9.19.2007

0 Graphic Plates


I am obsessed with graphic plates...these are from Brocade Home,Three Potatoe Four and Wrapables. The yellow one's are homemade by La Paracaidista...this might have to be a future project...

9.16.2007

7 Apartment Therapy Cure Week 1 Accomplishments


Week 1 Accomplishments
Bedroom:
-Thoroughly cleaned including under the bed and walk-in closet
-Put away all of the bf's clothes
-Did a ridiculous amount of laundry including all bedding and mound of towels from the closet
-Got rid of all outbox items including TV, outside chair that was inside, and extra throw pillows
-Purchased and put on new bedskirt
-Purchased and then returned new sheets
-Found new lamp and lampshade
-Found a home for the mirror that doesn't require hanging in on the wall!
-Painted accent wall



The bedroom after the first week!

Bathroom:
-Declogged the sink drain
-Purchased paint
-Purchased new towels

Other:
-Had the maintenance man fix the front door (it was sticking terribly so you had to throw your whole body weight at it so it would open)
-Thoroughly cleaned kitchen including fridge and pantry
-Had the bf's poster framed and hung
-Found a great mirror at a garage sale (now where to put it...)

I'm feeling pretty good for week one...Now I'm off to find curtains for the bedroom while everyone else in the city is watching the Saints game..

9.15.2007

5 Jonathan Adler Wanabees

I have made several very inexpensive purchases lately that are very similar to some awesome Jonathan Adler designs...

I love the Hollywood Lamps...they retail for $395...mine is from TJMaxx with a shade from Target for a total of $55

I found these awesome towels that have a pattern very similar to Jonathan Adler's Richard Nixon pattern...They were $3 each on clearance at Target...

The Relief vases are so beautiful. My wanabees are from Ikea ($3 vs. $45) and TJMaxx ($12 vs. $100)....Yay!!

9.13.2007

0 Apartment Therapy Cure Style Inspiration

So, it just dawned kind of out of nowhere what my style is...Hollywood Regency with a Modern tendency...whew!..We can thank the Kelli Wearstler pic below for helping me figure this out...Now the bedroom is taking on a whole new design path....

9.08.2007

2 Apartment Therapy Cure Bathroom Inspiration







Inspiration pics for the bathroom...including several pics I took around NOLA (Commander's Palace, Race St. house, and 1441 Jackson St.) I'm really into the striped awnings right now, as you can see...

Image 1 from Domino Magazine
Image 2 Photo by me
Image 3 Photo by me
Image 4 from Ann Sacks
Image 5 from Domino Magazine
Image 6 from Domino Magazine
Image 7 Photo by me
Image 8 from Domino Magazine
Image 9 from Ann Sacks
Image 10 from Domino Magazine

2 Apartment Therapy Cure Bedroom Inspiration








Inspiration pics for the bedroom overhaul...a couple of fellow ATers bedrooms included too!

9.03.2007

4 Apartment Therapy Fall Cure To-Do List and Before Pics

I have finally put together my to do list and before pics for my Apartment Therapy Fall Cure :






Living Room
-Hem Curtains
-Paint Side Table
-New Couch Cover
-New Coffee Table
-Freshen Art over couch- new objects for cubes
-Hang mirror- where??
-Create Bar Area?
-Frame and hang Poster
-More art
-Freshen Landing Strip
-New flat screen TV and entertainment center (in December)


My Bathroom
-Paint
-New Shower Curtain
-New Rug
-New Accessories
-Hang Shelf
-Hook/Art Project

Bedroom (aka. the Futon Lover's Room that needs a total overhaul)
-Remove outbox items left over from Spring Cure
-Purge unused pillows on futon
-Get/Make a Headboard
-Paint
-New Bedskirt
-Bed table- fix existing or get new
-Improve lighting
-Art
-New curtains
-Get rid of the last outdoor chair that is inside
The pics of this room are just too awful to post...This was the compromise room with the bf- it's "his room", I just sleep there. So, I try my best to not complain about its state. I never spend any time in here except when I'm asleep. The futon that I moved into the room from the living room during the Spring Cure is completely covered with throw pillows that I don't use and his clothes that he has decided no longer need to go in his closet. I have yet to empty the outbox from the spring cure, my fault, not because I'm having a hard time letting the items go, but because of logistics. He works nights, I work days so it's hard to coordinate when to work in this room....LUCKILY he will be out of the country for 10 days during this cure...I'll take advantage of the situation...

0 Bike Outing



So the bike and I just went on our first outing with a mission! We rode to Magazine St. for gelato at Sucre and to the movie store to rent Rushmore. It was the furthest I've ever ridden, I'm really proud of my sweaty self...


