The White Book Essential Interiors

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the white book E s s e n t i a l I n t e r i o r s T H E

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“THE BEST FRIEND ON EARTH OF MAN IS THE TREE. WHEN WE USE THE TREE RESPECTFULLY AND ECONOMICALLY, WE HAVE ONE OF THE GREATEST RESOURCES ON THE EARTH.” - Frank Llyod Wright

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Prices starting from €65 sqmt (excluding VAT) Featured: American White Ash Select 5-10" - suitable for under-floor heating

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ebonyandco h an d craf t ed sol i d w oo d f lo ors

www.ebonyandco.com Dublin 39 Fitzwilliam Street Upper Dublin 2 dublin@ebonyandco.com Worldwide Showrooms New York London Moscow Amsterdam Barcelona Dublin

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INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN 6

www.minniepeters.com 12 Maple Avenue, Sandyford, Dublin 18, Ireland.

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By appointment: 00 353 1 293 3919

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Exceptional finishes for the finest homes.

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Exceptional finishes for the finest homes.

Staircases • Kitchens • Bathrooms • Studies • Dressing Rooms • Bedrooms • Pannelling • Skirting and Architrave • Internal Doors • Windows and External Doors • Shutters • Bespoke Furniture

One point of contact | Design to Installation | Tailored to You

Galgorm Road, Ballymena

0044 (0) 845 371 2420

www.hayburn.com

Berkley Street, London


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FABRIC COLLECTION COLLECTION

Helen Turkington Fabric stores offer a unique product to the interior market in that we stock over 300 unbranded designer fabrics at 40% less the recommended retail price. We stock linens, silks, velvets, cottons and wools in a wide range of colours and designs. Our buy off the roll ethos means we are giving customers a straight forward way to buy premium fabrics with prices starting from only â‚Ź8.50 per metre. Customers may also avail of our in house Interior Design and curtain making service.

Helen Turkington fabrics Unit 7, Terminus Mills, Clonskeagh, Dublin 6. T: +353 (0)1 260 2524 F: +353 (0)1 260 2529 E: helen@helenturkington.ie www.helenturkington.ie 11

Helen Turkington fabrics 4-5 The Parade, St. Johns Hill, Clapham, London SW11 ITG T: 020 7228 9435 F: 020 7585 1571 E: info@helenturkington.co.uk www.helenturkingtonfabrics.com 11


INTERIORS COLLECTION FABRIC COLLECTION

Since opening Helen Turkington Interiors in Dunville Avenue over eight years ago Helen has established herself as a market leader in Interiors. The store is famous for its intimate and inspirational room settings presenting a contemporary classic style which is strong in symmetry and rich in accent colouring. The store stocks a wide range of furniture, lamps and accessories. We are constantly sourcing new products at affordable prices; this is reflected in our new Spring Summer stock. Our team of interior designers are on hand to offer clients the very best in service and advice. Our Irish made furniture range can be customised to meet our clients varying needs. Our new in house fresh flower shop “Flowers on the Avenue� is the latest addition to the Turkington brand bringing a hive of colourful activity to the store. Whatever your needs our aim is to provide original, interesting and elegant floral arrangements.

Helen Turkington Interiors 47 Dunville Avenue, Dublin 6. T: +353 (0)1 412 5138 F: +353 (0)1 497 8425 E: helen@helenturkington.ie www.helenturkington.ie 12

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PAINT COLLECTION FABRIC COLLECTION

The Helen Turkington Collection of paints, produced in collaboration with Colortrend, is a unique palette of contemporary, classic colours in a premium quality acrylic paint. Helen’s paint colours work in harmony with her unique style and vision. The collection offers a range of paint colours created to compliment the projects undertaken by Helen and her team of designers, with all of the colours marrying comfortably with Helen Turkington fabrics and soft furnishings.

Helen Turkington fabrics Unit 7, Terminus Mills, Clonskeagh, Dublin 6. T: +353 (0)1 260 2524 F: +353 (0)1 260 2529 E: helen@helenturkington.ie www.helenturkington.ie 15

Helen Turkington fabrics 4-5 The Parade, St. Johns Hill, Clapham, London SW11 ITG T: 020 7228 9435 F: 020 7585 1571 E: info@helenturkington.co.uk www.helenturkingtonfabrics.com 15


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Visit us at our showroom: (by casual arrangement) A:

Main Street, Aughrim, Co. Wicklow 0402 94661 info@rhatiganandhick.ie

T: E:

www.rhatiganandhick.ie Kitchens 17

Bedrooms

Studies

Wall Panelling 17


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Luxury bathroom concepts in stone. Custom-made and exclusive to Antica. ANTICA Unit 7 Earlscourt Industrial Est, Beaumount Ave, Churchtown, D14. T: 01 2960136 F: 01 2988150 email info@antica.ie web www.antica.ie


Anyone looking for new ideas for the design of their kitchen and living space, anyone who wants to furnish their own, consciously-designed surroundings with timelessly beautiful objects, high-quality materials and purpose-built technology in internationally recognized quality, needs the support of like-minded people, people of similar tastes, connoisseurs and skilled individuals. Please talk to us – the specialists in the new kitchen architecture from bulthaup. 20

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bulthaup

McNally Living 44-46 Serpentine Ave. Ballsbridge. Dublin 4. Tel. 01 6604856. www.mcnallyliving.ie 21

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Mah-Jong modular sofa / designed by Hans Hopfer fabrics Les Voyages Collection

NEW TO IRELAND. Showroom Now Open

In TheBeacon Beacon South Quarter, The South Quarter, SANDYFORD - Dublin 18. SANDYFORD Dublin 18. Tel: 01-653-1650 Tel: email:01-653-1650 Dublin@rochebobois.ie email: Dublin@rochebobis.ie Opening hours: 10am-6pm, Monday-Saturday, 10am-8pm, Thursday, Opening hours: 12am-6pm-Sunday. 10am-6pm, Monday-Saturday, 10am-8pm, Thursday, 12am-6pm, Sunday.

Collections, news and catalogues www.roche-bobois.com

Expressing your interior World 23

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INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN www.minniepeters.com 12 Maple Avenue, Sandyford, Dublin 18, Ireland. By appointment: 00 353 1 293 3919 24 24


the white book Welcome to The White Book Volume 17. Through the series of beautiful homes we have assembled for this edition, we celebrate a passage of time which spans over half a century. Time – in buildings just as in people, brings with it a bag of mixed blessings – the golden patina of age and tradition on the one hand, but also a few signs of wear and tear and perhaps a little yearning for what used to be. We can all use a little updating every now and again to give us a new lease of life – but if only we could achieve for our bodies the kind of transformation which the owners and designers in this issue have created at their period properties! Our time travel originates in the Elizabethan era, where a listed 16th century manor house has been radically transformed by the designer Pippa Paton into a free-flowing contemporary styled home. Georgian and Victorian houses in London also reveal modern interiors – the North London home of designer Shalini Misra is a stunning melange of global cultural influences and in Kensington, cutting edge design has been created by Simon and Lynn Slater to complement the traditional features of the building. Arriving in the 20th and 21st centuries, we feature three New York apartments by David Mann’s architecture and design practice. A former warehouse on the Upper Eastside merges urban living with Downtown style for a mother and her daughters, while in Greenwich, the ultimate bachelor pad opens up to reveal uber luxury with strong industrial accents. The last of our trio, a pre-War Manhattan apartment, has been purpose-designed to embrace a colourful and quirky art and furniture collection ranging from Art Deco to ‘60s Scandinavian. Returning back home to Ireland we have two stunning modern homes styled in completely contrasting contemporary fashions and an utterly charming country rectory in County Cork, which after 180 years, remains remarkably unchanged, finding itself in the same glorious setting as when it was built. I’m going to end my introduction to this book at its beginning – the breathtaking contemporary Spanish hilltop villa which was inspired in part by the Austro-Hungarian architect Adolf Loos. An ardent advocate of creating a marked distinction between the exterior and the interior of a building, Loos said that: “buildings should be silent to the outside but the inside should reveal their wealth”.Taking his advice to the limit, Hill House Interiors have created the ultimate fantasy holiday retreat.

publishing director siobhan buchanan-johnston director david sinclair editor siobhan buchanan-johnston features editor tracy biggam design leonie henson paul o’donovan colm brennan subscriptions

www.thewhitebook.co The White Book is published by Montague Publications Group The White House 3 Crosthwaite Terrace Clarinda Park West, Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin tel: 00 353 1 230 1566 web: www.thewhitebook.co e: editor@thewhitebook.co e: office@thewhitebook.co While considerable efforts are made to ensure that the information contained in this publication is as accurate as possible, Montague Publications Group Ltd. makes no representations, conditions or warranties of any kind whatsoever, express or implied, in relation to the accuracy of the information contained in the intended publication. The contents of the publication are fully protected by copyright and nothing maybe reprinted without permission. ISSN: 1649-4288

Cover picture by CGP Design Onslow Gardens, South Kensington

All that remains is for me to wish you “bon voyage” on our latest design odyssey and to tell you the exciting news that we will be launching our new web site of our new website – www.thewhitebook.co. Your portal for luxury living.

