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Haberdasher Square
Home by Invsco This residential loft conversion incorporates two existing structures. The larger of the two structures is a 12-story reinforced concrete building executed at 7-stories in a neo-gothic style in 1925 for the A. B. Dick Company and expanded in 1937 to its present height. An 8-story, heavy timber structure which dates from 1910, was renovated as Phase two of the project. The design of the project incorporates dwellings whose interior spaces are unified around a sweeping curved wall and soffit. This device at once defines all the major uses while serving to visually organize and affirm the character of a large singular interior room into which uses are placed. Twelve-foot ceilings, careful organization of pipes and ductwork serve to further define space and allow natural light to reach the most remote points. The building lobby begins with a restored entry and vestibule of rich bronze travertine and plaster sculpture moldings. The bold gothic inspired design serves to enrich the entry and become the counterpoint against which the new interior lobby and corridors are derived. Large columns, restored plate glass windows and a march of large columns serve to control the oversized building lobbies which stretch to new elevators at both sides of the buildings.
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