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Cos Cob
3 x National Award Winning “Designer of the Year”, presented by the Interior Design Society Top 10 Interior Designers in CT, Custom Home Builder Magazine 2018 4 x Awarded Best of Houzz, Customer Service and Satisfaction “As a designer, I believe that design transforms not only our homes, but also our outlook. Beth Krupa Interiors is an award-winning design firm whose mission is to provide high end collaborative experiences with her valued and respected residential & commercial clientele that surpass all expectations.
kimhekking
I was convinced by family and friends that I needed a decorator. Although I have admired others homes that are designed and decorated by a professional, I didn’t see it as necessary in my life. Beth patiently worked with me and we found a style. She really listened to our families needs. Beth found a way to create a beautiful comfortable space room by room that suited our family’s life style and met our budget. I still fall in love with my home every time I walk into the front door!
Cos Cob
Marinelli Architect’s + Planners have been in business since 1992. Licensed in the states of New York and Connecticut. Member of the National Council of Architectural Registration Boards and American Institute of Architects. Our firm has comprehensive background experience in healthcare design, corporate space planning, commercial and residential design. Our firm provides team leaders with the personality and experience necessary in cultivating a productive client/contractor relationship.
Cos Cob
A boutique design studio that mixes innovation and agility with a personal touch to your home space, workspace, any space. Let's work together! See more of my work on www.spacesdesignco.com and on instagram @spaces.design.interiors
Cos Cob
We offer interior design services including custom furniture, custom window treatments and shades. We work together with other designers for their needs like reupholstery, and custom window treatments but also offer interior design services. WE have been in business for over 30 years servicing clients in United States and Worldwide.
ArchiGreen became the fusion of two concepts: Architecture and "Green" Designs. The idea of sustainable architecture is to eliminate the negative environmental impact through a thoughtful and sensitive approach utilizing renewable resources, connecting the human element with the natural environment to coexist in a state of equilibrium with nature. It is a set of principles to obtain a better human experience and comfort by using less energy and resources maximizing performance and durability to create a better space in which to live. We understand that our architecture is designed and conceived as a living organism to be a part of "Gaia" being Earth itself, another living organism. We are oppose to the obsolete notion that architecture is "a machine for living," but rather an organic, and unique piece of art able to function with renewable, and sustainable energy committed to achieve the challenging ecological design principles of our time.
I would argue that nature is the most important inspirational source one can think of. In every single human trade or endeavor, nature is the master of all trades. It took 4.5 billion years to evolve and develop to its current form to adapt to a particular environment. One cannot compete against nature but learn to adjust and play with its wisdom.
My work is and always has been a sort of detective trying to find out the creative process of an object, its causes and effects. I imagine nature and all its components, circumstances and conditions to create something new. Let's take "The Big-Ban" for example, as a thought experiment. Can one imagine a single planet with all its beauty, meaning colors, aromas, sounds, tastes, and the most astonishing and daring thought of all to think that its mass can be compacted into an infinitesimally small space to be shared with the rest of the compacted planets, stars, and the rest of the galaxies of the Universe? I can only imagine the massive amount of gravitational force concentrated in that infinitesimal space. Then, continuing with our thought experiment, witness, in another dimension, the gravitational singularity and rediscover the aftermath of the Big-Ban in a single color manifested in each flower every spring, or paying attention to the bird's complaint about the climate change, or the whisper of an elderly tree or an ancient river being denied their right to exist. Then I go back to my drawing board with my relentless commitment to design something new, and something green!
Traditional or Contemporary?
It is an ongoing debate about architecture.
Shall we live in a traditional or contemporary house?
Shall we build traditional or contemporary architecture?
Is it about the budget? I met clients with an unlimited budget that have resurrected ancient designs to live in a contemporary world.
Is it about culture? We see contemporary architecture arising between ancient worlds and vice-versa.
Is it about the norm? I can almost hear somebody saying that to Beethoven.
-"Are you deaf? Can't you just listen to what has been written? It says that symphonies are supposed to be without chorus"- and yet Beethoven composed the most amazing "choral symphony."
Beethoven had in mind newly created sounds; some instruments had to evolve to reach Beethoven's "vision."
Is it about education? Hmm... Let me think for a minute.
I see my colleagues, very well educated in Harvard and so on and so forth, building the same old, traditional, anachronistic Queen Ann style, not in England, but America for the "new" rich, of course, pretending to be the "old monarchy" in 2017 here in America... Let's just remember that America, the "new world," was founded on a simple principle of freedom. We were finally free to build our future without heavy chains and ancient shadows of monarchies and religions respectively. Our new world was destined to shine the light of freedom to the world to unlock the human spirit, embracing arts and science, innovation and creativity. That's how I found myself dreaming of contemporary architecture, in love with new forms, seduced by the feeling and touch of a newly created design, of a newly invented space.
When I asked my students to write a synonym word for architecture they did not relate the word "invention" to it, but, rather curiously, every single style from the past was written on the board. What are we teaching to our creative minds? Are we educating thinkers to create and invent new solutions for this challenging world, or are we indoctrinating them to copy, and emulate a particular style? If we look at the world around us we can tell the difference between a thinker architect and a snobbish architect. You tell me. Albert Einstein used to say, our mind works as a parachute does, if it doesn't open it doesn't work.
So, it is not about the budget, culture, codes nor the education. It is about being true to ourselves. It is about being true to our time and place in history. It is about our legacy as a human-being to our future generations to come.
Homo sapiens did not survive using the same tools as the Neanderthals did. We had to invent, to create, to imagine and finally, we had to make it happen. We had to build contemporary architecture. That's why we are here. For better or for worse the debate is over.
Innovation and creativity is what I love the most. For us, innovation is about being able to play and experiment.
Is there such a thing as "playing" at work? Yes, we play and experiment at work as long as the final product makes a happy client. Innovation doesn't come from a traditional approach. Innovation comes from a different approach away from conventional thought. Play and experiment until we reach "Nirvana"!
Certainly, there are no magic recipes to create something new, but there are indeed good practices and habits, and we have mastered them.
I associate creativity with a certain degree of a "healthy uncertainty," as Frank Gehry would say. Certainty is what we all know, and it has been done in the past, but we are exploring the fascinating world of the unknown, the unexplored, the future that has yet to come.
What inspired me the most is that we are in the business of shaping alternative better futures.
I think that our clients keep coming back because of our original clever ideas and sustainable designs.
We provide remote online services only in NYC and Greenwich, Connecticut.