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PUBLICATION

Siobhan Buchanan-Johnston 25

1649-6191

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A.D. NATALIA CORBETTA . FOTOGRAFIA MARIA VITTORIA BACKHAUS

GROUNDPIECE DESIGNED BY ANTONIO OPTIONS, ALSO WITH LEATHER ARMRESTS F L E X F O R M S.P.A.

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CITTERIO. SOFA COLLECTION WITH AND BACKRESTS THAT DOUBLE AS

ENDLESS STORAGE

UK AGENT Alberto Schiatti Tel. + 39 0362 328 162 info@schiatti.it

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homes c a p i t o l a s s e t 52 capitol design use cutting edge interior s to transform this south kensington apar tment in London d a r e t o d r e a m 72 the ultimate dream holiday home a contemporar y spanish villa with the most stunning interior s by hill house interiors f i t f o r a k i n g 120 a tudor manor house situated in the Cotswolds undergoes a complete r e n ov a t i o n i n t h e h a n d s o f i t ’s talented owner s, pippa paton design a l e s s o n i n r e s t r a i n t 152 d e s i g n e r H e l e n Tu r k i n g t o n b r i n g s a timeless and elegant touch with sumptuous interior s to a family home in kerr y h o u s e o f d r e a m s 178 a new luxurious residence in cork spanning over a lavishly designed 10,000 sq ft of high end interiors

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A WOLF IS JUST AN OVEN, LIKE A DIAMOND IS JUST A STONE Iconic design. Enduring quality. Superior performance

www.wolf-range.co.uk

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homes

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lofty aspirations the new yor k situated, ultimate designer duplex and modernist masterpiece flaunts the wor k of designer david mann from mr architecture+decor

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american space programme an upper eastside loft conver sion, par t of the shimmering manhattan skyline sees iconic design and dĂŠcor from designer duo at mr architecture+dĂŠcor

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countr y pursuits the old rector y and manor house p r e s e r ve s i t ’s c h a r a c t e r w h i l s t emanating warmth and pure design luxur y by inter ior design duo, internal affairs

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twentieth-centur y fox a pre-war manhattan apar tment is transformed into a colourful home packed with quir ky ar t and modern day collectibles by designer david mann

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addition by subtraction free-flowing spaces and global cultures are woven into the family post- georgian home of designer and architect shalini misra

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ARTESIO

®

Poggenpohl@DesignHouse, Sorrento Drive, Dalkey, Co Dublin. Tel - 01 2352222 Web – designhousedublin.com Email – info@designhousedublin.com

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www.poggenpohl.com

www.poggenpohl.com

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Furniture • Lighting • Interior Design Residential and Contract 32 1

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Design by

Visit our exciting showroom in the beautiful surroundings at The Village at Lyons

Lyons Demesne, Celbridge, Co. Kildare T: +353 (0)1 627 5122 M: +353 (0)87 791 9485 E: paschal@designbyrenaissance.com www.renaissancedesign.ie Opening hours: Wednesday to Sunday. Visit La Serre Restaurant www.villageatlyons.com 33 2

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TRUNK PORSHA ‘ Nature in Harmony ’

Handmade wide plank and parquet wood floors in exclusive finishes.

www.trunkflooring.com

Main Showroom / Trunk Flooring & Porsha Stone Brook buildings, Rossculban, Kesh, Co.Fermanagh, NI, BT 93 1TF T +44 (0)28 6863 2200 E lisa@trunkflooring.com

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TRUNK PORSHA

‘ Nature in Harmony ’

A luxury collection of timeless natural stone in large slabs to bespoke pieces.

www.porshastone.com

Boutique Showroom / Trunk Flooring & Porsha Stone Unit 3 The Village at Lyons Estate, Cellbridge, Co.Kildare, Ireland T +353 (0)1 6544800 E lisa@trunkflooring.com

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T h i r d F l o o r, H a r r o d s , K n i g h t s b r i d g e , L o n d o n . S W 1 X 7 X L • Te l e p h o n e 0 2 0 7 8 9 3 8 3 2 5 / 6 • E - m a i l h a r r o d s @ c l i v e . c o m

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7 L o n d o n R o a d , Tu n b r i d g e We l l s , Ke n t . T N 1 1 D G • Te l e p h o n e 0 1 8 9 2 6 1 9 5 5 0 • E - m a i l t u n b r i d g e w e l l s @ c l i v e . c o m

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New VT Showroom Now Open

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Ireland’s leading award winning showroom at Beechmount Home Park, Navan, Co Meath

Tel: +353 (0) 46 9029444 www.versatile.ie

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Come and view the all new 2012 collections in our showroom and see the difference for yourself. Telephone 0404-65000 www.newcastledesign.ie

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No home will ever meet everybody’s expectations.

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But there is a room that will.

Uncompromisingly professional. The Vario cooling 400 series. The Vario cooling 400 series is as variable and as flexible as its name suggests. It can be combined in all sorts of different ways and can therefore cater for even the most exacting of expectations. Its interior is dominated by high-quality stainless steel, resulting in quality and hygiene standards on a par with professional kitchens. And then there is dynamic cold air distribution with Multi-Air-Flow and an ice maker with a fixed water connection. In short , this cooling system offers space for everything – except for compromises. The difference is Gaggenau. For more information and a list of partners please visit: www.gaggenau.co.uk. Alternatively, visit our showroom at: 40 Wigmore Street, London, W1U 2RX.

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THE VERY BEST IN OUT/INDOOR FURNITURE. THE LEADING BRANDS OF DEDON, EGO PARIS AND FISCHER MOBEL ARE EXCLUSIVE TO LEISURE PLAN. TEL +44 (0)1279 816001 SALES@LEISUREPLAN.CO.UK WWW.LEISUREPLAN.CO.UK 44

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KA M A CO LLEC TI O N

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Aghadoe Heights Hotel Penthouse 1 46

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HOME THEATRE LIGHTING CONTROL DISTRIBUTED AUDIO HOME SECURITY HOME AUTOMATION

intelligence at the touch of a button Contact us today and we will gladly prepare a fully customised proposal for all your Audio Visual needs colm@thesmarthouse.ie www.thesmarthouse.ie T: 00 353 87 272 8200

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Dublin 11-15 Upper Erne Street Dublin 2 T 01 676 9511 F 01 676 9519 E info@houseworks.ie W www.houseworks.ie

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Belfast The Boucher Centre 55-93 Boucher Road Belfast BT 12 6HR T 028 9066 6323 F 028 9066 4681 E info@houseworksni.com

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WINNER OF SHOWROOM AWARD FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2009 WINNER OF MASTER RETAILER AWARD FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2007 WINNER OF SHOWROOM AWARD FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2007 WINNER OF MARKETING AWARD FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2004 WINNER OF MASTER RETAILER AWARD FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2003 WINNER OF JUNIOR DESIGNER AWARDS FOR KITCHENS IN UK & IRELAND 2003, 2005 & 2006

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Make your house a home with Miele No matter how you want your kitchen to look, the Miele range of built-in appliances are designed to ďŹ t together perfectly. Create an ambience to suit your individual taste, without compromising on style and design. Experience the Miele Difference. For further information call 01 461 0710 or log on to www.miele.ie

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COOKING AND BAKING

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Capital Asset The combined forces of a singer/songwriter and an ex-Harlequins rugby player is not the most likely of partnerships behind a thriving property development and interior design firm, but then again Simon and Lynn Slater could never be described as your average couple.. The achingly hip husband-and-wife team set up Capitol Design London (www.capitol-desixgn.com) in 2001 with the aim of providing turn-key property solutions for investors who, Simon explains, “want to take the hassle out of purchasing in prime central London.” A bold move, certainly, but one that has paid dividends. The pair have worked consistently over the past ten years, creating a portfolio of some of the most striking properties in London. With 15 projects (and counting) to their name, it is arguably their latest work – a headturningly gorgeous three-bedroom residence on Onslow Gardens in London’s South Kensington – that provides their finest calling card to date.

