RENOVATING A TOWNHOUSE APARTMENT

The living room in the 900-sq.ft. apartment renovated by New York City-based G.P. Schafer Architect in New York City’s Greenwich Village features 12-ft. French windows that overlook the street. The windows were rebuilt and the integral jamb-panel folding shutters were re-created to match the ones that would have been there originally. The dining table doubles as a desk. Unless otherwise noted, all photos © Paul Costello
When Gil Schafer, AIA, bought his parlor-floor townhouse apartment in the historic Greenwich Village section of
New York City in the fall of 2000, he acquired a small, but potentially elegant home. The 900-sq.ft. apartment
had 13-ft. ceilings, 12-ft. windows and a few original Italianate/ Victorian elements remaining from its
original form: three adjacent parlors in an 1850-60s townhouse. The previous owner had renovated and overlaid
Modernist elements on the historic interior.
This was all to change as Schafer “sought to restore period detail to a much-altered fabric while exploring
several architectural themes.” After 18 months of design and construction, completed in May 2002, the apartment
now resembles a “Minard Lefever interior of the 1830s with the glamour and mischief of a David Adler/Frances
Elkins interior of the late 1920s and 30s.” Where plain, pallid walls had existed previously, a rich
terra-cotta finish now furnishes a backdrop for Ionic columns, custom moldings, a scagliola mantel and other
details.
“One of the challenges was the high ceilings,” says Schafer. “There is actually more square footage on the
walls than on the floor, and this enormous height was a daunting problem. It was a challenge just trying to
proportion things to the scale of the space. The doors are taller, for example, and I had some new furniture
built to accommodate the ceiling height. The volume of the space makes lighting a challenge, too.” Schafer’s
solution was to use numerous lamps throughout the apartment, combined with strategic uplighting, following the
examples of David Hicks, a decorator he admires.
Schafer originally planned to keep the triple-parlor floor plan, using the front room as the living room and
the center room for dining, with the two separated by a new screen of columns. He found, however, that this
didn’t really suit a contemporary lifestyle, so he changed the floor plan to incorporate a large living/dining
room (14x22 ft.) in the front with a small wainscoted gallery in the center of the apartment. The column screen
of custom plaster Ionic columns was pushed back to separate the main living room from this gallery, which opens
into the kitchen and leads to the bedroom in the back of the apartment.
When the two parlors were opened into one larger room, the mantel in the former front parlor (facing the double
entry doors) became off center. To balance it, Schafer designed a new large mahogany bookcase that he added to
the same wall to form a focal point for the main seating area.
The new custom-made scagliola chimneypiece, meanwhile, was modeled after one in an Asher Benjamin pattern book
for the period. Fabricated by Ahmad Suleiman of Doylestown, PA, it resembles black marble with white veining.
To reinforce the look of the 1830s, the architectural elements were custom designed for the apartment,
including the cornice, base and architrave moldings, plaster ceiling roses, doors and replacement French
windows with integral folding jamb shutters. All were inspired by Minard Lefever patterns. The plaster
architectural ornament (cornice, moldings & ceiling roses) was the work of Fred Martin of New York City. Peter
Colosa of Long Island City was responsible for the construction in the apartment and for all of the millwork
and cabinetry, including the doors, paneling, kitchen cabinets and running trim.
Schafer turned to Rhett Butler of New York City-based E.R. Butler Co. to create historical hardware for the
interior, including hinges, doorknobs, cabinet hardware, custom concealed door pivot hinges and cabinet hinges
for concealed panel doors. Cobalt crystal knobs from one of E.R. Butler’s 19th-century reproduction lines were
used for the doors, combined with custom brass hardware. These are paired with custom key tassels created from
an abandoned 19th-century pattern. E.R. Butler fitted the entry doors with double brass rim-locks and a large
nickel silver key thumb turn. “I share Rhett Butler’s obsession with hardware,” says Schafer. “He made the
cobalt crystal knobs for this apartment, as well as custom escutcheons that are copies from a 19th-century
model.” The finish on the hardware is not the usual light satin antiqued finish, but is instead a custom finish
designed to make the hardware look like it had aged with time. “It turned out that this was an incredibly
difficult patinating process,” says Schafer, “because it doesn’t have the typical etched quality of a satin
finish.”
The 8-ft. doors throughout the apartment were painted to resemble mahogany rails and stiles surrounding inset
panels of crotch mahogany with ebonized panel molds. This faux wood graining was the work of decorative painter
Jean Carrau of New York City.
Accessed through the galley at the rear of the living room, the kitchen has simple painted rail and stile
cabinetry with glass upper cabinets with ribbed glass and portero marble countertops. Satin nickel hardware
with a pewter wash was used to give the cabinetry a time-worn quality and to distinguish it from the more
formal brass hardware in the main rooms. The kitchen also features the dark-stained quartersawn oak flooring
used throughout the apartment.

A tall bed inspired by a French steel “campaign” bed from the 19th-century was used in the cube-shaped bedroom, which, like the other rooms, has 13-ft. ceilings. The walls in the rear of the apartment were upholstered to create a quieter environment.
The approximately 12x12-ft. bedroom is almost a perfect cube, Schafer notes. He felt that the high ceiling
called for a tall bed to anchor it. The solution was a steel bed frame, inspired by French steel “campaign”
beds from the 19th century, crafted by metal artisans Les Metalliers Champenois of Paterson, NJ. Because the
townhouse is in a wood building where sound transmission is a factor, “I upholstered a lot of the walls to help
make the apartment quiet,” says Schafer. “It has a very tailored, flat look so that it doesn’t look like
typical wall upholstery. The back room features silk and others are felt or brown velvet.”
Schafer carried the black marble with white veining theme from the mantel into the bathroom, using negro
marquina marble. The slab marble floor is inlaid with 1-in. strips of polished nickel created by E. R. Butler,
recalling the interiors of David Adler. Paneling in this room provides a contrast to the marble and allowed
Schafer to integrate grilles for exhaust fans and stereo speakers. It also provided a way of hiding cabinets.
Nine hundred square feet may not be much space, but this apartment provided a number of challenges. Schafer’s
careful use of detail and space planning has turned this once-plain apartment into a showpiece. “This was an
opportunity to have control over every facet of the project, from the architecture to designing the furnishings
and decoration,” says Schafer, “and to have a complete tabula rasa. We designed every inch of the apartment. It
was also an opportunity to work with all of the different craftspeople, from those who did the faux graining,
scagliola and plaster columns and capitals to people who made the French campaign bed, to make it all come
together.”
G.P. Schafer Architect, PLLC, is a small, full-service architectural firm specializing in traditional
residential architecture. Based in New York City, it is directed by Gil Schafer III, who won a Palladio Award
for a Greek Revival home in upstate New York in 2002. (Period Homes, Summer 2002, p. 12) A graduate of the Yale
School of Architecture with a masters degree in 1988, Schafer has been involved in residential projects in
locations around the country and has been published in a number of magazines, such as Architecture, Japan
Architect, Country Life, Departures and House & Garden. He also serves as chairman of The Institute of
Classical Architecture & Classical America.
See details about the winning entry in the Summer 2004 issue of Period Homes Magazine.