April 14, 2026

Interior Intuition Design

Lifestyle Starts from Your Room

Tour an Upper East Side apartment that’s layered and livable

Tour an Upper East Side apartment that’s layered and livable

A family of five in Flatiron: it has a nice ring to it. But after living downtown for years in an open-concept apartment, the parents longed for structure – maybe even a separate kitchen with doors, so the whole home wouldn’t sound or smell like a restaurant whenever they fried an egg.

They still loved their home, however. And so it made sense, after purchasing an Upper East Side apartment in a 1930s building, to work with Andrew Magnes Architecture, the firm behind their Flatiron home. Coincidentally, the family had a personal connection to Nate Berkus Associates (their cousin recently worked with the firm on a renovation the family adored), making the A-list design firm an obvious fit to finesse the interiors.

Simply put, it was a gut. ‘They were really excited about the light that was coming in and just the layout of building – and the location was half a block from Central Park,’ says Andrew. But the apartment itself had its original prewar layout, tailored to a lifestyle that no longer exists. There were staff corridors, maids’ rooms (plural), a large formal dining room – all in all, more structure than the parents had in mind.

White walled entryway with checkboards red, white and black marble tiles and a wooden clad lift

(Image credit: Architecture: Andrew Magnes Architecture and Christopher Boskey Architect / Interior Design: Nate Berkus Associates / Photography: Peter Murdock)

Tasked with injecting a traditional look while breaking down all that formality, Andrew was busy breaking another barrier, too: for the first time in his career, he teamed up with his life partner, architect Chris Boskey, on the renovation.

link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © All rights reserved. | Newsphere by AF themes.