Words: Alexander Fitzgerald / Photography: CGP Design

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Although classified as an apartment, this particular property could never be described as your standard bijoux bedsit. A handsome, lightfilled space of some 2,500 sq ft, its accommodation includes three ensuite double bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, reception room and mezzanine TV lounge. There’s also the small (sic) matter of a 1,300 sq ft private roof terrace. Adding further sheen to an already covetable package is the fact that as a lateral apartment, the space the residence affords is equivalent to a four-storey townhouse in neighbouring Chelsea. Quite the bit of real estate indeed, then. With their flair for cutting-edge interiors allied to an expertise in creating luxurious design schemes that are complimentary to the traditional features of a building, the Slaters were in their element when it came to this project.

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“The entire brief centred around creating a contemporary home with comfort at its core,” explains Lynn, adding how the original layout of the property – which spans across two Victorian buildings at first- and second-floor level – required a reconfiguration of the original layout and a restructuring of many of the rooms, as well as a complete decorative makeover. Six months’ hard inspiration and perspiration have reaped dividends. The apartment now boasts a delightfully fluid layout and pervasive feeling of space, which is magnified by generous room proportions, 14-foot-high ceilings and, as befits Capitol Design’s reputation, a stunning fit-out and décor that are in keeping with the grandeur of the property. The Slaters describe their signature style as “understated elegance” and profess to a penchant for designs that “enhance a room’s elements, rather than overpowering them.” This approach finds expression throughout this particular property, from the bespoke lacquered walnut radiator cabinets in the kitchen-cum-dining room to a contemporary chandelier by Bella Figura which casts glamorous light in the hallway and adds a Venetian element and interest to the space without being overbearing.

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To those that argue that creating a show-stopping interior requires little more than an understanding bank manager, the Slaters’ skill in commissioning design- and space-appropriate bespoke pieces, when required, provides the perfect riposte.

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In the kitchen, for instance, bespoke storage units have been crafted from hand-coloured stained oak which complement perfectly the composite stone worktops. A custom-made grey oak storage unit in the hallway, meanwhile, provides extensive storage in the hallway. And then there’s a tactile rug in the living room whose deliberately restful design is yet another that was conceived and created by Capitol Design. “Having not found exactly what we were looking for,” says Simon, a self-confessed perfectionist who, like his wife, pays minute attention to detail, “we chose to design the rug ourselves and have it made.”

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When not coming up with their own creations, Simon and Lynn have an equally good eye for the designs of others. An Interni Edition St Malo table crafted from rare Tamo wood, for example, takes pride of place in the dining area, while the living room features a pair of Jacinto Usan sofas and a handsome mirror by Christopher guy. Equally indulgent is the material mix, which includes a Deodar upholstery fabric on one of the beds, throws and cushions made up of fabrics from De Le Cuona and a chair covered in an off-white satin fabric by Aiveen Daly. As in all the best homes, lighting is an integral part of the planning. Versatile and discreet illumination is provided throughout by a Lutron Homeworks lighting system, which is operated by Crestron. This is supplemented, where appropriate, by mood and ambient lighting, such as a pair of Porta Romana pendant lights in the dining area and beside lamps with luxurious silk shades.

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Beautiful as it indisputably is, what is most impressive about the interior, however, is the way in which the various elements – furnishings, fabrics, lighting and accessories – coalesce.Taken as a whole, the apartment’s fit out and décor is the design equivalent of a professionally trained choir singing in blissful harmony, rather than merely a random assortment of competent singers, each looking to outperform the other. Simon and Lynn’s passion for their craft, which is obvious from the offset, manifests itself in their innate understanding of what items work well together and how best to place them. Indeed, throughout the apartment is a skilful mix of classic and contemporary pieces, the various items unified by their high level of craft and conceptual quality.

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The term ‘makeover’ – which summons up images of Laurence Llewellyn-Bowen rag-painting a nest of MDF tables – can scarcely do justice to what Simon and Lynn have done to this property; in fact, even ‘metamorphosis’ sells them some way short. The apartment is all of a piece with nothing given over to chance. Even the smallest touches, from cornicing and door handles to light switches and plug sockets, have been considered. It demonstrates how a singularity of vision and an attention to the smallest detail can create a sort of inevitability and rightness where everything seems part of a whole.

www.capitol-design.com

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Dockrell Complex, Ballymount Road Upper, Dublin 24. Tel: (01) 408 9702 Fax: (01) 408 9093 E-mail: info@artefaction.ie www.artefaction.ie 71

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D a r e To D r e a m With its abundance of space, sophisticated palette, ultra-contemporar y interiors and jaw-droppingly lavish fit-out, this sprawling Spanish villa is its owner’s ultimate fantasy. It’s difficult, if not impossible, not to feel even a small stab of envy during a visit to this 15,000 sq ft villa in Marbella. As dream homes go, it’s got the lot: stunning proportions, to-die-for décor, no-expensespared fit-out, idyllic hillside setting and oodles of personality. The holiday home of an international businessman and his family, the seven-bedroom property is an opulent melange of luxurious fabrics, high-end (and often bespoke) furnishings and accessories and striking artwork, much in the manner of the renowned architect Adolf Loos, who once stated that buildings ‘should be silent to the outside, but the inside should reveal all their wealth’.

Words: Alexander Fitzgerald / Photography Thierry Cardineau

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The creative genius behind such visual perfection is the design duo Jenny Weiss and Helen Bygraves, whose combined talents make up Hill House Interiors, one of the UK’s leading interior design consultancies. No stranger to working on commissions abroad, the pair’s extensive portfolio of projects includes a host of lavish properties across the globe, from Cap D’Antibes in the Cote d’Azur to The Palm in Dubai. This particular project represented quite a challenge – yet one that they wholeheartedly embraced. “In addition to designing the interiors, we were asked to look at the plans and consult with the build team and architect regarding bathroom finishes, wardrobes, fireplaces and internal doors,” explains Weiss. “We were given a very tight schedule to design and manufacture all the bespoke cabinetry and soft furnishings, so that the client could maximise the summer vacation.”

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This interior design dream team obviously thrive under pressure. Despite tight deadlines (the project was completed in just five months), neither the standard of finish nor the immaculate attention to detail that characterises Hill House’s work has been compromised. Far from it, in fact. Walking around the villa, where space flows like molten lava, is akin to stepping from one miniature gallery into another. Each space has a neutral palette, but the carefully compiled and painstakingly sourced objects within add colour, texture, interest and, as is evident from the photography, an air of utter luxury. And although it is full of museumquality objects, there’s not a whiff of glass-case stuffiness about it. The whole place is alive.

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Indeed, when you see the holiday home as it is today, it’s obvious why people turn to interior designers; the best, such as Weiss and Bygraves, are visionaries and illusionists, magicians who can reinvent space, redefine form and elevate the ordinary to the extraordinary. Not just a visual treat, however, the property is also intelligently designed throughout. The villa cleverly engages with its open countryside location by maximising views from every angle and taking full advantage of the varying quality of light that enters the interior at different times during the day and the year. As soon as you step over the threshold, this Andalucian beauty opens its arms to embrace you. The hallway is such a large space that making it glamorous, and more than simply a means of getting from one room to another, was essential. As Weiss and Bygraves say, almost in unison, one finishing off the other’s sentence, “We know you only get one chance to make a first impression – so we always go for the ‘wow’ factor with an entrance hall.”

