millwork and terrazzo volumes reshape crown heights flat
Â
In Crown Heights, New York, architect Jack Solomon reshapes a merged apartment through interlocking millwork volumes, transforming an oversized layout into a sequence of intimate, highly functional spaces. A shared minimalist sensibility lifts the interior into a warmer, more functional home, shaped by the daily routines of the newly expecting couple. Approached from a front patio via open-air circulation, the kitchen sets the tone upon arrival. Extending a beloved ceramic art series, a wall-mounted sideboard transforms a hard-edged entry into a textured welcome. A new kitchen island becomes a communal centerpiece while expanding prep space. A nesting butcher block lifts away for serving, adding flexibility and layered functionality. Volumetric compositions of wood, terrazzo, and color continue throughout the apartment to create intimacy and visual hierarchy.

a home bar features a fluted terrazzo backdrop | all images courtesy of Solomon Studio
Â
Â
Apartment renovation balances function with spatial harmony
Â
A vertical motif recurs in the form of a millwork screen, fluted tile, and acoustic slatwall. In the guest bathroom, terrazzo frames the bathtub against a fluted blue ceramic backdrop. The living room shifts focus to the corner, where an entertainment console and home bar interlock as a pair to accommodate the owners’ collections of books, records, and wine. By borrowing space from the bedroom, the primary bathroom gains valuable counter space, where an upgraded double-vanity niche anchors the room in handmade concrete tiles and mint terrazzo. An oak wardrobe wraps around the volume on the bedroom side. Solomon Studio collaborated closely with Brooklyn-based KLN Studio to ensure the bespoke millwork simultaneously resolved spatial inefficiencies and programmatic needs. Minimalism and integrated millwork unify the home, shaping a domestic life that balances function with spatial harmony.

the living room is reorganized by interlocking volumes

a sideboard extends a ceramic art series