who is working in another room in the house. Jonathan of America Painting comes into the room with Charles to review the geometric pattern and the ideas Charles has of painting a percentage of them to create further creative geometric interplays and color distribution in the room. Jonathan agrees to donate his labor to paint the ceiling. That detail will create two enormous patterns to emerge from the complex geometrics of the ceiling design. On Thursday, the team agrees upon the photograph to use above the sofa. The team has been in search of an awesome natural photograph that makes a statement about earth’s majesty and grandeur. It is decided that icebergs are the target for they are not only awesome and majestic, but they are cool and refreshing, very lounge like, while they also make a somewhat ‘political’ statement about the planet and its volatility given ‘global warming’. After an exhausting search of all known photographs of icebergs, it is narrowed to the work of artist Camille Seaman and a photograph of one enormous iceberg projecting in an angular way from the icy sea. The image is sent to Duggal, where it is decided to have the image enlarged to 5’x7’ and mounted behind clear plexi-glass. Saturday is the day when the Venetian Plaster is scheduled to commence. Decorfin (www.decorfinusa.com ) sends over three artists to begin the work. When they arrive, the installers for the Plaster ceiling are already busy at work. Unfortunately, nobody from Pavarini is present, and the Plaster ceiling installers send the artists away explaining that if they were to start, their work would be destroyed as the crown is installed around the edge of the soffits. Charles arrives about an hour later, planning to direct the artists. He is absolutely shocked to learn that they had been sent away! This room is never going to come together if authority is taken from the project managers and left to other tradesmen to schedule! Absolutely enraged, Charles questions the Plaster Ceiling installer only to be met with antipathy and attitude! The heat increases as what was intended to be a discussion becomes a combative argument between Charles and the installer.The fear is that the Venetian Plaster will then have to be rushed at the last minute when electricians and other trades are fighting for ladders and floor space. With no option but to leave and keep the faith, Charles sets back out into the design market to finalize other details. On a more positive note, we receive commitment of support from Bernd Goeckler. We are absolutely thrilled to be working with the famed dealer who has not been so open to lending pieces in the past. It just proves how important one’s reputation is in this business. You can have all the insurance and experience in the world, but to convince a dealer to lend extraordinary product depends on the exposure. Goeckler obviously perceives the level of exposure the room will generate and rationalizes the value of allowing us to showcase it. March 30th-April 4th The ‘Floating’ fireplace elevation has been completed and we are set to begin the tile installation on Monday Morning. Charles and Randall arrive on-site at 9:30am to discover that the installer is in the process of applying the wrong color tile. A quick call to Shelly Tile confirms that a mistake had been made in the warehouse and that there is plenty of stock in the in Elizabeth, New Jersey. Randall immediately begins packing-up the incorrect tile and plans to make the exchange immediately. He assures the installers he will be back within 90 minutes so that they can continue. Dubiously, they set-out for a long lunch and siesta, fully expecting to loose the day. Randall makes his way to Elizabeth, exchanges the tile, and heads straight to the showhouse with the tile, surprising everyone. The tile work begins and the design team is told that work should be complete by Wednesday.