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In true Hill House-style, this particular hallway does not disappoint. A tasteful dÊcor, sleek cream marfil tiling, opulent ceiling columns and, for its focal point, a brushed silver objet d’art which is placed on stunning table inspired by the Spanish artist Miro, it is an undeniably decadent heart to the villa. While there’s plenty to take in and admire, the deliberately open-plan layout ensures that the eye is drawn through to a spectacular chandelier in the adjacent living space, and then through wide expanses of glass beyond, which open out to gardens complete with an infinity pool and stunning views.

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With a wealth of reception accommodation, the options for anything from informal lounging to lavish entertaining, are many. Most family life, however, centres around a magnificent triple-height drawing room where the key pieces include a vast sofa upholstered in a William Yeoward fabric, an Asian-style low bench by Christopher Guy and, for a luxurious touch underfoot, a bespoke rug by Hill House. Providing a stunning feature overhead, meanwhile, is a dramatic 7.5-metre fibre optic chandelier, a custom-made creation by English lighting specialist Sharon Marston, which cascades down from the apex of the room’s triple-height ceiling. In the dining area, which leads off one end of the main reception area, a black lacquered baby grand piano subtly demarcates the division between living and dining areas. Bread is broken at a handsome 12-seater table which features dark oak atop a sleek chrome underframe. Those looking to source an identical design for their own homes are likely to be disappointed. As Bygraves explains: “It was difficult to find a table that met the exact requirements, so we had [the table] custommade to specification.”

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The duo’s design skills are equally apparent in the room’s bespoke cabinetry which incorporates extensive wine storage and conceals wine chillers and, in true 007 style, a secret mirrored bar. “We prefer to use bespoke furniture in order to correctly scale it to the size of the rooms,” Bygraves mentions. “This is particularly important in a project of this size to prevent the rooms looking cavernous. Weiss and Bygraves’ flair for sophisticated colours and textures is particularly pronounced in the chill-out room, which is set off to stylish effect by a symphony of burnt orange, ivory and bronze, and two sumptuous over-sized leather sofas.

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Elsewhere, an Asian influence is pervasive in the galleried study, an airy space on the first floor which leads off the master bedroom and overlooks the triple-height living space below. Details here include elaborate ceiling panelling, built-in cabinetry, a super-sized lacquered leather desk by Italian manufacturer Turri and a sumptuous leather chair. “We wanted to create a private area that reflected the owner’s status,” explains Weiss, adding that the luxury quotient was elevated by the addition of pleated and printed velvets on the room’s upholstery.

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As in most households, the kitchen is the hub of the house and this villa is no different. It has been designed as a multi-functional room with ample space for food preparation and, should the hungry brood return from a day at the beach or pool ready for a feeding frenzy, informal meals. Floored in crema marfil tiling and fitted with high-gloss lacquer units with Silestone composite countertops, it’s a sleek and ultra-contemporary blend of form and function. The inclusion of a centre island, which features an integrated fridge and storage and incorporates a spacious breakfast bar, provides the perfect spot for a quick snack or early morning juice. Should breakfast be taken en famille, however, there’s ample space to the side of the room where a circular table and chair, both designed by Hill House, bathe in light beneath a crystal bead chandelier by CTO.

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While the scale becomes marginally more intimate in the private areas overhead, the emphasis on aesthetics and luxury is maintained. Take the master bedroom, a dual-aspect retreat where a tranquil mood prevails thanks to the Hill House partnership’s judicious use of colour and texture. A palette of amethyst, taupe, burnished silver and platinum proves a spectacular combination, while luxurious layers of contrasting textures, including a stunning amethyst fabric, which has been used to upholster the bed, and a bespoke silk rug, which adorns the room’s grey oak floorboards, accentuate the sumptuous ambience.

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The bedroom’s various furnishings, all of which have been specially designed by Hill House, are equally noteworthy. Highlights include the aforementioned bed, which is framed by mother-of-pearl and dark oak, and a collection of custom-made mirrored pieces, two of which conceal a pop-up TV unit and a bar with an integrated fridge respectively. While each of the villa’s four remaining bedrooms set their own luxurious scene, a disparately different décor has been used in that belonging to the owner’s young daughter. Described by Weiss and Bygraves as “very feminine and girly” and “a huge fan of shoes and handbags”, her private quarters pay homage to her passions via an unashamedly feminine décor created using super-soft JAB fabrics, textured wallpaper by Tektura and, for a real burst of colour, a deep pink feature wall with Elitis wallpaper.

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Bathrooms can sometimes be an interior designer’s Achilles’ heel, often appearing as overly clinical, charm-free spaces. Not here. “Bathrooms can be the most important room in the house,” notes Bygraves. “They have to be the ultimate escape room, where the owners can truly relax and unwind.” There is certainly little risk of getting remotely stressed in any of the villa’s many bathrooms. The master en suite is particularly indulgent with its over-sized stone bath, which has been positioned to take full advantage of the splendid views available from the room, and a vast four-metre walk-in shower. Its suite includes a WC and bidet, although these are housed separately. “When planning a bathroom of this calibre, we always try to take [the WC and bidet] out of the equation, because they are just not that visually attractive, so we prefer to accommodate them, out of sight, in an adjoining room,” Weiss mentions.

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The word basements tends to conjure up images of dark, damp and dingy spaces, crammed with unloved and unused furniture, old sports equipment and assorted box files. Sequestered beneath the ground level accommodation in this villa, however, is a vast Bat Cave-like space tricked out with all manner of creature comforts and high-tech gadgetry. Taking pride of place here is a pool and spa area fit to grace any fivestar hotel. A haven of tranquillity with its textured polished plastered walls and locally sourced stone floors, this sprawling space is part of a subterranean ‘after-hours’ zone which comprises changing and shower rooms, sauna, steam room, fully fitted gymnasium and even a designated massage area.

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As befits the scale and fit-out of the villa, it is perhaps of little surprise to discover that the basement includes its own cinema room, an ultraplush space with its own star quality and where every day can feel like Saturday night at the movies. “We wanted to create a communal and inviting family space,” says Bygraves, pointing to a series of iconic black-and-white Hollywood images and replica movie posters which set the stylish scene. “We softened the walls, entirely panelling them in tones of stone with strategically placed vertical black suede panels on the screen wall to conceal the speaker system and complement the ceiling.”

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The rows of chewing gum-stained, rigidly upright cramped chairs that characterise the average multiplex are, mercifully, absent. In their place, the Hill House duo opted for a far infinitely more comfortable and aesthetically pleasing alternative: a bespoke U-shaped seating system which they designed to fit the space. Upholstered in butter-soft Italian leather, its comfort levels are taken up yet another notch with the addition of numerous cushions with a chic Andrew Martin fabric. Working on the dĂŠcor and fit-out of the adjoining games room proved particularly enjoyable for the interior design duo, providing them with a perfect opportunity to “really let our imagination run wild!â€?

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Eschewing the traditional palette of a classic games room, they opted for a far more funky combination of hot pink and purple. A hand-made snooker table with purple baize was duly commissioned, while similar tones were chosen for a five-metre long wall in the room, which depicts the solar system lit by twinkling fibre optics. Other touches include purple retro chairs, drum tables with pink internal lighting and a loud and proud textured pink rug which injects a shot of colour to the room’s wideplank wooden flooring. The stand-out design in the games room, however, is arguably a special resin ice bar fitted with colour-changing LEDs. “We wanted to add a focal point to the area where the owners and their friends could congregate and relax,” explains Weiss. “The resin bar is also a great way to introduce even more colour.”

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So far, so impeccable. But what about the gardens themselves? Has the stunning attention to detail indoors been carried through to the outside? It will perhaps come as little surprise to learn that the gardens are landscaped to within an inch of their perfectly manicured lives. As large as they are lavish, they incorporate lush lawns, paved patio areas for al fresco dining and entertaining and a magnificent infinity pool. Those hoping to replicate the various furnishings in the gardens with a trip to Ikea are likely to be disappointed. The focus, as ever, is firmly on premium pieces that exude taste and quality. The loungers that flank the pool, for instance, are by Spanish design firm Kettal, while a glamorous U-shaped white sofa, which is dressed with green and green-and-white striped cushions and enclosed within a curvaceous wicker frame, is by Skyline.

