Project Details
- Project Name
- Sky Loft
- Location
- DC
- Architect
- KUBE Architecture
- Project Types
- Single Family
- Project Scope
- Renovation/Remodel
- Awards
- 2015 Remodeling Design Awards
- Team
-
Janet Bloomberg
Sonya Singh
- Consultants
- Metrix Construction
- Project Status
- Built
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
By enlarging an existing opening in the first floor ceiling,
using lots of glass, and hiding storage—even rooms—behind panels and pivoting
doors, architect Janet Bloomberg and contractor Sonya Singh created a stunning
central volume of space that spills light throughout this 1,300-square-foot
D.C. loft.
The client wanted more room and a white, pure space. The
glass was the architecture firm’s idea, Bloomberg says. “He was a little
worried about the privacy aspect. There is always a lot of convincing when I do
the frosted glass, but he was a good sport, and he listened.” She removed the
knee walls that surrounded the opening upstairs, replacing them with a
frameless transparent glass rail. The existing skylight was enlarged to bring
in more light.
Bloomberg found extra square footage throughout by capturing
wasted space where walls had been built out further than they needed to be, and
brought everything up to the rafters, where previously it was boxed down. The
team was able to widen the galley kitchen almost three feet by snatching space
from a powder room that “was excessively longer than it needed to be,” Bloomberg
said, and by relocating a water heater upstairs.
With kitchen, bedroom, bathroom, stairs, storage, and shelving
hidden away, all focus is on the serenity of that central volume of space,
allowing the homeowner’s collection of artwork to take center stage. Upstairs,
there is plenty of storage thanks to a line of closets that runs the length of
the apartment’s second floor. Those closets lie behind white pivoting doors,
while the master bath’s privacy is maintained behind a frosted glass door and
adjacent 7x7-foot fixed frosted glass panel, which serves as visual focal point
from the living room below.
Watch the video about the redesign, and see more winners of the 2015 Remodeling Design Awards.