The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘david rockwell’

  • Larry Bogdanow, the founder of Bogdanow Partners Architects whose projects included some of Manhattan’s best-known restaurants, died at age 64 on Wednesday, according to the New York Times. A part-time farmer and a member of the “slow food” movement, Bogdanow was awarded many jobs from restaurateurs with similar passions. He got his first big restaurant design job from Danny Meyer, who commissioned Bogdanow and Warren Ashworth to design Union Square Cafe in the mid-1980s. Some restaurants also designed by Bogdanow include the Cub Room in Soho,
    Tribeca’s City Hall restaurant, Telepan on the Upper West Side and
    Flatiron restaurants Union Pacific and Beppe. He also designed a restaurant on the 107th floor of the World Trade Center that was destroyed during the Sept. 11 attacks. Comments

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    From left: David Rockwell, Julius Schwarz, Alex Sapir and Trump Soho at 246 Spring Street

    The developers of Trump Soho have entered a legal imbroglio against the
    Rockwell Group, alleging in a new lawsuit that the interior design firm failed
    to meet building codes and cost the property more than $1.5 million in
    damages for delays and replacement costs to complete their work.

    The complaint, filed this past Friday in New York state Supreme Court,
    came just two days after Rockwell sued the Bayrock Group and Sapir
    Organization, alleging the Trump Soho developers failed to pay for $1.5
    million in interior design work at the building.

    Bayrock/Sapir, which developed the 391-unit hotel-condominium at 246
    Spring Street, contends the design firm placed furnishings too close to
    light fixtures and provided interior construction documents that were out of
    compliance with Americans with Disabilities Act requirements. [more]

  • Architects do more than design shiny new buildings. David Rockwell can vouch for that. His firm, the Rockwell Group — which has designed the Elinor
    Bunin-Munroe Film Center at Lincoln Center, the W New York and the W
    Union Square — has taken a special interest in playgrounds. Working
    pro bono, the company, which has an office at 5 Union Square West as well as in Madrid and Dubai, designed
    Imagination Playground in Burling Slip, an unstructured free-play play
    space in Lower Manhattan, featuring a collection of loose parts like
    wheelbarrows, rolling carts and molded foam blocks, meant to encourage
    kids to play creatively. The project broke ground this spring. A
    portable version, known as “Imagination Playground in a Box,” will be
    introduced in other cities around the country. The veteran architect
    also acted as production designer for the revamped Academy Awards show
    this year. Rockwell spoke with The Real Deal about his firm’s latest projects. [more]