apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


'Cube of Nature' in Chinatown Apartment
Boston Magazine

01_CityView.jpg
6-10-kayla-thumbs2.jpg

This stunning 8' x 8' 2-story courtyard is a fresh take on bringing the outdoors in. Manhattan transplants Sam and Leslie hired local Boston firm Howeler Yoon to merge the top two floors of a Chinatown building to create their new home, agreeing to sacrifice a bit of square footage to gain a whole lot of nature — including ample natural light but also rain and snow. The result is a wonderful dollop of California indoor-outdoor living, smack in the heart of Boston's Chinatown...

 
 

Much more on this lovely apartment via Boston Magazine and Howeler Yoon.

Tags

outdoor, inspiration, garden, courtyard, Chinatown

Related Links

Share

Comments (24)

I just cannot imagine living in a space that is so hard and sharp as this.

posted by LoriSF on June 10th 2009 at 3:49pm
view LoriSF's profile

kind of a cool take on the tenement airshaft.

posted by shlowzi on June 10th 2009 at 3:55pm
view shlowzi's profile

Looks like living inside a smokestack... way too claustrophobic for not enough payoff. I think it'd be better off with two story windows instead of a ... weird, cooker vent-thing.

posted by That70sHeidi on June 10th 2009 at 4:41pm
view That70sHeidi's profile

What an ingenious way to bring the sun in! I wonder if it is hard to deal with in heavy rains?

posted by baileyb on June 10th 2009 at 4:46pm
view baileyb's profile

I love it. Can you post more examples of bringing the outdoor in, besides floral arrangements and balcony designs

posted by sassifrass on June 10th 2009 at 4:51pm
view sassifrass's profile

Or snow!
Does it get filled with snow?!

posted by theserovingeyes on June 10th 2009 at 4:58pm
view theserovingeyes's profile

The first thing I thought of was the scene in Interview with a Vampire when he puts Claudia in the sun.

posted by Nikita on June 10th 2009 at 5:10pm
view Nikita's profile

It's creative, I'll say that. Although for an interior courtyard I'd want places to sit, and plants, and more than just teak decking in a large shower stall. Also, I cannot even imagine how weird it would be in the winter, when the snow is melting and refreezing and getting crusty and gross. Because even without being at ground level, it would.

posted by sally305 on June 10th 2009 at 6:12pm
view sally305's profile

I would put in some of those wall pocket things from yesterday all up one side and that crazy moss carpet thing from the design show. And then it would be a perfect uber hip mod thing.

posted by e6 on June 10th 2009 at 7:05pm
view e6's profile

It's wonderful.

Fortunately those who can't imagine living with something like this won't have to.

posted by MrCranky on June 10th 2009 at 8:22pm
view MrCranky's profile

Wow. I want.

posted by RichardinLA on June 11th 2009 at 7:13am
view RichardinLA's profile

I think this is VERY cool. Maybe it gets closed off on top in winter so it doesn't get too much snow in it? I don't know, all I know is that it's cool.

posted by KayDaisy on June 11th 2009 at 7:15am
view KayDaisy's profile

I'm not sure I like this...reminds me of the twilight zone episode where people are trapped in a box.

posted by suzy8track on June 11th 2009 at 9:08am
view suzy8track's profile

It looks like a solar oven to me.

posted by asinner on June 11th 2009 at 9:35am
view asinner's profile

I think it's kind of cool as a quirky home feature, but not really as an outdoor feature. The picture of the little girl with the hose makes me kind of sad. Like...is that her idea of going outside to play? Which makes me wonder...what exactly is the point of having a hose there? There aren't any plants to water or anything...

posted by amazonikon on June 11th 2009 at 10:14am
view amazonikon's profile

This was built in cold grey Boston? Did they plan this via long distance? I'm sure the family will enjoy their courtyard the dozen or so days out of the year they can use it. It would be more useful if asinner's surmise were correct and it actually were a solar heater.

posted by amed studio on June 11th 2009 at 8:24pm
view amed studio's profile

Very inspirational apartment right in the middle of chilly and dull Boston. This courtyard must be attraction for the whole family.

Stunning design idea!

posted by jeanne211 on June 12th 2009 at 1:57am
view jeanne211's profile

It's a lovely reno overall and a great way to let in light. However, I can't imagine the smells of cooking oil and exhaust in the summertime would be pleasant.

posted by dianalily on June 12th 2009 at 8:47am
view dianalily's profile

This reminds me of air shaft sitting spaces in homes in San Francisco! I love them. Granted, it's a little more temperate there...

posted by apdesigngirl on June 13th 2009 at 12:10pm
view apdesigngirl's profile

Cool and innovative! I think it's great for Chinatown since there's little greenery in that neighborhood.

To those who posted that Boston is cold and gray, chilly and dull have clearly never been to Boston. Today was a gorgeous, sunny, warm summer afternoon and there were hundreds of people enjoying the beautiful Boston Common. Many travel from around the world to visit the history, architecture and culture in Boston, so not sure where you're getting your facts. Just had to respond to the haters... cheers!

posted by s_boston on June 13th 2009 at 7:51pm
view s_boston's profile

reminds me of James Turrell's skyspace, Tending, (Blue) sculpture at Nasher Sculpture Museum in Dallas, Tx. It's quite breathtaking.

posted by lifeinmd on June 13th 2009 at 11:24pm
view lifeinmd's profile

I remember reading about at least one converted warehouse loft that had an atrium feature like this in my city. It was cool at the time, but now I really don't know what I'd do with it. I'm afraid it'd just fill up with snow and transient critters.

posted by Alaricus on June 14th 2009 at 1:24am
view Alaricus's profile

I like it in theory. But agree that they certainly haven't employed it very well. Cube of Nature? Really? And not one plant? (Vase of cheesy flowers NOT withstanding...) Um, okay. "Cube of Weather" is more like it. Hey, I am all about spare and modern design. But this space isn't spare or modern, but vacant.

posted by bittergaymark on June 14th 2009 at 2:06pm
view bittergaymark's profile

It's weird ... the vase of flowers seems to move with every single shot. They must really, really like those flowers.

Anyways, I think this space is owned by the Cellist from the Magnetic Fields, whom I love!

posted by jick on June 14th 2009 at 9:21pm
view jick's profile

Feeds

RSS icon Boston

+ City Feeds