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Residential ArchitectureHouse of the Month

The Dillon

By Linda C. Lentz
Punctuating the curtain wall, operable windows fill the Dillon's units with daylight and fresh air. Folds on the east elevation facilitate east/west views.
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Punctuating the curtain wall, operable windows fill the Dillon's units with daylight and fresh air. Folds on the east elevation facilitate east/west views.
Photo © Michael Moran
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and sunlight.
Photo © Michael Moran
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and sunlight.
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Photo © Michael Moran
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Image courtesy Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Image courtesy Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Image courtesy Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
The Dillon
The Dillon
Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
New York, New York
Image courtesy Smith-Miller + Hawkinson
Punctuating the curtain wall, operable windows fill the Dillon's units with daylight and fresh air. Folds on the east elevation facilitate east/west views.
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and
Studio or townhouse, all of the units are generously proportioned with flexible spaces and white oak flooring. Lenticular film along the bottom and sides of the glazing tempers height, visibility, and
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
The Dillon
April 16, 2011

Architects & Firms

Smith-Miller+Hawkinson

New York City

As neighborhoods go, New York City’s Midtown West (aka Clinton or Hell’s Kitchen) is a microcosm of the city itself. Roughly carved between 34th and 59th Streets, from 8th Avenue to the Hudson River, it retains the grittiness of its immigrant roots with tenement buildings, warehouses, shops, restaurants, hospitals, and schools. It is also a stone’s throw from the urban core of Manhattan — Broadway, Fifth Avenue, Times Square, Lincoln Center, Central Park, and the Midtown business district — making it ripe for gentrification, a process that has been evolving for about 20 years.

Most of the area’s residential developments are configured for professional couples or single occupants, and include high-rise apartment towers that skirt the height-restricted blocks central to the community. But the Dillon, a recently opened seven-story condominium on West 53rd Street, is sized for families, too, referencing the historic urban fabric and scale of the location. Its protracted and folded south-facing curtain wall and diverse floor plans speak to new generations.

This in fill project, designed by Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architects for the SDS Procida Development Group, features a 176,000-square-foot concrete structure on a sloping, 300-foot-long, L-shaped site.

Referring to such urban works as Le Corbusier’s Ville Radieuse, design principal Henry Smith-Miller worked closely with project architect Christian Uhl and executive architect Richard DeMarco of Montroy Andersen DeMarco to devise a livable, high-density scheme. What they came up with is an innovative 83-unit hybrid project comprising 52 unique layouts.

Nine triplex townhouses line the street on the building’s east end, each having a dedicated entrance, backyard, and basement with adjacent parking space. Directly above, 22 duplexes — some with private roof rights — are organized along skip-stop corridors on the fourth and seventh floors to maximize the spatial potential of the volume. At the building’s deeper west end, 52 studios and one- and two-bedroom apartments top the condo’s common areas, an entrance to underground parking, and a loftlike, 6,000-square-foot commercial unit that fronts West 54th Street.

“It’s packed with salable square feet,” notes Smith-Miller. Indeed, all of the units are daylight-filled and have wood floors, spacious closets, and terrific kitchens and baths. Clearly, the architects have created equally pleasing residences that consider the needs of real New Yorkers. Since it opened in September, says developer Mario Procida, the Dillon is nearly 50 percent sold.

People

Architect:
SMH+ (Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architects LLP)
305 Canal Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY 10013
1.212.966.3875
1.212.966.3877

Henry Smith-Miller, design partner R.A. A.I.A.
Christian Uhl, project architect R.A.
Bronwyn Breitner, Designer
Seila Reveriego Gennarini, Designer
Jonathan Scelsa, Designer
Ruchika Modi, Designer
John Barrett, Designer
David Moses, Designer

Consulting Architect for Building and Housing Law:
Richard DeMarco, Partner, Montroy Andersen DeMarco — Richard DeMarco R.A., A.I.A
99 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 212 481 5900
Fax: 212 481 7481

Interior designers:
SMH+ (Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architects LLP)

Engineer(s):
Severud and Associates (structural)
Sideris Kefalas Engineers P.C. (m/e/p)
R.A. Heintges & Associates (building envelope & curtain wall)
Langan Engineering, Geotechnical
AKRF, Civil, Environmental Assessment and Parking

Consultant(s):
Landscape:
dlandstucio llc

Lighting:
Claude Engle Lighting Design

Photographer:
Michael Moran

Renderer:
SMH+ Architects

CAD system, project management, or other software used:
AutoCAD and 3-D Studio MAX

 

Products

Structural system:
Flat Plate Cast-in-Place Concrete

Exterior cladding
Metal/glass curtain wall:
Schuco (site-built FW 60 SSG dry-gasketted glass and aluminum curtain wall system)

Fiber Cement:
Eter-Color Fiber Cement Board Cladding

Glazing
Glass: Viracon (VE 15-2m)

Other:
Angle 21 glass, Vision Film (lenticular glazing)

 
KEYWORDS: New York City

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Linda Lentz is a former editor at Architectural Record.

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