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Top 10 Friday Five Posts of 2024

Larry Booth’s natural flair for design and architectural convictions have garnered him some 50+ years of professional practice where he has significantly contributed to Chicago’s cultural landscape in addition to the broader academic arena. As the founder and principal/director of Booth Hansen, he has led by example proving that robust design solutions come from an open and organized collaborative studio.

Bright lobby with modern decor, featuring colorful wall art, a wooden reception desk, plants, and an arched hallway leading to a sunlit room.

Architect Alda Ly continues to assemble a portfolio of meaningful work designing for entrepreneurs and startups with her practice ALA Studio. She has a storied history of socially conscious contributions to the field and employs ethnographic research to inform her concepts. Though Ly’s practice tackles a wide range of projects, each space is imbued with a sense of play and reflective of her deep consideration for the client’s human experience.

A hand with rings and bracelets rests on a woven surface. Nearby are two ceramic mugs with black and white geometric patterns and yellow interiors. A leaf partially covers one mug.

The tendrils of graphic thinking extend into almost every other facet of design, as evidenced by the work of Hadiya Williams and her design studio Black Pepper Paperie Co. She draws from two decades of experience in the graphic arts to inform fresh objects in the realm of ceramics and surface design. What’s more, her work builds on a storied tradition of West African art and textiles while referencing the Black Arts Movement and the early 20th century Harlem Renaissance.

Folded pages resembling a fan with a gradient of earth tones, mounted against a white wall.

Los Angeles-based artist Susan Maddux makes works that are an incredible three-dimensional experience drawing. Her origami-inspired technique transforms paintings into oversized wall sculptures through experimentation with proportion and patterning. The work also connects Maddux – a 4th generation Hapa-Japanese woman – to generations of artisans who came before her.

A cozy seating area features an L-shaped yellow couch with a round wooden table and a black chair, set against a pink wall with decorative arches and a globe lamp.

Creative practice is inextricably linked to life experience. And for interior designer Kate Rohrer, her time waiting tables and pouring cocktails in the food service industry still informs the way she approaches hospitality projects. Her firm ROHE Creative is responsible for some exhilarating spaces thanks to Rohrer’s unabashed use of color and penchant for rich textures seamlessly blending disparate styles into unique personal narratives.

Modern two-story house with large windows, wooden exterior, and an outdoor deck with seating, set in a grassy area with trees in the background.

Passive house design, net zero goals, and sustainability. These things might sound like headaches for some, but for Sarah Jefferys – who leads her namesake firm, Sarah Jefferys Architecture + Interiors – they are the impetus to arrive at the most robust design solution for people and the planet. An expert in her field with over 20 years of experience, Jefferys is on a mission to reach net zero on all her studio’s projects within the next decade.

Covered walkway with skylights leading to a modern house with large windows, a lawn, and a swimming pool under a clear blue sky.

Having defected from a career in consulting, George Smart set on a new path to pay it forward. While researching design precedents for a new family home, he noticed the lack of reputable online sources for the everyman. He decided to build his own repository, which marked the founding of NCModernist, and later USModernist – the world’s largest nonprofit educational archive dedicated to the documentation, preservation, and promotion of Modernist residential design.

Spacious living room with modern decor, featuring a large potted tree, white sofa, wooden lounge chair, and artwork on the walls.

Gwyneth Paltrow, Demi Moore, Joe Jonas, Christian Bale, Beyoncé, and Jay-Z. While celebrity may be one throughline connecting these stars, interior designer Brigette Romanek is another. The award-winning creative started styling interiors roughly a decade ago and has already grown her creative practice into a highly sought after design studio now stepping into the realm of product design.

A room with colorful stained glass windows, a yellow chair, a plant on a white stool, and decorative wall art.

Industrial designer Kickie Chudikova’s curiosity for artful objects is exercised in the design of every product, home furnishing, and artifact she manufactures – with the hopes that it will provide their owners with enrichment or fulfillment for a lifetime. Chudikova has never limited herself in material palette or by color, always looking for a solution that invites interaction, with future aspirations to tackle food.

And the most popular Friday Five post of 2024 is…

Colorful neon lights arranged in abstract, branching patterns illuminate a garden at night.

Glass is enchanting, and for master of his craft Dale Chihuly, the medium’s properties are incomparable. His work includes more than 200 museum collections worldwide and his résumé is equally as decorated. It boasts many accolades including two fellowships, 13 honorary doctorates, and title as co-founder of the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State. Chihuly is one of few leading the development of this industry into the future.

Check out the rest of Design Milk’s end of the year coverage here!

With professional degrees in architecture and journalism, New York-based writer Joseph has a desire to make living beautifully accessible. His work seeks to enrich the lives of others with visual communication and storytelling through design. When not writing, he teaches visual communication, theory, and design.

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  • Westwood House

    Located in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Asheville NC with distant north views of Mt Spivey and a narrow sloping lot, this wedge-shaped home is a response to site. We took into careful consideration a variety of site-specific inputs including views, sun orientation, prevailing winds, privacy, and natural cooling/heating techniques among others. The result is a functional, energy efficient home with a distinctive exterior shape and warm light filled interior spaces. The home’s dominant shed roof maximizes solar orientation for photovoltaic panels while also allowing for a double-height central atrium to flood the core of the house with natural light and exhaust hot air on hot summer days. The introduction of natural light into the core of the house reduces the need for artificial lighting on cloudy days, while the chimney effect created by opening large operable skylights at the top of the atrium reduces HVAC loads by bringing cool air up from the basement. This central atrium is an example of how a design feature can multitask –it brings natural light deep into the core of the house, it cools the house using the chimney effect, and it provides a place to grow plants which filter interior air. It also allowed us to minimize the street facing windows for privacy while still maintaining a light filled interior. Anchoring the bottom of the atrium are four large arched openings and a Spanish terracotta tile floor. The tile floor is a durable surface good for watering plants and for heavy foot traffic. A keyhole opening marks the boundary between private and public sides of the house while two of the arched openings frame an intimate eating nook and entry foyer with walls covered in locally milled southern yellow pine. The last arch has steps spilling out into a sunken living room and kitchen area with access to a back deck. Locally milled cypress, a naturally rot resistant wood, covers the exterior and anchors the strong geometry of the house to the site. In the end, our desire for functionality created something more than just an energy efficient home. The interior took on an unexpected bohemian feel; one that originated from a desire for light and functionality, but resulted in warm soft interior spaces that were comfortable and welcoming.