Project posted by nC2 architecture llc

1852 Ft Greene Townhouse

Year
1852
Structure
House (Multi Residence)
Style
Modern
Entry and formal living room
Entry and formal living room
Kitchen
Kitchen
Top floor skylit gallery
Top floor skylit gallery
Lush materials in the master bathroom
Lush materials in the master bathroom
Rear facade with a modern replacement for the original, decrepit rear bay window
Rear facade with a modern replacement for the original, decrepit rear bay window
Rear yard
Rear yard

Details

Square Feet
4000
Bedrooms
5
Full Baths
4
Partial Baths
1

Credits

Interior Design
Builder
Square 1 Construction
Photographer
Tom Sibley, Richard Goodstein

From nC2 architecture llc

Full gut renovation and facade restoration of an historic 1850s wood-frame townhouse. The current owners found the building as a decaying, vacant SRO (single room occupancy) dwelling with approximately 9 rooming units. The building has been converted to a two-family house with an owner’s triplex over a garden-level rental.

Due to the fact that the very little of the existing structure was serviceable and the change of occupancy necessitated major layout changes, nC2 was able to propose an especially creative and unconventional design for the triplex. This design centers around a continuous 2-run stair which connects the main living space on the parlor level to a family room on the second floor and, finally, to a studio space on the third, thus linking all of the public and semi-public spaces with a single architectural element. This scheme is further enhanced through the use of a wood-slat screen wall which functions as a guardrail for the stair as well as a light-filtering element tying all of the floors together, as well its culmination in a 5’ x 25’ skylight.

Project team: Richard Goodstein, Michael Hanson, Jalile Nuñez, Angie Hunsaker
Structural: Silman Associates, New York, NY

MEP: Levin Engineering PLLC, Brooklyn, NY

Photograhy: Tom Sibley, Richard Goodstein

More info: www.nc2architecture.com/185...