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“The quality of materials and craftsmanship is of the utmost importance to us – anything less that top drawer simply will not make the cut,” affirms Weiss. Elsewhere, a specially designed area is the outdoor equivalent of a living room. Fitted with a tiled floor, ceiling beams and even a fireplace, it is furnished memorably with huge L-shaped sofas by Kettal, a minimountain of cushions and a pair of freestanding rocking chairs. The various pieces, Bygraves mentions, were painstakingly sourced and selected for their combination of form, function and, crucially, flexibility. “Items here were chosen to offer optimum flexibility,” she says, “so that the configuration can be adjusted according to the season. Renaissance author, courtier, and father of inductive reasoning Sir Francis Bacon (1561-1626) famously said, “Houses are to be lived in, not looked upon”, and this is clearly a philosophy that the owner of the luxury villa subscribes to. This is a holiday home that was designed to be lived in and enjoyed, not as a mere showpiece.

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Indeed, when they began this five-month project, Weiss and Bygraves set out to create an interior that was luxurious and glamorous yet felt relaxed and welcoming, and were anxious to avoid imposing a formal style. The number of friends and family visiting the owners most weekends, and hoping to return again and again, should provide them with all the evidence they require to indicate that this has been a fait accompli. The interior design duo have even been able to enjoy on occasion the fruits of their inspired labour, having joined the owner and his family for the odd memorable party or two. And why not indeed? With a house this grand, it would be a crying shame not to use it and, crucially, enjoy it! www.hillhouseinteriors.com

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Fit for a King A Tudor manor house which played host to Charles I has undergone a stunning 21st century revival. With its mullioned windows, stone slate roof and mellow honey coloured walls, Butlers Court aooears a typical 16th century Cotswold manor house built in c.1550 and extended several times over subsequent centuries, it was the one-time home of an ardent Royalist family, the Ashcombes. It is at Butlers Court on 17 September 1643, that Katherine Ashcombe was said to have had the privilege of entertaining Charles I for a night on his march from Gloucester to Newbury.

Words: Tracy Biggam / Photography: Steve Russell

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The house is the creation and home of interior designer Pippa Paton. It was love at first sight according to Pippa, “As soon as we reached the top of the drive we knew instinctively it had to be ours.� Five years later work on the house and its outbuildings is complete and Butlers Court is not only home to Pippa, her husband Scott and children Max and Scarlett, but is also company HQ for Pippa Paton Design, which the couple run together.

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The main reason for the somewhat protracted renovation was that Butlers Court had to be fitted in-between a constant stream of new design projects: “Our own home often took a back seat as we were so busy working on client properties.” Pippa Paton Design has been running since 2005 and is a far cry from Pippa’s original career. “Before I qualified as an interior designer I was Group Finance Director for a big advertising agency in London. Around eight years ago I decided to change direction – I’d always been interested in interiors and had often lent a hand to friends who were doing up their homes, but I realised that it was something that I was passionate about and so I enrolled in a course at the Chelsea College of Art and Design.” Initially the business was purely interior design based, but now their portfolio of services has expanded to include project management, which is run by Scott.

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When the Patons moved to Butlers Court in 2006, the house had received scant decorative attention in the previous half century. “The same family had lived here since around 1950 and the only change they had made was to put in a small kitchen”, explains Pippa.The layout remained essentially the same as it had been for many decades, with a series of small rooms leading off the kitchen. Each had once served an individual purpose – scullery, flower room, boot room, log room and so on – a legacy of the days when the house was run with the help of a team of servants.

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“Apart from the dimensions of this series of small rooms, the other problems with the layout were that none of the rooms faced south and there was no access to the garden. We needed to make radical changes to the interior architecture to give us light and the flowing living, kitchen and dining space that we wanted.�

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The house is a Grade II listed building, but Pippa was able to make the internal changes she wanted and also add a large part-glazed kitchen extension by getting permission to knock down a couple of small lean-tos dating from the 1900s: “The extension is absolutely inkeeping with the original part of the house and fundamental to the creation of the open-plan living accommodation we desired. It was also obvious to have a room which we could fully open out onto the garden.�

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With the restrictions of the old building and a north-south orientation, however, it was not possible to flood every room with daylight. “What I did with the formal sitting room, for instance, was to embrace the lack of light by painting it black. There was no point in trying to make it bright and airy, so instead we decided that it would become our evening room – and it’s a very atmospheric place to be at night. To make sure we didn’t feel closed-in we took away the door in that room so that there is a free flow of space … In fact wherever possible we have removed doors as we prefer the house to flow.”

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The renovation of the house hasn’t all been about removing things, however – Pippa’s aim was to embrace and celebrate its past and to use the marks of the passage of time to her advantage. In the course of the building work they uncovered a series of features from bygone days, including several forgotten doorways and an old well in the boot-room which they preserved, putting a glass door over the opening and lighting it from beneath: “Once we uncovered an original feature of the house we left it uncovered.” She describes her style as: “Broadly contemporary, but I like a mix of old and new. I work a lot in old and listed buildings where I always try to avoid pastiche and instead bring the building into the 21st century. Our own house is a good example of the way I like to work. Where I have used an original oak door, for instance, I have given it an undisguised new frame – each element is not trying to be something it isn’t and yet the two sit very happily together. Neither have I tried to age the big chunky oak beams that we have installed – I like new things to look new.”

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As far as design influences are concerned, Pippa says that she feels her style is instinctive rather than studied and learned: “I don’t like to follow rules. I know what I like and I find that I intuitively know what needs to go into a space.” Over time, however, she says that she has noticed her style becoming more eclectic: “Experience has given me the confidence to use large, unexpected and unusual things in spaces. The more one-off pieces you can use, the better the effect.”

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Part of the desire to move from their previous house in Henley was to find space for a proper design studio. This was another reason why Butlers Court had such appeal, as within the grounds was an old coach house which Pippa identified immediately as the perfect location for her company. Comprising three coaching bays and a stable with a hay loft above, there was scope to create both a design studio and selfcontained two bedroom cottage.

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The studio is a light, bright space with white-washed walls and bleached floorboards up in the eves of the coach house. Many of its original features remain, such as the dovecotes on the gable end and Pippa has retained some of the old internal layout – utilising the hay loft as a mezzanine floor reached by a ladder.

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The coach house was the first part of the entire project to be tackled. Pippa’s rationale was that this was the quickest route to deliver both living and working accommodation and would enable them to spend time working on the more complex project of the manor house. With two open fire places as the only source of heating on the ground floor, the Patons braved the cold in the manor house for two years while they converted the outlying coach house into accommodation: “I figured that if people had lived in the house without central heating for 450 years, then we could certainly survive in the short-term until we finished the coach house”, says Pippa. “And besides, the walls are 1.5 to 2m thick for the most part, so it never felt really icy!”

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The end result of the years of hard work is an idyllic property which effortlessly spans the centuries. True to its Tudor roots from the outside, inside Butlers Court today, time has marched on four and a half centuries in a sublime transition from post-medieval to modern. Vintage salvage finds and antiques line up alongside Italian designer accessories and bespoke furniture in a gorgeous melange of contrasting textures and colours; all set against a backdrop of smooth plaster, mighty oak beams and exposed stonework. One can’t help but feel that Charles I would still be very pleased to rest here.

www.pippapatondesign.co.uk

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A lesson in restraint Built and twice extended, all in the space of ten years, this large family home showcases the best in timeless design. “Compared to our last home it felt like we moved into Beverley Hills!” jokes Sophie Smith of her spacious Kerry house. Built in 2001 it took almost two years to complete. Her husband isn’t an architect, rather a chartered surveyor and project manager, and he spent at least an hour and half on the plans every evening in the painstaking quest for their dream home. “The builder is my husband’s best friend, and despite what people say about never mixing business with pleasure, we’ve had very happy results. The house has been extended twice, and the same team have come back to do all the work.” The hall represents the more formal side to the house, and shows how its style has evolved. Wall panelling was added to the stairs and landing two years ago and the mahogany stairs has been painted. One thing that has stayed the same is the soft palette of gorgeous neutrals that run harmoniously throughout the whole home. The light-filled sitting room was originally planned as a playroom, but once built the couple realised it would make a lovely living space. The furniture and fabrics came from interior designer Helen Turkington who was brought back in ‘Phase 3’ to work her magic on other parts of the home.