KIPS BAY 2009 ROOM DESCRIPTION The Lounge You are witnessing the latest work by Charles Pavarini III Design Associates Inc, The Lounge. Designed to relax the spirit and stimulate the mind, the room brings you into a new dimension of Interior Design. Part Piano Lounge, part Social Lounge, the ambience gives a nod to the past while blazing a current style employing Pavarini signature architectural effects and lighting ingenuity, and showcasing a new line of custom upholstered furniture amidst a collection of fine vintage pieces. The backgrounds are an important component to set the stage for the complex interplay of fabrics and furnishings. Sparkling Zolatone walls and a taupe sisal carpet by Stark give a smooth canvas for the collage of furnishings. The ceiling, finished in hand-cast architectural geometric plaster-work by Balmer Architectural Mouldigns of Toronto, gives reference to the building’s history and juxtaposes the sleek yet dramatic style each and every piece in the room evokes. Painted to reveal the layering of pattern and finished in nickel studs brings it forward to merge with the sleekness of the room. This traditional architectural detail is typical of the Pavarini philosophy of layering history with high technology coupled with a dramatic edge. Overlay rugs by Stark Carpet and luscious amethyst and taupe fabrics by Lelievre of Paris, through Old World Weavers, bring the layering of warmth to the room by softening the long window elevation with smooth drapery and the floor with soft pile. Luxurious furniture designed by Pavarini and produced by Anthony Lawrence and Avery Boardman dominate the room with comfort and contemporary refinement. Custom Case good pieces by Dakota Jackson and Lorin Marsh make strong statements in wood, metal, and glass. The custom bookcases designed by Pavarini and built by Daniel Scuderi, Inc. showcase important Vintage and contemporary accessories by Meissen, Celine, Heinrich, and Lorin Marsh. Most importantly, the Art-Case Steinway piano custom carved by renowned John Eric Byers and finished in milk-paint sets the tone for realizing the conversion from lobby to piano lounge at dusk, as jazz and Broadway entertainers bring music to the air. To conceptually contrast all of the man-made refinement throughout the rooms furnishings, a thread of ‘organic’ design runs through the scheme. A log chair by Niedermaier and a tree-like bronze table from John Salibello Antiques work into the furniture collage, while an enormous photograph of an iceberg by Camille Seaman makes a chilling statement about earth and global warming. The massive ‘living’ sculpture of a torso by artist Robert Cannon further reinforces the organic approach as mosses and flowers grow from its joints. Scale is tested with giant and whimsical porcelain standing lamps by Allan Knight that hug the ‘floating’ fireplace in mother-of-pearl tile by Shelly Tile. An intricate LED lighting system by Jesco is geniously integrated to address lighting needs by highlighting major architectural focal points sculpted by Pavarini. Their result captures form in ways which flatter and surprise. The use of light as a design tool reflects Charles’ philosophy on lighting as influenced by his experience in the theatre industry. As a performer, set designer, costume designer, and producer throughout his broad career, Mr. Pavarini’s appreciation for drama and passion for mood is unmatched. Custom pierced moulding in the cove designed by Pavarini allows colored light to pass through, giving live framework to the geometric plaster ceiling. The ‘floating’ fireplace is given its magic by LED strip placement which gives it the allusion it doesn’t come in contact with the wall or ceiling. These effects give the room its awe-inspiring impact and display cutting-edge ways of achieving dramatic results in a room destined to stimulate conversation and welcome live entertainment. ABOUT CHARLES PAVARINI III Charles Pavarini III Design Associates Inc. is a full-scale Design Firm specializing in Architecturally-Based Interior Design. While many of our projects begin with new construction and full-scale renovations, we see nearly all projects through decoration and art selection to achieve a complete Interior Design concept. Our work is widely recognized for its European flavor and very clear sense of style and sophistication. Architecturally-Based Interior Design: Whether the project takes place on a new site or involves the renovation of an existing structure, our services often begin during the construction planning stages. Our highly adept design team is fluent in architecture, spatial visualization, and space layout; therefore, it is to the benefit of the project that our services be secured before construction begins. We work in tandem with architects to achieve structural layouts based on architectural principles so that they are ready for construction. Our Interior Design concepts work hand-in-hand with the architecture of the spaces to ensure a cohesive design concept. Whether we are involved with a construction project or not, our design is based upon the architectural vocabulary of the space. That vocabulary dictates many of the concepts which the Interior Design and Decoration is hinged-upon. Lighting Design is a major component to our Interior Design services. It highlights the architecture and brings focus to the Interior Design through light and shadow, and it is a necessary component to our Architectural Interior Design scheme. Decoration: Decoration involves the treatment of all levels of the Interior Design including the walls, ceiling, floor, and furnishings. We consider the walls, ceiling, and floor to be the backgrounds. For our purposes, the backgrounds must acutely relate to the furnishings as the two are inter-dependant. Our team includes numerous artisans versed in the arts of decorative painting, mural painting, faux finishing, and tile and mosaic installation. With them, we can create suitable and appropriate backgrounds for the furnishings. Furnishings include furniture, accessories, art and sculpture. We source not only contemporary furniture pieces, art and sculpture, but also antiques. In regards to upholstery, most of our upholstered furniture is custom-made and often designed specifically for the project. The sense of scale and form are major components of our upholstered pieces, so that they are appropriate to the overall Interior Design. Our Work Stands Alone: Our firm is a leader in creating successful Interior Design that exhibits a very high taste level, style component, and refined sense of drama. Based on fundamental classical principles, our work blends historical elements and concepts in new ways that show a mastery of merging tradition with contemporary woodworking and cutting-edge lighting design.
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