Condé Nast House & Garden

IN CLEAR SIGHT

ARCHITECT TOSHIKO MORI HELPS A TECH-SAVVY COUPLE BOLDLY REIMAGINE GLASS-HOUSE LIVING WITH A CLUSTER OF SLEEK STRUCTURES

- TEXT FRED A. BERNSTEIN PRODUCTION SAM COCHRAN STYLING MICHAEL REYNOLDS PHOTOGRAPH­S THOMAS LOOF

A tech-savvy couple reimagines glass-house living

People who live in glass houses need to do their homework. Take it from Bob greenberg, a media executive, and his wife, Corvova Lee, an artist. after purchasing a 97-hectare plot in new York’s hudson Valley nine years ago, the Manhattan-based couple enlisted architect Toshiko Mori to not only design a weekend retreat but also act as their teacher. With Toshiko, a longtime harvard professor, the pair studied some of the country’s best-known glass dwellings, among them Mies van der rohe’s 1951 Farnsworth house, outside Chicago, and Philip Johnson’s 1949 glass house in new Canaan, Connecticu­t. If these mid-century marvels offered an education in style, they also presented a few sobering lessons. ‘Too cold, too hot, foggedup glass, no ventilatio­n,’ Bob says, rattling off some of the buildings’ disadvanta­ges. ‘These homes were not very livable except in perfect weather.’

and so with Toshiko’s help, the couple set out to reinvent the glass house. That meant tackling practical problems as well as providing more space than either the Mies or Philip icons. But how to do all that while retaining the sleek aesthetic? Their solution was to create four small structures connected by concrete walkways – a kind of modernist adirondack camp. With an open plan that contains a combined living/dining/ kitchen area plus the master bedroom, the main house is all Bob and Corvova need when they’re up for the weekend alone. (at 115 square metres, it’s roughly the same size as the Farnsworth house.) There’s also a cooking pavilion, where they can entertain large groups, and an exercise pavilion for yoga and gyrotonics. situated slightly apart from that clutch of buildings is the guesthouse, complete with two suites and a modest living room and kitchenett­e.

Instead of cooling and heating a vast house that’s mostly unoccupied, the couple can use any of the four volumes (which total 372 square metres) as needed. ‘It’s an anti-mcmansion statement,’ says Bob,

‘IT’S ABOUT LIVING IN EACH MOMENT AND APPRECIATI­NG THE SPECIFIC SPACE ONE OCCUPIES’

who realised just how little space he and his wife actually required when, during constructi­on, they would occasional­ly sleep in an airstream trailer on the grounds. remembers Toshiko, ‘Bob and corvova asked me to reduce the size of each building so the experience­s could be more intimate. It’s about living in each moment and appreciati­ng the specific space one occupies.’

To develop super-slim structural frameworks for the pavilions, Toshiko turned to Bill Baker, the engineer responsibl­e for dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world. While the architect didn’t want Bill to hide any supports – ‘it’s important for people to see what’s doing what,’ Toshiko says – she did want them to recede. Bill came up with a network of columns that, at five centimetre­s wide by five centimetre­s deep, are even smaller than the home’s window mullions. ‘It’s very radical, with an amazingly delicate appearance,’ Toshiko says of the residence, which Bill refers to as a ‘one-story skyscraper’ on account of all the innovation that went into it. ‘at this very human scale,’ he notes, ‘every detail matters.’

The materials palette was likewise tightly controlled, with splashes of white paint, polished-concrete floors, and aluminium accents, which Toshiko gave a Macbook-style gleam. Wood, though nearly absent inside, is nonetheles­s ever-present on the grounds, where the homeowners added

conifers, dogwood and winterberr­ies with the help of landscape designers edwina von gal and richard herbert. (each building is like a terrarium in reverse.) While Bob and Corvova love to experience nature on weekends, they both confess they would prefer to do so without having to change out of their city clothes. Those tend to be Comme des garçons. Thirty years ago, the couple met when he was shopping in one of the brand’s stores and she was employed as a stylist for the Japanese label’s founder, rei Kawakubo.

When it came to furniture, the pair worked with Toshiko to choose the home’s small number of pieces. Black leather seating by dieter rams mingles with a Mies cocktail table, while moulded-plastic chairs by Maarten van severen join a Jean Prouvé stainless-steel dining table. Confrontin­g that sleekness is the couple’s trove of Chinese sculpture, much of it produced during the northern Qi dynasty, from ad 550 to 577. ‘That was a very rich period culturally,’ explains hudson, new Yorkbased antiquitie­s dealer Tom swope, who sold Bob and Corvova many of the works, which provide touches of historic patina.

For Bob, however, the compound is all about the future. his firm, r/ga, an advertisin­g agency that has expanded into digital marketing, helps companies use internet technology to maximum effect. The goal was for the residence to be what he calls a ‘connected home,’ with lighting, security, heating/cooling, and other systems that could all be controlled from anywhere on the property – or, for that matter, anywhere in the world.

Fine-tuning those systems took three years, recalls Corvova, admitting that what was for her husband a pursuit of passion sometimes felt like a neverendin­g process. But not long ago Bob let a delivery truck through the front gate by touching his iphone. ‘I was in Portugal, on a boat,’ he says triumphant­ly, adding, ‘The house works.’

 ??  ?? clockwise, from far left the cooking pavilion’s concrete terrace, in the foreground, features an outdoor kitchen with a viking grill as well as a suite of furniture by richard schultz for knoll; the master bedroom; the master bedroom pavilion lit up at...
clockwise, from far left the cooking pavilion’s concrete terrace, in the foreground, features an outdoor kitchen with a viking grill as well as a suite of furniture by richard schultz for knoll; the master bedroom; the master bedroom pavilion lit up at...
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 ??  ?? above buddhist sculptures are displayed on custom-made shelving in the master bedroom. the chairs are by maarten van severen for vitra right at dusk, the setting sun casts a warm glow on the glass expanse
above buddhist sculptures are displayed on custom-made shelving in the master bedroom. the chairs are by maarten van severen for vitra right at dusk, the setting sun casts a warm glow on the glass expanse
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 ??  ?? arranged beneath a bespoke light fixture in the main house are a jean prouvé dining table and maarten van severen chairs. the chinese art includes a limestone stele fragment, a standing buddha, a jade cong and an assortment of bi disks opposite page,...
arranged beneath a bespoke light fixture in the main house are a jean prouvé dining table and maarten van severen chairs. the chinese art includes a limestone stele fragment, a standing buddha, a jade cong and an assortment of bi disks opposite page,...

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