Words: Jillian Bolger / Photography: Barry Murphy

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“Sophie found it hard to visualise the spaces but knew what she liked as soon as she saw it,” Helen explains. “She wanted something timeless rather than trend driven, which is exactly the way I approach design.” The mix of check and herringbone seats and elegant coffee table were first teamed up in Helen’s shop in a room staging, and now sit handsomely in Sophie’s room surrounded by Farrow & Ball Light Gray walls, Manuel Canova’s curtains and curvaceous wooden lamps from Hicken Lighting.

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Texture plays an important role in the home’s timeless styling, with a mix of fabrics right down to the contrast-piped cushions all chosen from the same palette. “If you buy a flamboyant dress you’ll only wear it a few times. If you buy a black dress you can dress it up, change accessories and it doesn’t date. Your house is like this – and you can live with it longer too¬,” explains Helen, who prefers to introduce colour through flowers. “You can’t rush a house either,” she explains. “A place always looks better if you take your time to get it right. I’ve worked with Sophie for years and gotten to know what she likes. She now trusts me enough to call from London, for example, and tell her I’ve found the perfect cushion fabric. A relationship evolves with a client.”

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Helen is pictured here in one of her and the family’s favourite rooms – the conservatory. Unlike many sunrooms it is used year round thanks to the relaxed styling and limestone floors. “It’s a really bright space,” Sophie tells me, “Even in the depths of winter it’s so cosy, whether looking out at the snow or morning sun.” The walls are painted in Farrow & Ball Stony Ground, a warm neutral well paired with the wood panelling and bookcases, which contain a secret door to the home office. A real fire is a welcoming feature in the formal sitting room, which once looked out onto the expansive gardens. When the house was extended they decided to keep the French doors by the fire, mirroring them to capture light from the big bay windows. There’s stronger beige and bronze tones in this room, and this is capitalised on by using only lamps and candles rather than ceiling or spot lights.

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Distressed leather chairs in rich toffee create a clubby feel in this smaller reception room which has become something of a reading and chess room for the family. The wooden set came from Belgium, as did the chairs while the leather trunk, used as a table, was sourced from SKI Interiors. The linen-effect wallpaper introduces a green tone while staying within the natural range of the house’s palette. It would be easy to be envious of all this space, but the Smiths have five children and Sophie is proud of the fact that every room in the house is well utilised. “Some large homes feel like museums, and although I don’t like clutter, every room in this house is lived in and used.”

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Mealtimes in the Smith’s are enjoyed around a large solid table that took months of sourcing. “I couldn’t find a big enough round table anywhere, despite trawling the internet and looking in countless furniture shop while on holidays on the States,” recalls Sophie. “Eventually I found a picture of one I liked so we had it made by Seabury in Naas.” The base is painted in Stony Ground by Farrow & Ball while the top is washed white oak. Placed beneath a trio of windows ¬the table is bathed in natural light and enjoys views over the large garden. The two smaller windows are dressed in Roman blinds fashioned from a pretty botanical Colefax & Fowler print, neatly connecting the views to the interior.

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Adhering to the classic style choices the kitchen is a hand-painted farmhouse affair in cool Farrow & Ball colours with teak counters. Crafted by David Duggan it was seamlessly extended in 2009 when a beautiful cream Aga was added. “It quickly became like another family member!” jokes Sophie. “The kids and dogs love it.”

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The sunroom enjoys wonderful light and generous doors that open onto the leafy garden. Originally conceived as a larger room to run the length of the house its size was reduced when Sophie’s daughter asked if the plans could be changed to give her a different bedroom. In summer time it’s a great space for entertaining, with access onto a terrace with a large dining table.

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A fan of Helen’s elegant styling Sophie admits that the console table, lamps, and mirror in this second hallway were all spotted together in her shop. “They were all paired up and looked great together so I knew they’d work well here.” The walls are painted in Harbour Gray by Zoffany, although most of the paint throughout the house is Farrow & Ball, most notably String, Cord and Stony Ground. (Since 2010 Helen has her own range of paints for Colortrend, which she now uses instead.) The space has been personalised by the addition of family photos in silver frames, and it is these personal touches are something very important to both women. “A home should never be completed by a designer, otherwise it will always look like a show house,” Helen feels. “It should feature a collection of things that mean something to the owner and that tell a story about the journey of their lives.”

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The master bedroom is a luxurious and restful space that enjoys lovely natural light. The wallpaper features the same leafy Colefax & Fowler pattern used in the kitchen’s Roman blinds. “The house is surrounded by tall trees and lush greenery so we wanted to have that lovely botanical feel inside,” Sophie explains.

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Upon entering the vast home office – accessed through the secret bookshelf door – you find a large open plan room illuminated by two antler-effect chandeliers with a distinctive Ralph Lauren vibe. (The secret door was designed to keep the office separate from the family space, while also avoiding the conservatory feeling like a corridor.) Thanks to its garden access and smart storage, including a staircase with in-built filing – this room easily transforms into another reception room for family gatherings.

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The boys’ bedroom is tricked out in fresh Linum ticking that’s been cleverly accented by denim throws. It’s a good example of Helen Turkington’s innate understanding of txextures, and illustrates how colour and patterns can stay timeless if handled in the right way. It’s her signature look and its been stamped rather beautifully on the Smith’s delightful Kerry home.

www.helenturkington.ie www.helenturkingtonfabrics.com

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House of Dreams Light, comfort and expansive space for both family life and entertainment were the essential indulgences at a luxurious new residence in Cork. The brief issued to Tom Coughlan of Coughlan DeKeyser Architects by the owners of a half acre site in a leafy Cork suburb was highly specific – to design a house which would catch the light as the day progressed, make the most of a south facing garden (which should be seen from the front door), incorporate a separate space for entertaining guests and of course meet all the fundamental needs of a family home.

Words: Tracy Biggam Photography: Barry Murphy

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It was a challenging brief according to Tom (who is also the architect behind the stunning Cliff House Hotel in Waterford), not least because there were established residences either side of the plot which restricted east and west light. “Our desire was to create a series of well lit spaces by maximising the southerly aspect of the property. An awareness of how the sun moves across the site was all-important in achieving this objective.� Serving both to create great visual impact and to facilitate the flow of light is the curved glazed stairway with glass balustrading, backed by a vast three storey window to the garden, which dominates the entrance hall. This staircase serves the lower floor, entrance hallway and gallery landings, allowing light to flow unrestricted throughout the building.

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Covering approximately 10,000 sq ft in total, the house occupies three floors over a basement. Entry is at ground floor level, straight into the enormous hallway furnished with elegant cream and silver signature pieces from Italian design house Creazioni. The formal drawing room and dining room lie to the right of the hallway from the entrance, with the less formal accommodation of kitchen, family room, breakfast room and playroom arranged to the left.

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Interior design in a contemporary classical style has been completely created and managed by the owner who reveals that while much of the furniture was sourced during visits to the annual Salone Internazionale Del Mobile in Milan, it was inspired by the contents of what she calls: “My ‘Dream Drawer’, where I stored pictures and cuttings over a ten year period before we built the house.” The owner also worked closely with Bespoke Design to source all the furniture, fabric and furnishings. The lay-out of the house is also very much the work of its mistress as she was so clear and particular about what she wanted out of the accommodation.

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Fendi is another Italian designer brand which features prominently in the furnishing of the house and has been used both in the formal drawing room and in the family room to create a sumptuous snug in a neutral palette of putty and taupe tones with aubergine accents. The sofa, throw, rug and nest of tables are all by Fendi Casa, and rest on rich walnut parquet by the Irish luxury solid wood flooring company, Ebony and Co. There is more Fendi in the sunny breakfast room situated at the back of the kitchen facing the garden where the design of the white leather table and cube chairs complements the retro seating visible at the rear of the garden.

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The spectacular kitchen is by bespoke specialists, Design House, who are based in Dalkey, County Dublin. Chris Donaghy, owner and designer at Design House, worked closely with his client to meet her very specific separate family and entertaining needs. The units are oak, hand-painted in cream and topped by exquisite grey marble (one of the services Chris provides his clients is to accompany them to Italy where they can select their own unique piece of stone). The floor is a French limestone sourced from Designer Tile Outlet in Cork. Fendi Murano double tier chandelier and high stools covered in cream leather with a button finish add glamour to the setting.

