A house tells you something about the people in it. So does the art on the walls.
The Greenwich Village Apartment was designed to hold both β clean lines, adjustable lighting, uninterrupted expanses of wall that let the work breathe.
How you live in a space matters as much as who you are. This one takes both seriously.
π· Photographer: Catherine Tighe
π General Contractor: Hamilton Renovation
From the street, it reads as a brownstone like any other on the block.
Inside the Park Slope Brownstone Addition, that impression shifts immediately. Floating concrete treads, etched glass diffusing light through the stairwell, and polished concrete floors bring a material clarity that feels deliberate and restrained. Moments of color are assertive without excess.
The exterior remains; the assumptions it carries do not.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Tatra Renovation
The scope of a project like this β converting a multi-family back into a single-family home on the Upper West Side β can stop a renovation before it starts. The list is long. The decisions are endless. The coordination is relentless.
That's exactly the kind of project we live for.
Upper West Side Limestone 2. Tell us what you want the house to be. We'll handle everything that gets it there.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Dynamic Reconstruction
Five stories means a lot of stair β and a lot of moments you move through every day.
New iron and wood railings throughout the Upper West Side Limestone.
Designed to be safe, built to last, and worth looking at for the next hundred years.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Tatra Renovation
Partial renovations are the hardest kind to get right. You're not starting over β you're in conversation with what's already there.
In this Brooklyn Heights row house, the edit was everything. Strip back what doesn't belong. Sharpen what does. Let the original architecture make its case again β and let the interiors breathe around it.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Dynamic Reconstruction
Two people, one bathroom, a newborn next door. The brief basically wrote itself. Double vanity, smart storage, wall-mounted hardware, and a palette that never goes out of style. Prospect Heights Brownstone by Studio Delson.
π· Photographer: Max Burkhalter
π General Contractor: @tomchriscontractingco
The best spatial surprises are the ones you never see coming. Take a tour inside this Fort Greene landmark and you find a double-height living room, a glass wall that folds away to give the garden back to the house, and a layering of reclaimed and modern materials that makes the whole thing feel inevitable. Restoration doesn't have to mean compromise.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Visionary Building Corp.
They didn't need a bigger house. They needed a better one. This Park Slope Brownstone renovation unlocked space that was already there β opening the layout, restoring a parquet floor, and letting the original dark millwork do something showstopping: anchor a room full of life and color.
Same address. Completely different home.
π· Photographer: Brett Beyer
π General Contractor: Tatra Renovation
Every limestone townhouse that was carved into apartments is waiting to be one home again. The process looks daunting from the outside. Our team has done it enough times to know exactly where it leads: a stair hall that frames a crystal chandelier fifty feet away, a curved wall of windows that belong to no one but you, a herringbone floor that was always there underneath. Upper West Side Limestone. Studio Delson.
π· Photographer: Jason Schmidt
π General Contractor: Dynamic Reconstruction
A coat rack in a building vestibule. That's how you know it's family. This Prospect Heights multi-family β three cousins with one unit each, and a shared apartment with communal kitchen on the garden level β starts at the door and never loses the thread. Exposed brick, original ironwork, slate gray stairwell, oak treads. Character you can't manufacture.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: @tomchriscontractingco
This house was never meant to be divided. A graceful faΓ§ade with five floors of carved limestone, stained glass transoms, a hand-detailed entry surround β the building has always known what it is. Somewhere along the way, it became five separate units. Studio Delson brought it back to one.
The conversion was complex. The experience for the client wasn't. Studio Delson managed the entire process β from the first conversation to the final walk-through β so the client could focus on what comes next rather than what's being figured out. Five stories of Upper West Side limestone, returned to the single grand house it was always supposed to be.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Tatra Renovation
The mission: a kitchen that didn't feel like an afterthought in its own house.
The green glass mosaic backsplash was the first move β a note of color that anchors the space without overwhelming it. Everything else followed: sleek flat-panel millwork, a full-length waterfall island with a raised breakfast bar, and at the back of the room, a floor-to-ceiling glass wall where the rear extension meets the kitchen.
That wall does more than let light in. It makes the garden part of the room. Morning coffee at the island, deck one step away, the city somewhere past the garden. The Park Slope Brownstone Additions knows what it's for.
π· Photographer: @jasonschmidtstudio
π General Contractor: Tatra Renovation