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A Masterclass in Urban Living with Gachot Studios (Design Masterclass)

A masterclass in urban living begins with understanding how a home evolves alongside the people who inhabit it. From downtown lofts to landmark townhouses, Gachot Studios approaches each project as an opportunity to refine how life unfolds within the layered fabric of New York City. Through lived experience and professional practice, Christine and John Gachot reveal how thoughtful design can shape not only interiors, but the rhythms of daily life.

Having lived across multiple neighbourhoods, their own journey reflects a deep engagement with context. These homes, distinct in architectural language, became testing grounds for a masterclass in urban living – places to explore how contemporary sensibilities can sit comfortably within historic shells.

Central to their philosophy is the creation of a warm, neutral base. A consistent core palette allows for evolution over time, accommodating collected objects, meaningful artworks and shifting personal tastes. Interiors are conceived as frameworks – foundations that encourage growth and layering over a decade or more. In this way, a masterclass in urban living is less about perfection on installation day and more about cultivating character through time.

Materiality plays a pivotal role. The studio’s emphasis on texture demonstrates how contrast brings depth. In more austere architectural settings, softness becomes essential, tempering hard lines with tactile warmth. Equally important is durability. Surfaces are selected not only for beauty, but for how they age. Stone that absorbs the patina of use, fabrics that withstand hospitality-level wear and flooring that balances pattern with resilience all speak to a practical sophistication embedded within their work.

Colour, too, is approached with strategy. In double-height spaces, continuity grounds the experience, while contained rooms offer opportunities for saturation. Tone-on-tone applications soften bold gestures, ensuring vibrancy never overwhelms. This careful calibration defines a masterclass in urban living – knowing when to restrain and when to amplify, allowing architecture and interior language to converse fluently.

The dialogue between residential and hospitality further sharpens their approach. Projects such as Pebble Bar embody a sensibility where commercial environments borrow the intimacy of home. Layered fabrics, ambient palettes and considered detailing dissolve the boundary between public and private. Conversely, insights from hospitality – particularly advances in commercial-grade textiles – enrich residential work with enhanced performance and longevity.

Ultimately, Gachot Studios frames design as an evolving collaboration. Clients are encouraged to see their homes not as finished compositions, but as living environments shaped by memory, use and adaptation. This perspective anchors a masterclass in urban living in authenticity rather than spectacle.

Set against the dynamic backdrop of New York City, their work demonstrates that successful urban interiors balance heritage with immediacy, durability with delight. Through careful layering, informed materiality and an unwavering respect for how people truly live, Gachot Studios offers a nuanced blueprint for city life – one grounded in warmth, flexibility and enduring design intelligence.

0:38 – No.1 Consistent and Customisable Through-Line
02:30 – No.2 Layer Textures
03:12 – No.3 Existing Architecture as Backdrop
04: 46 – No.4 Use Colour
07:17 – No.5 Experiment with Materials and Tones

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Photography by William Jess Laird, Nicole Franzen and Michael Reynolds.
Filmed and edited by O&Co. Homes.
Production by The Local Production.

Location: New York City, New York, United States

The Local Project acknowledges the traditional territories and homelands of the Indigenous peoples in the United States. We recognise the importance of Indigenous peoples in the identity of our respective countries and continuing connections to Country and community. We pay our respect to Elders, past and present, and extend that respect to all Indigenous people of these lands.

#Masterclass #Urban #Living

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