What’s Old Is New: Revelatory Remodeling

What’s Old Is New: Revelatory Remodeling
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Brutal Beauty: A Concrete-Chic Addition Rises in Mexico
Hallelujah! John Cameron Mitchell’s Home Is a Queer Art Church

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Editor’s Letter: Divine Interventions
Editor’s Letter: Divine Interventions
These inspired additions, updates, and overhauls use historic buildings as raw material for new ways of living.
By William Hanley - 10 months ago
Japan’s Dwindling “Signboard” Buildings
Kanban kenchiku (signboard architecture) marks an important record of shifting early-20th-century Japanese tastes.
Smart Tech for the Home Doesn’t Have to Be Ugly
Whether you love midcentury modern or are (still) obsessed with checkerboard everything, we found some smart gadgets that’ll mesh with your aesthetic.
Your Home Doesn’t Need to Be “Smart”
Do you really need an app for your icemaker? Probably not.
Nifemi Marcus-Bello Finds Inspiration in Lagos’s Culture of Recycling
The Nigerian designer makes new forms using old techniques, keeping traditions alive in the process.
Architect Rick Cook Designed a Home for His Family—Then Discovered Someone Had Done It Better
A ’70s residence in upstate New York by Charles P. Winter gave Cook and his wife the perfect starting point for a sensitive 20-year renovation.
This Sculptural San Francisco Flat Is Anything But Cookie-Cutter
Haddock Studio preserves an apartment’s Victorian details while updating its interiors with custom furniture, an industrial kitchen, and a chiseled marble sink.
Two Vintage Furniture Dealers Remake a Maine Home to Fill With Their Prized Collection
The owners of Home Union in Brooklyn updated an ’80s-vintage prefab that now hosts a who’s who of modern design.
A Roaming Couple Recalibrate a 1975 Argosy for Creative Work and Off-Grid Bliss
Riley Haakon and Caroline Burke experimented with wood finishes and an open layout to turn the trailer into a home-on-wheels.
She Dreamed of Living in an Ancient Tower—and It Came True
In France, artist Eva Claessens transforms a crumbling ruin into an ethereal home and studio.
How John Cameron Mitchell Turned His New Orleans Home Into a Queer Art Church
The creator moved south for a chance at a more affordable life—and found it in the former home of (among other things) the secret society Ordo Templi Orientis.
In Baja Sur, a Chef Turns a Historic Property Into a Compound for His Creative Community
Ernesto Kut Gomez restored its 1800s brick buildings and added new ones to create a sanctuary.
Textile Designer Arati Rao Is Helping Preserve Craft Culture’s Human Touch
This miniature yarn-making tool was given to her by a weaving center she works with in India, which uses full-size versions to keep up their centuries old traditions.
Creature Comforts
Derek and Venea Meyer use desert-inspired design elements, indoor/outdoor architectural details, and organic forms to envelop their energy-efficient home.