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Apartment Therapy On: Apartment Exteriors

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When is the last time you looked at the outside of your apartment? Our dwellings in the city are very internalized. Many of us don't really know what our homes look like from the outside. Some of our apartments aren't visible from the street, or don't have a real "facade"...

 
 

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So, we sometimes like to remind ourselves when we step outside to look up and study the exterior of our home. What is it made of? Is it clean, dirty? Are there any decorative elements in the railings or masonry? How do they relate to the interior?

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These details - as separate as they feel from our interior worlds - can inform design choices we make indoors. What areas can you impact where interior and exterior meet: window treatments, cleaning your windows, removing menus/postings from the stoop and building entry? (Photo via: NubbyTwiglet on Flickr.)

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Apartment Therapy on...., outdoor, exteriors, facade

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Comments (11)

I don't think that "internalized "means what you think it does. Of course, someone's apartment is personal and how one regards it is subjective. Most people live in buildings that have little, if any, exterior ornamentation.

But why should a cold, bland Post-Modern exterior limit your choice of decor inside?

posted by Palmetto on 2008-06-24 13:27:34
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Are those pictures from Central Park West? Around the 70s perhaps? I know I've seen that black railing...

Yeah, I'm a geek =}

posted by JH4285 on 2008-06-24 13:28:18
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Using the exterior as a reference or jumping off point (or continuation) for design choices is a great idea. It's entirely up to the individual to decide how they want to interpret and use what they see. This could mean contrasting or complementing the design elements outside. It can also mean letting it dictate every design element or something much more subtle, such as a single piece of art.

posted by jick on 2008-06-24 14:25:17
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When I'm choosing a new apartment, the exterior DOES factor into my decision. I have to at least like the exterior, if not love it. After all, I do see it every day as I come and go.

For me that translates into something that has a bit of a cottagey look to it.

Views out the windows are also important to me.

posted by dblitz1 on 2008-06-24 14:26:38
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Seeing the sky is better than any building facade.

posted by right angle on 2008-06-24 16:11:42
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I was just thinking the other day that it would be neat to do an exterior/interior series on AT. I'm sure some of the most amazing apartments we've seen on AT are in buildings that really aren't that great from the outside. The contrast can be interesting, especially when people have modern interiors that fit with very old exteriors.

I'm thrilled that my landlord is finally painting the outside of our two-family house (in SF). The outside looks so shabby that guests are always startled when they see the nicely renovated interior. Then again, that first moment of surprise is cool, in a way. It's like they've stumbled upon something unexpectedly pleasant.

posted by Liana on 2008-06-24 16:29:44
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it is still an individual choice as to how we feather our nests. i always walk past a loft building in chelsea that one loft, as i can see from the street had traditional drapes and decor, and thought it was an odd juxtaposition. as for me if i lived in a richard mier building on perry street it would be a minimal and understated interior for me, to let the architecture speak.

posted by patrickmc on 2008-06-24 19:22:10
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The railing is around the Dakota (72-73 on CPW). Does this make me and uber-geek?

posted by Mid-C Frank on 2008-06-24 21:02:49
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I can't imagine people don't pay attention to the outside of their apartment building. Maybe some people don't especially like it or it's meh to them, or maybe it was a building they'd always seen from the street and admired, and hoped to find out the insides weren't complete trash or divvied and ruinovated, and if then, that the rent could be afforded.

I know what the exterior of my building looks like and its adjoining building. I know that not everyone has a balcony, but almost everyone does, and quite a few of them are conveniently located directly over the nook where the dumpsters are kept, and most of the rest are facing the parking lot for the buildings adjacent, including the backs of them. None look over the street or the back yard. I don't have one, as I'm not interested in attracting cat burglars.

The building is red brick, no ivy, and does not advertise vacancies on the premises. The address is clearly posted on the streetside, but my building doesn't have a "name" such as Thingle Terrace or The Everproxy. This convention can be a superficial benefit to the ego or cruel and embarrassing, so I guess I can live with it. I don't know when it was built but it's as old as my parents if not a couple more decades. Don't know how to deduce it either.

The awnings are rather new, the walkway is still broken and puddly when it rains, and the columns of the front door of one building don't quite match the columns of the front door of the other, but they are the nice detail. The management of my building always shovels and salt-sands the sidewalk in front before and more often than any other landlord on my street. Another nice detail.

posted by K T G on 2008-06-24 22:31:11
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I just want to die from shame with our interior hallways. They are ghastly. The carpet, when new, looked like it was filthy, just one of those industrial strength puke-inducing color and pattern combinations that could not possibly look good under any circumstances.

Add to it some of the most repulsive door colors known to man. We once had a nice, neutral beige. Then they decided to try out every bad shade of green...pond scum green, mold green, snot green, alien green.

Then they must have gotten deal on squash yellow. The outside the building is done is squash...squash green, squash yellow, squash deeper yellow, squash orange. At least it's kind of cheery. But on the doors?

After adding on a cheap traditional style door molding on the top? That pops off whenever people bump into it with a big thing moving in and out. Some people have used the top of the molding to leave their empty beverage bottles on the way out. OMG!

By the time I get to my apartment, I am cranky. The color is THAT BAD. The carpet is THAT BAD.

I want to scream in their face "ARE YOU COLOR BLIND OR JUST STUPID?"

Nobody likes the yellow doors. NOBODY.

The color and carpet is enough so that if I had been moving here NOW, I would not have moved in. Seriously.

When I moved in, we had white walls, beige doors and TURQUOISE carpet with jewel color dots, sort of. Or maybe it was more teal. It was happy.

posted by TRUE BLUE on 2008-06-25 05:21:33
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I would think readers of Apartment Therapy are aware and do look at the exterior of their building... strange to assume otherwise!

posted by SMM on 2008-06-25 11:15:30
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