AD100’s firm has a team of architects, designers, artists and cinephiles based in Los Angeles. The Archers: Modern Living Room Interiors are presented next as some of the best inspirational projects from the Studio created by Richard Petit and Stephen Hunt in 2002.
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The Archers: Modern Living Room Interiors
The archers have a meticulous way of work, where every project shares a commitment to authenticity, the resonance of material, and experimentation rooted in precedent. Site-specific furniture and finishes are a defining aspect of the studio’s projects.
The Archers: Modern Living Room Interiors
The Archers Studio has the belief that every space deserves to be the only one of its kind, as we will show next.
The Archers: Modern Living Room Interiors
1- Hill House Six
This House in the hills overlooking Hollywood was to create a more sympathetic environment for a sophisticated young art collector and his growing family.
2-Hill House Five
A compact two-story mid-century house received an extensive and thoughtful remodel; the only original surviving elements are the dusty pink concrete block central fireplace core, steel beams and window frames. A luxe but organic materials palette elevates the house without obliterating its eccentricities, while all new systems and conveniences, including a screening room, bring the house into the 21st Century.
Inspired by the look
Inspired by the look
3- Hill House Four
By incorporating furniture previously collected by the clients, such as sofas by Luigi Caccia Dominioni and Roy McMakin and a Gemini coffee table by The Archers, and combining these pieces with new additions and custom elements designed by The Archers, we were able to furnish the interiors in a way that announced a bold new chapter for the couple without feeling impersonal or wholly unfamiliar.
4- Thirty Third Floor Apartment
New oak panelling and a marble fireplace, centred on an early Karl Benjamin painting, were installed in the living room, and French doors were added to open up an Eastern vista of Central Park to the dining room, creating a view corridor that hadn’t previously existed. A classicising strategy created an appropriate cosmopolitan container for a wide-ranging collection of furniture, objects and art, carefully chosen to reflect the client’s adventurous nature.
Inspired by the look
Inspired by the look
5- Third Floor Apartment
This project was in a condominium apartment, the main goal was to transform it into a sensational space for living and entertaining, with a clean backdrop for ever-changing art installations. With some details: a contained chef’s kitchen, a room with an en suite bath that could do triple-duty as an office, guest room and television room, a formal dining room for ten and a surfeit of concealed storage.
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6- Ranch House
The relaxed blend of traditional design and progressive function – board-and-batten siding and gabled forms enveloping open-plan layouts with sliding glass doors, sunken wet bars and heated pools – appealed to homeowners who were not quite at ease with the severe lines and metal surfaces of Modern houses.
7- Office
The Office was a project made to communicate the style, confidence and daring of the executive owner of the space. With dark colours and imponent details, the goal was easy to achieve.
Inspired by the look
Inspired by the look
8- Hill House Three
The archer made a brief to create at Hill House Three, a fully functioning second home, capable of hosting sizable gatherings and overnight guests. Various details on the house were customized for the total integration of design, architecture and painting.
9- Beach House
For massive steel, glass, and limestone contemporary home on the beach in Malibu, the proposal was to create breathtaking yet uninviting spaces. The relatively new house was in immaculate condition, so it was decided that any intervention would be fairly light-touch. The client wanted to soften the house’s muscularity, improve the acoustics and create layered, intimate spaces within its cavernous volumes without making structural changes.
10-Hill House Two
One of The Archer’s earliest projects is this refurbishment of a rare surviving example of California Spanish Deco architecture, designed and built by Lyle Nelson Barcume in 1932. The elaborate tile work and shaped plaster details provided an unlikely envelope for a collection of mostly late-twentieth-century furniture and art belonging to the clients.
See also: Modern Home Design: Covering all Rooms with Fierce & High-End Decor
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