Side note: Sucre is one my favorite new spots. It's a total sweet shop, offering home made gelato, pastries, and chocolates. The interiors are modern meets traditional- imagine Pinkberry meets NOLA. The gelato is wonderful and the employees are very friendly.


Side note 2: I realized recently, I don't think I have ever seen Rushmore, although Wes Anderson's The Royal Tennenbaums and Life Aquatic are two of my most favorite movies...I'm every excited to finally see it...

9.02.2007

4 NOLA Post-Katrina Architecture Tour





Today I went on a mini architecture tour in NOLA, the focus was modern, sustainable housing built after Katrina. The first stop was Tulane's URBANbuild Studio's Prototype #2 house on Dryades St. in Central City.

The URBANbuild studios were formed after Katrina as a community service project for Tulane School of Architecture students. "Faculty and students engaged in URBANbuild studios are deployed to neighborhoods throughout the city to develop creative and sustainable urban design strategies, innovative designs for new housing, and proposals for site-specific urban interventions and large-scale mixed use urban environments." The houses are built by the students and professors.
The lot for this project is only 27' wide, yet the students managed to design a 1320 sqft house, a variation on the traditional NOLA camelback, that engages its site to the fullest. Porches on the front and back of the house link it to the neighborhood, while the modern lines and materials set it apart.

Funny side story: this house is located in Central City, which is located just north of St. Charles Ave. The area is known for its high crime rate, many of the murders you see on the news take place here...needless to say I was a little bit nervous about photographing this one. My concerns were immediately lifted as soon as we got out of the car. Some jovial and loud neighborhood men were sitting on a porch across the street. They immediately said hello, and when they saw us whip out our cameras they said, "oh, your here to see that house...that's some California style right there..." Early in the project another neighbor told the students, "no one is going to want to live there (upon observing the modern design)" I was wondering how the neighbors would respond, hopefully they understand the spirit of the project: rebuilding NOLA and bringing their neighbors back.
Anyway...overall I really liked this project, the breezeway that links the front and back is my favorite part...check out the website to see many construction and neighborhood pics...



Stop #2 was URBANbuild's first house built in the summer of 2006 in the Treme neighborhood on Dumaine St. This prototype was similar to the first, with the main focus being the porch, an essential architectural element in New Orleans. Pics are from the URBANbuild website as we didn't feel comfortable getting out to photograph this one.


I just came across another house that Tulane students are building this summer. This studio is called GREENbuild, their goal is similar to URBANbuild, but with an eco-friendly approach. Instead of stick building on site, this group built their house in modules in a warehouse, which are now being installed on site at 7th and Daneel St. in Central City. They are not quite finished, but check out their progress on their website- cool progress videos.


Our next destination took us to the Lower Ninth Ward, to see the progress on the Global Green project. You are probably familiar with this highly publicized project that has Brad Pitt as its poster child. The group held an international design competition to develop the site situated adjacent to the Mississippi River. The winning design is by Mathew Berman and Andrew Kotchen of Workshop/APD of New York. See their entry here. The project includes a community center, an 18 unit multi-family apartment building, and mulitple single family homes. The goals of the project according to the website are:

-Creating a green model or showcase for development and rebuilding for New Orleans, and green affordable housing in the US

-Ensuring the sustainability and long term affordability of the Project’s housing units for residents, and socioeconomic fabric of the neighborhood through the center

-Educating NOLA residents, the Gulf Coast and broader American public through the Project’s visitors center, NOLA resource center, and website about the benefits of green building

-Advancing smart solutions to global warming that both benefit communities (e.g., affordable housing, schools) and engage stakeholders in building will for action

So here is what we found:


One not finished house, a big fence, and a security gaurd...now I'm going to try to remain positive about this project, as it has brought attention to a historic neighborhood that is really struggling and seems to have really noble intentions....that said, why is it that a couple of small groups of college students and professors can build three houses that people can actually live in now, and this is as far as the Global Green has gotten?



Our last stop was The New Orleans Mission Family Center on Clio St. in Central City. Supposedly, this was the city's first post-Katrina sustainable building project. It is located on the site of the historic New Orleans Mission, a building severely damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The 4,400-square-foot, two-story, $1.5 million family center is the result of the Gulf Coast Rebuilding Fund, a corporate partnership led by California-based HomeAid, a nonprofit builder of transitional housing; Tulane University's School of Architecture, including design work by third and fourth year students; and two New Orleans architecture firms, Favrot and Shane and Perez, APC. Check out more here.
It is great to see so many sustaible modern projects going on in the city, that will hopefully be the catylyst for more development in the city.

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