DIY & Remodeling With Meredith Swinehart
Lately we've been admiring polished versions of the retractable wall hooks used on planes, trains, and boats. Here are three versions at three very different prices. Now if only our clothes, tools, and dishes would put themselves away when not in use.
Above: This Wall Panel with Coat Rack by Austrian design firm Team 7 has integrated metal hooks that fold flush when not in use. It's available in six woods, including walnut shown here, and can be installed alone or with additional features such as mirrors, benches, and shoe cabinets. For pricing and purchasing information, contact Wharfside in the UK and Möbili Mobel in the US.
Above: Knax Coat Rack, handmade in Denmark since 1995, is a made-to-last classic (its springs have been tested more than half a million times without breaking). Shown here in oiled walnut with aluminum hooks, Knax is available in 11 wood finishes, 12 painted colors, and three hook finishes—aluminum, black, and special-edition copper. Prices range from €93 for a two-hook rack to €246 for a 10-hook rack. In the US, a selection is available from CA Modern Home for $119 to $289.
Above: For a basic option, Ikea's Bjärnum hooks are made of aluminum and fold flat when not in use. They aren't spring-loaded, but at $9.99 for a pack of three, you might not mind manually closing them.
Love hardware as much as we do? Try:
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Architecture & Interiors With Margot Guralnick
Anna Pipkorn and Jane Kilpatrick's Melbourne interior design firm set sail with a surprise commission: They were asked to create a minimalist-luxe interior for a custom houseboat built for three generations of a family to gather on Lake Eildon, Victoria, Australia's answer to Lake Powell.
Discovered when a neighbor took interest in Kilpatrick's own home renovations—"I think she was attracted to the textured natural materials and clean lines in our house"—the design duo, both 36, were entirely new to nautical work. But they had been colleagues for years in two prominent Melbourne interiors firms and felt ready to chart their own course. Working for a father and his adult daughters who have been vacationing on Lake Eildon all their lives, Pipkorn and Kilpatrick were in on the creation of the 45-foot boat from its inception at Anchorage Houseboats in Eildon: "We were given the size of the fiberglass shell, and that was about it. Soon we were sitting around a table, talking navigation systems and state rooms." Applying a Scandi palette to the interiors, they created a serenely glamorous setup that gives new meaning to shipshape. And there's no chance of ever losing your bearings: Every room has a clear view of the water.
Photography by Christine Francis via Pipkorn & Kilpatrick.
Above: Climb aboard; the railings inside and out are marine-grade stainless steel. Designed for large gatherings, the boat has two levels plus a roof deck, and is divided into public and private zones. Shown here, the library lounge off the entry with a painting by Greg Wood, part of a collection of contemporary Australian art that appears throughout. The wall paneling is Victoria ash. "When possible, we sourced local, sustainable materials that are reflective of the surrounding landscape," says Kilpatrick.
Above: The designers created a sense of expansiveness courtesy of all the windows, and also by "convincing the builder to raise ceiling heights beyond the usual and to eliminate claustrophobia-inducing bulkheads by burying the services between the ceiling joists."
The sofa is the Hollywood Lounge from Angelucci 20th Century of Victoria, Australia.
Above: "The ground floor was designed as a free flow of lounge, dining room, kitchen, and helm," Kilpatrick says. The kitchen is one of two (there's also a galley upstairs) and in each, all of the details are built-in, trash bin and hidden microwave included, so that, as the designers say, "everything has its place, and every inch is utilized without it being obvious."
The counter is silver travertine—"We had weight restrictions and had to be very careful with the stone," says Kilpatrick, explaining that they counter-balanced the kitchen bulk with a big sofa on the other side.
Above: The design deftly straddles the line between formal and inviting.
Above: Top of the lake dining. Muuto's Adaptable Table in oak with a soap finish is surrounded by Hans Wegner PP58 Chairs with leather seats. The hammered copper light is Original BTC's Stanley Pendant.
Above: The dining area is open to the main lounge.
Above: Integrated closets, drawers, and bedside tables make the sleeping quarters feel generous. There are four bedrooms total: the master suite, shown here, on the ground level and three upstairs. The painting is by Pipkorn.
Above: The kids' room has built-in white bunks. The boat's linens are the Citi line from Abode of Australia.
Above: Even the bathrooms, one upstairs, one down, have wide-open views. The designers detailed them with one-way glass in the shower, and all of the windows have motorized roller blinds concealed behind the pelmets that wrap around the entire perimeter of the boat.