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In addition to fine cabinetry, the kitchen combines all manner of appliances, including the iconic American brands of Wolf cooker (often referred to as the ‘Ferrari of cookers’) and Sub Zero fridge, freezer and wine chiller. A Miele microwave and coffee maker have been built in to the units adjacent to the breakfast room, with warming drawers under each.

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The formal dining room is situated off the entrance hallway and is dominated by an enormous Fendi Casa leather covered table. Three large Obi lights by Axolight hang above and the table is laid with Venere cutlery by Armani Casa and tableware by Villeroy and Boch. A seascape by the Cork-born artist Philip Gray has been precisely positioned to reflect in the mirror on one wall so that all guests can enjoy its beauty and tranquillity. To keep the party going after dinner, in the basement below the dining room is a wine cellar, resplendent in silver and red with climate controlled Sub Zero wine storage, a large games room with pool table and an 8 seater cinema.

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The family bedrooms are all situated on the first floor of the house, with the master suite taking the lion’s share of the space, covering the footprint of the formal drawing room and dining room downstairs. Consisting of a bedroom with open fire, double wardrobes, a sitting area to the rear over-looking the garden and an ensuite bathroom, the suite is a glamorous, sensuous space in a gold and chocolate colour palette. The gold leather bed is by Fendi, as are the bedlinen and sidetables with gold lamps by Kettal and at the foot of the bed languishes a leopard print covered Creazioni chaise longue with matching pillows and throw. A toning backdrop is provided by the gold and cream carpet from Loomah Carpets and Rugs with a dark brown faux leather Couture wallpaper by Tektura behind the headboard.

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A very generous guest suite with ensuite bathroom occupies the entire second floor of the property and is another glamorous space featuring a white leather bed from Cattelan Italia with contrasting fuschia pink wall paint, cushions and throw by Designers Guild.

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In the master ensuite the rich brown and gold theme is continued with tiles from the Pixall Mosaic collection by Sicis and bespoke bathroom units in dark mahogany tones with French brown marble tops. Bowl sinks and wall-mounted silver taps were sourced from the Yard in Belfast.

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The south-facing garden was a focal point from the outset and renowned Irish landscape designer Diarmuid Gavin was commissioned to come up with a scheme which would bring the spirit of the house out into the garden. His design utilises a central lawn leading to a wooden pergola at the far end, complete with two swinging ‘bubble’ seats. Pleached trees and wooden slatted screens add perspective and structure, delineating the different usage areas of the space.

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It’s the final element of the perfect home according to the owner : “This house panders to our every need and allows us to entertain in the way we want to, but most of all it’s where we create wonderful childhood memories for our son and ourselves – it’s always a pleasure and a privilege to come home.”

www.designhouseconcepts.com www.ebonyandco.com www.designertileoutlet.com www.diarmuidgavindesigns.co.uk www.cda-architects.ie

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A SUB-ZERO IS JUST A REFRIGERATOR, LIKE A DIAMOND IS JUST A STONE Iconic design. Enduring quality. Superior performance

www.sub-zero.co.uk

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Lofty aspirations New York has defined and refined the concept of loft living and this modernist masterpiece is the ultimate designer duplex. High above Greenwich Village stands One Jackson Square, a building of outstanding beauty shimmering in the Manhattan skyline. Bands of floor-to-ceiling glass wrap around its curves in smooth ribbons, juxtaposing old and new in this predominantly low-rise neighbourhood. Built in 2009, David Mann of MR Architecture+Décor was drafted in to fit out one of the show – or model – apartments, as they’re called stateside. You won’t see much change out of $7.5 million for this duplex apartment (furnished) but luxury and location don’t come cheap in this part of the world.

Words: Jillian Bolger / Photography: Eric Laignel

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Trained as an architect and interior designer David has an inherent understanding of space. Given an almost blank palette (he had a few features and fittings to work around) he set out to create the ultimate bachelor pad in this hip part of the city. Blending luxury living with industrial accents – as an homage to loft culture – this duplex penthouse is a tactile showcase for its design-led furnishings Unimpressed by the central positioning of a utility room door David cloaked the wall in sheer grey linen to streamline aesthetics. Large building pillars were transformed into sculptural statements in matt black paint. The double-sided plasterboard fireplace was clad in black mirrors to reflect the space’s impressive scale while the two perimeter walls look edgy and industrial in cement tones..

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The living area is a feast of visual and tactile stimulants – shiny, smooth, soft and reflective. A graphite silk velvet sofa and lacquered rope weave armchairs are balanced by the reflective qualities of the 70’s CityScape glass and aluminium coffee table. The abstract layered acrylic painting by Peter Zimmerman, hung to look like it floats against the curtain, ties the colour scheme together while celebrating the strong urban environment. The duplex was already fitted out with wide-plank solid white oak floors, so David chose a pale horsehair area rug that’s similar in colour to add a sensual contrast. It’s an unusual choice that plays out well in front of the theatrical drama of the extended curtain and Tom Dixon mirror ball lights.

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For a chic industrial vibe that adds real warmth David had two perimeter walls stuccoed to look like concrete. It proved a genius move matched by the witty piece of wall sculpture: a Brompton folding bike that’s utilitarian design at its best. The high spec Italian Molteni kitchen makes streamlined impact with its cool mix of gloss and walnut units, Corian countertops and premium appliances. Think Blanco, Miele and Sub Zero and you’ll get the picture.

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The double-height space wasn’t wasted on this architectural mind, who placed the apartment’s dining space beneath the 22-foot ceiling. Accentuating the scale he chose a cluster of blackened metal pendant lights by Tom Hickson which illuminate the impressive marble Mangiarotti dining table. “I fell in love with these wooden chairs,” David tells me, “and subsequently bought them afterward for my own home!”.

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The property boasts three bathrooms and two bedrooms, and upstairs David has created his little ‘nook’ which has been tricked out as a luxe chill out zone. Overlooking the West Village, you can get cosy on the handsome walnut and leather sling chair and footstool, or laze on the Brisa fur beanbag, a fun and gorgeous design piece.

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By contrast to the main living space David turned the second bedroom into a study that’s decidedly earthy and softer around the edges. It boasts an Eames chair, Jacques Adnet leather daybed and rosewood shelving while the walls are rich and intriguing in black grass cloth.

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“The master bedroom isn’t overly big,” David admits, “so I wanted to make an impact on a scale the space could handle”. The black bed has no headboard, positioned instead against a table to give the illusion it floats in the middle of the room. Metallic silver paint reflects the Ingo Mauer light fitting in silver paper while a Mongolian lambswool bedspread is at once decadent and inviting.

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The master bedroom is also home to The Valet Chair a clever piece of 1940’s design by Danish modernist, Hans Wegner. Handsome, useful (the seat flips up to store personal items like wallet and cufflinks), striking and pared-back it reflects David Mann’s quest for smart and stimulating design. And things don’t get much more stimulating than this deluxe dream pad in New York’s coolest borough.

MR Architecture & Décor 245 West 29th Street, 10th Floor, New York, NY 10001 T 212.989.9300 F 212.989.9430 info@mrarch.com

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Pumpkin armchair and sofa. Design: Pierre Paulin. For a catalogue visit www.ligne-roset.co.uk or call 0870 7777 202

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BBDO

Live beautifully.

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American space program Luxury and wow factor are to the fore of this Upper Eastside loft conversion. It’s rare that a city dweller has the opportunity to create a home from scratch right in the heart of the city. But stylish business woman, Kris Fuchs, got that chance when her ex-husband told her to choose any floor she liked in his empty building – a former warehouse of auction house Christie’s – on Manhattan’s Upper Eastside. Surprisingly Kris didn’t choose the top floor, but the fourth, where she employed the services of David Mann, Principal at MR Architecture and Décor. His brief was to create a beautiful space for Kris and her two teenage daughters, merging urban living with downtown style in this 4,400 square foot loft space. Kris is owner of SUITE New York, a high-end furniture showroom in the city and while David is also renowned for his interior design talents, she hired him to design the space from the ground up, turning to colleague and SUITE New York’s Creative Director, Chris Kraig, to handle the décor.

