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Entryway by Ellen Honigstock

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Live in an apartment or house without a separate entry space? We love this solution in a West Village townhouse by Ellen Honigstock...

 
 

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Honigstock created an entry using vertical wood slats that stretch from floor to ceiling. The permeable division allows light and views through the space and the existing flooring just runs right through. The result is a little light-handed definition without cutting up the small space.

This actually appears to be a rear entrance to the house, but similar could be done at the main entry to a small house or apartment. See the rest of the project at Ellen Honigstock Architect.

Images: Bjorg Photography

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inspiration, entryway, townhouse, West Village, Ellen Honigstock

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Comments (16)

Those posts are beautiful

posted by SeanG on August 17th 2009 at 7:23am
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I like the idea, but I don't know if I would have added so many -- maybe it's just the angle of the photos, but they seem to really cut off the living space. Perhaps just having two or even three close to the door would define the areas without making it seem like you're in a jail when you're sitting in the living room...

posted by JeffC on August 17th 2009 at 8:56am
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Why?

posted by JWet on August 17th 2009 at 9:28am
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All I think about is those totally AWESOME floors!!

posted by acwink on August 17th 2009 at 9:29am
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yes, the floors are arresting. i think fewer poles would work...

posted by chromaspace on August 17th 2009 at 9:35am
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So now they have room for two crappy chairs an ad a pile of books? This is for pictures not life.

posted by most on August 17th 2009 at 9:44am
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It looks like they ran out of money in the middle of a construction project.

posted by PhillyLass on August 17th 2009 at 9:49am
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I agree. I think some sheer material stretched between the wood would make it seem more complete. Though if it were me, I would not define the living space via structural elements. I'd rather do this by arranging the furniture, area rugs, etc. differently.

posted by slowdown on August 17th 2009 at 10:34am
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This is so strange to me--I live in a Brooklyn brownstone and people often pay to have the separation wall REMOVED to create one large flowing space and let in light. Not sure the beams really adds to the space at all though the wood she chose is beautful...what was wrong with keeping it open?

posted by msvalery on August 17th 2009 at 10:34am
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Does anyone know where those chairs are from? Love the design...

posted by ryannswan on August 17th 2009 at 11:03am
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I don't get it. Most Brownstone owners want that wall removed so it looks like someone started and didn't finish.

posted by leadingedge on August 17th 2009 at 11:07am
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That's a load-bearing wall. If you took out the two-by-fours the house would probably collapse. Maybe it's safe, but the fact is, these photos make me a little queasy.

posted by monarda on August 17th 2009 at 11:53am
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Is it possible that the beams are structural? If so, I think this is a clever solution. If not, then I think the concept didn't quite work. I would be tempted to make the beams more functional by adding open shelves that span across them on the living room side and adding a few old iron hooks for coats, purses, etc on the entry side.

posted by michelle123 on August 17th 2009 at 12:18pm
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They sure look structural - wouldn't it be neat to surround them with hollowed out birch logs?

posted by luna on August 17th 2009 at 1:58pm
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I have an apartment with no entry way. But there is no way this would be considered a 'solution'. This is just shelter porn.

posted by apdesigngirl on August 17th 2009 at 9:14pm
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If it's just about visual - and not structural - separation, then I think even a single beam, across from the dark post of the stairwell, would do the trick. Really. In my last home, a single narrow pillar, in a very specific location, had the visual effect of a delineating wall...

posted by *lynn* on August 18th 2009 at 10:38am
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