“Upside of downsizing is making the pieces work” |
| Upside of downsizing is making the pieces work Posted: 27 Feb 2011 12:21 AM PST Designer Matthew Turner placed the dining area in a corner with floor-to-ceiling windows to take full advantage of the view. Designer's tip: "A round table centers the space, and is inherently conversational, as well as giving every diner a delightfully different vantage point." Decorating can be a bit like musical chairs, especially if you're downsizing. Some pieces shift around, while others don't make the cut because there's just no space for them. Luckily for homeowners Stephen and Pamela Mittel, interior designer Matthew MacCaul Turner proved adept at this game. In January 2010, the couple decided to sell their four-bedroom Pacific Heights home. A mere two months later, they were settling into a condo about two-thirds the size: an 1,800-square-foot two-bedroom in South of Market's Millennium Tower. The move marked a drastic change in neighborhood as well as lifestyle for the San Francisco natives. (She grew up in St. Francis Wood; he in Cow Hollow.) "We needed to simplify our lives," said Stephen, who now walks to his finance job at the Ferry Building. "And this was a way to do that." He and his wife of nearly 42 years wanted to adapt their existing furnishings from a traditional layout to a modern, open floor plan. Despite the myriad aesthetic differences between their past and present domiciles, the Mittels made just one purchase when they moved: a wall-mounted flat-screen television. Seamless moveAnd they had Turner, who also devised the decor in their Pacific Heights abode, to thank for the seamless, budget-friendly migration. "I spent a lot of time cataloging and measuring everything," recalled the designer. "I placed everything before we even set foot in here. I'm very methodical and believe in a certain rigor when you take on a project." Much of the Mittels' furniture continues to serve the same purpose as it did in their previous place - such as the dining tables and chairs, and the beds in the master suite and guest quarters. Then there are elements that have been adapted for use in different rooms. For instance, the living room in their former house was decorated with a six-panel Edo-era Japanese screen and two walnut and antique-mirror side tables that Turner designed. The screen now hangs above the couple's bed and the tables flank the bed as nightstands. "The key to reuse," said Turner, "is that the pieces are quality and classic." Fortunately, some furniture had already undergone a face-lift and eased right into contemporary high-rise living. Turner had the staid skirt removed from the bottom of the Mittels' sofa and implemented carved wooden legs with a lotus blossom motif - a lighter, airier approach. The olive silk damask upholstery was also ditched in favor of a soft beige linen velvet with coral and lavender undertones. Piano donatedOf course, there are items that were long gone by the time the movers arrived. A piano was donated to the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. The bench remains, however; Pamela spent three months on the needlepoint cushion cover, and it provides additional seating in the living room. While the floor-to-ceiling windows in the unit's combination kitchen-living-dining space offer breathtaking panoramic views of the San Francisco Bay, they presented a challenge when it came to the Mittels' art collection. The expanses of glass equate to fewer walls on which to hang art. But Turner had a solution: He incorporated a selection of smaller framed works by the likes of Jasper Johns, Alberto Giacometti and Joan Miró into a salon-style gallery in the entry. A large, ornate mirror is the anchor, grounding the hallway display. "People think the mirror is new," said Pamela, "but it's just more prominent now." Such is the case with many of their belongings that are no longer tucked away in seldom-frequented rooms. In fact, Pamela acknowledged that in their sleek and clean-lined interior, she and Stephen are "seeing things as if for the first time because they're being shown in a different light." This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php |
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