Tuesday, May 3, 2011

THE EVOLUTION OF STAIRCASES

STAIRCASES OF TODAY 
KEEP GETTING, SMALLER AND SMALLER 

 

Today I am writing about staircases and the way in which we have been remodeling them in recent years. Long gone are the wooden staircases of yesterday and they have been replaced with the modern, contemporary sometimes looking top scary to even climb them minimal idea of staircases. From floating glass to floating pieces of wood with no rail you stop and wonder how do you get up without falling. Regardless today's staircases have become focal points of our design style and in many cases beciome the main most modern item in our homes. Take a look at these designs, and then the last design is one my friend and Partner Edward Saunders came up with for his home. It looks so incredibly different that the entire house has a different feel, look, and vibe to it.





Fancy Staircase Treatments


Whether whimsical or precise, traditional or state-of-the-arts, staircases add significant interior architecture value to an abode. This collection demonstrates all of the above. They brilliantly blossom with color. They demonstrate the family-oriented character of the home’s owners. They take our breath away, and they lend a sense of stability or mystery.
So many staircases seem matter of fact, or at least blasé. Others bear no railings and seemingly no security measure for those with height concerns, but staircases can be designed to fit any style.
Most of today’s posts demonstrate that contemporary doesn’t automatically mean monochromatic. Nor is it entirely linear. Today there are far more choices including elegant yet tight curves, labyrinthine hand-rail sculptures, warm lines, and near invisibility. 




















They may be narrow but the contrast between steep colorful twists and stark white walls makes a compelling experience. 

 

Take a journey through psychedelic lyrics or along a ‘yellow brick road.’



Parents and kids can enjoy this young-at-heart staircase. These seem fine wood, glass, with a heavy railing. Afterall the entire purpose of a staircase is to actually make it from one floor to the next not die trying.



These staircases do not seem safe, secure, or even a good idea to me


 



Floating through images of Mexican architect Luis Barragán stunning, classic works. I personally would be afraid of any staircase called floating not to mention they do not seem secure to me but the ones on top, the little wood pieces that appear to stick out of the wall with no railing, well that is just asking for an accident to happen.




Create multiple uses or an eclectic aesthetic. 



Contrast horizontal texture with the vertical nature of the stairs. 




   

Sculptured balustrades and rails lend another layer of aesthetics. These staircases are beautiful and to me mean totally new ideas and concepts. If you want to make a staircase stick out, this is the way to go..



 


Perhaps an art that harkens back to the work of Dalí? To me this is not anything more then an attempt to copy a style that is better left to the experts.


So many possibilities and so many staircases I simply find repulsive.. and yet others I find stunning. Look at the picture below,  so you can see the one my friend and I came up with. 






This is the lamp on top of the staircase

Modern, contemporary silver with 
frosted glass coverings






















































Excellent work on our part if I do say so myself..  

AG Home Goods

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