Above: The bathroom vanities are solid Australian stringybark, a eucalyptus, with blackened steel legs. The cube basin is from Australian bath company Caroma and has a Brodware City Stik wall-mounted tap. The basket supplies a place for vacationers to stow their travel kits.
Above: Penelope Durston cushions and an Original BTC Hector Clip Lamp in a dream bedroom.
Above: The bedroom hallway is open and bright thanks to a skylight, a space-changing detail that Pipkorn and Kilpatrick convinced the builders to insert: "It was a huge push to get it over the line, and thank god we did. We toured a lot of houseboats as preparation, and so many were dark and very pokey."
Above: World's best Butterfly Chair with a view? The chair's outdoor Stainless Steel Frame came from Angelucci 20th Century, and Kilpatrick supplied the leather seat, a vacation find in Sri Lanka.
Above: "The boat was built in a shed in Eildon and then transported to the lake on a large semi-truck, a very nerve-wracking day," says Kilpatrick. "On the outside, it has the boat builder's signature look."
Above: The floor plans detail the ample lounge areas and masterful division between public and private rooms. The interior is 110 square meters (approximately 1,184 square feet). See more of the designers' work at Pipkorn & Kilpatrick.
We have a weakness for houseboats. Here are two more of our favorites: A Mother and Daughter Afloat in Paris and The Modern Urban Houseboat, a vacation rental in Berlin.
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Kitchens With Christine Chang Hanway
Feeding the masses? Long favored by restaurants, the galley kitchen is designed for efficient meal production. Derived from the kitchens of ships and airplanes, the setup, also known as the corridor kitchen, is comprised of a single narrow passageway with cabinets and countertops on either side. Making the most of limited space, the hard-working galley is a perennial favorite in space-pressed urban dwellings. Here's a look at 10 inspired takes on the type.
Above: Ann DeSaussure Davidson and Scott Davidson's 75-square-foot Brooklyn kitchen is the quintessential urban galley. Remodeled on a shoestring budget by the couple and architect Josh Pulver of A + C, the room is stocked with sky-high storage and presents a flush façade thanks to small-scaled European appliances concealed behind paneled doors. For a full tour and dissection of the kitchen, see the Remodelista book. Photograph by Matthew Williams for Remodelista.
Above: A layout illustrates an efficient setup for a galley kitchen. Image via Momentum Construction.
Above: An urban galley kitchen with polished concrete floors in Paris has open shelving built efficiently around the radiator. Photograph via Afflante.
Above: An industrial, stainless-steel galley by MNA (Michael Neumann Architecture) features a wall of windows that flood the space with light. Photograph via MNA.
Above: In a 1970s galley kitchen renovated by London's reclamation experts and designers Retrouvius, a sliding door opens (and sections off) the kitchen from the dining room. For a full tour of this apartment, see A Barbican Flat Goes Glamorous. Photograph by Debi Treloar for Ryland Peters & Small from Reclaiming Style.
Above: London architecture and design firm Project Orange designed a commercial galley kitchen for a London couple who run a monthly dining club out of their home. A stainless steel cart on casters serves as a movable island. Photograph via Project Orange.
Above: Almost every inch of my galley kitchen in London is lined with cabinets. For a full tour of my house, see Christine's House: Living Small in London.
Above: Floating shelves made from 100-year-old oak floorboards add a rustic element to the galley in a remodeled Eichler home in the Bay Area belonging to Lisa Collins, founding principal of Studio One San Francisco. Photograph by Mark Adams.
Above: A small galley kitchen in Sweden finds extra depth by stepping the cabinets and countertop back from the sink. Photograph via Fantastic Frank.
Above: In her Stockholm galley, photographer and interior designer Benedikte Ugland contrasts black countertops and cabinets—Ikea designs that she refaced and stained—with beveled subway tile. We've got our eye on the sleek black faucet; here are some sources for high/low black faucets. Photograph by Anna Kern for Skona Hem.
Above: In Remodelista cofounder Francesca's Brooklyn galley, architect Steven Harris created a feeling of openness by floating the long cabinet run off the floor via a stepped-back base. Take a look at the Remodelista book for a full exploration of the house.
For more kitchen layout ideas, see our Remodeling 101 posts:
And for compact kitchen ideas, go to Radical Downsizing: High/Low Mini Kitchens and Ikea Ingenuity: A Two-in-One Kitchen and Mini Herb Garden.
This post is an update; it originally ran on March 14, 2014, as part of our Kitchen Composition issue.
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