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

 

Photo Gallery

About Charles Pavarini III Design

Room Description

The Design Diary

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

Initial Project Review

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.

 

 
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