Words: Jillian Bolger / Photography: Francois Halard

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The apartment is accessed through a dark leather-clad vestibule which opens onto a light-flooded space. The walls, a high gloss epoxy that’s durable and sleek, lead you towards a showpiece Steinway piano that separates the open plan living and dining space. This dark, lacquered structure sits dramatically amidst a calming palette of neutral and tactile fabrics. Cool limestone slabs, a humorous pouf in Mongolian lamb, a sparkling Viennese glass lamp and plush carpet create a multifaceted cocoon that’s luxurious and inviting.

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Kris, pictured with David Mann, sits on one half of a sofa that’s been designed to look like it’s split in two. Handsome Macassar ebony units and leather sling chairs in warm brown punctuate the space while sheer curtains run around three walls, softening the setting while diffusing light. The luxurious area rug was designed by Chris Kraig, and matches the one in the dining room.

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The generous white oak table in the dining room is perfect for entertaining and guests will be seated in style on Hans J Wegner’s 1944 design classics – The China Chair. While there’s no great view there is great light, maximised by a sheer curtain which runs along three walls giving the illusion of continuing windows. This neutral palette is the perfect canvas for John Chamberlain’s colourful sculpture – several of his highly covetable works are owned by MoMA – and the fun house mirrors that make you fat and thin at once! An apartment of this scale and calibre could only ever have one type of master bedroom, and that’s one with serious wow factor. David created a large, open space with luxurious indulgences, like a white glass-clad fireplace with its own seating area and a completely mirrored walk-in wardrobe, which allows the room to remain clutterfree. In keeping with the neutral colour scheme this calming space is accented by purples, mauves and lilacs, making for a fresh and feminine twist.

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It ain’t the Oval Office, but it could perhaps be called the Round Room, given its propensity for all things circular. The centrepiece is a large Nina Rota bed designed by master of curves, Lebanese architect and designer, Ron Arad. It’s decidedly glamorous, and Chris Kraig added a subtle Deco touch with a magnificent bespoke rug that suggests oldworld Hollywood. From the carpet pattern to the bedside tables, the wall lights to the ornaments and vintage Italian fireside table, circles have a fun and harmonious presence.

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If you’re looking for humour you’ll find it in spades in the vibrantly coloured media room. “This was a space with no natural light so needed to be treated imaginatively,” explains David of the tangerine den. Contrasting dramatically with the rest of the light-filled home it’s an intimate space that’s perfect for cosy movie viewing. The sofas are cantilevered off walls upholstered in orange Ralph Lauren corduroy. Macassar ebony shelving lends a retro richness to this orange and brown ensemble, which is accented by the embroidered cushions in vintage designs.

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Kris’s daughters share a completely Corian-clad bathroom, but each has her own bright bedroom. David created a generous terrace to run along the apartment’s North end past all three bedrooms. It’s a welcome space in an urban home and gives bird’s eye views of this affluent neighbourhood. Despite the serious design aesthetics there’s plenty of fun and humour at play in this Upper Eastside loft. And while Kris has enviable connections in the design world – plus access to the many beautiful pieces she stocks at SUITE New York – you can be sure she was glad to have David Mann on speed dial when it came to choosing the perfect architect.

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MR Architecture+DĂŠcor 245 West 29th Street, 10th Floor, New Yok, NY 10001 www.mrarch.com

SUITE New York 419 Park Avenue South, 17th Floor, New York, NY 10016 www.suiteny.com

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Countr y Pursuits Some larger than life characters have made Aghinagh House their home over the years, but the prevailing atmosphere at this Irish Georgian rectory is a restful quietude, which the owners have been at pains to preserve. Aghinagh’s special atmosphere was obvious at first sight, according to its current owner, interior designer Nuala Ryan: “When we first saw the house we didn’t know anything about its history or who had lived there, we just sensed a very positive energy.”

Words: Tracy Biggam / Photography: Barry Murphy

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It has been a little over 6 years since Nuala and husband Michael purchased the rectory and set about a project of extensive repair and renovation. “Although the house was in reasonable condition, we decided that it was better to carry out extensive works to make sure that we didn’t need to undertake continuous refurbishment after moving in.” Nuala explains. Seven months later, after completing all the building works, she was finally able to embark upon the interiors of the house with the help of business partner Aine O’Dwyer, with whom she runs Cork-based interior design business, Internal Affairs.

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The building work had included a high degree of restoration – recovering original features where possible or replacing them where necessary; and it was always Nuala’s intention that the interior design would follow suit, creating a period feel without striving for pastiche. “Our whole intention was to try to preserve the original atmosphere of the house while creating a practical space for a young family. We trawled the collections of design houses like Zoffany, Jane Churchill, Colefax & Fowler, Mulberry and Farrow & Ball for fabrics and wallpapers and we added new and old elements from our travels in France and Italy”, says Nuala.

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Nestling among 20 acres of gardens and lush green pastures in a little pocket of West Cork countryside, not far from Macroom, Aghinagh is a rare example of a country house whose setting remains virtually unchanged from its creation. Samuel Lewis’s account in his Topographical Directory of Ireland, written in 1837, describes the parochial setting as having: “… land [which] is generally good and is well sheltered; … about four fifths are under a good system of cultivation; the remainder is rough pasture and bog. … The banks of the river are here adorned with several elegant houses…. The living is a rectory [Aginagh House]… built in 1814, with a gift of £100 and a loan of £1500 from the same Board: the glebe comprises 24 acres.”

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Apar t from several coats of clotted cream coloured paint and a shiny red front door, externally the house looks just as it did in the early 19th century – a roomy, but unpretentious house in a wooded setting. It is not a house that was ever intended for show – as a rectory, pretensions of grandeur wouldn’t have been seemly – and then later its inhabitants were more concerned with outdoor pursuits than in creating a highly decorative proper ty. Pictures of Aghinagh which Nuala took at the time of purchase depict a house much in need of TLC but with an aristocratic and elegant soul: “I love the house because although it’s quite large, it’s not at all ostentatious – and I felt it would be quite wrong to try and flamboyantly gild the lily. We have the luxury of wonderful space with big windows and high ceilings but we have the peaceful cosy family home we’d always dreamed of,” says Nuala.

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The couple bought the house from Fergie Sutherland, the celebrated trainer of Cheltenham Gold Cup winner, Imperial Call. Eton and Sandhurst-educated, Sutherland had gone on to have a distinguished career in the British Army which ended prematurely when he lost his leg in a booby trap whilst serving in Korea in 1952. The lack of a limb was a mere passing inconvenience for the tough Scot, however. He returned to England, his spirit undiminished and being a lifelong devotee of all things equine, found a new career in horse racing. Popular folklore has it that he would arrive for country weekends with three spare legs: one for riding, one for shooting and the other for dancing.

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Sutherland moved to Aghinagh House from Newmarket in the late 1960s, recognising the potential of the lush Cork pastures for raising and training the horses he loved. He was not the first gutsy military man to make the house his home, however, as twenty years earlier it had been the retirement home of his mother’s second husband, the renowned army officer, Sir Adrian Carton De Wiart. When Sutherland moved in his mother, by then widowed, was still living at Aghinagh (and remained so until after her 100th birthday in 2003). De Wiart was a remarkable character by all accounts – and it would seem entirely wrong to write about his former home without a short homage to its illustrious former occupant. In the first instance, as a photograph taken at the house in 1951 testifies, De Wiart’s appearance was somewhat unorthodox. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography described Sir Adrian thus: “With his black eyepatch and empty sleeve, Carton De Wiart looked like an elegant pirate, and became a figure of legend.”

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It was an appearance which had been shaped by a more than eventful life. Considered by many to be one of the most remarkable figures in British military history, De Wiart was wounded eight times serving in two World Wars (including the loss of an eye and a hand), awarded the VC for his bravery at the Battle of the Somme and Mentioned in Despatches six times. One account of his exploits describes how “… De Wiart evaded capture for eight days disguised as an Italian peasant. But he was in northern Italy, did not speak Italian, was 61 years old with an eye patch, one empty sleeve and multiple injuries”. He was no shrinking violet socially either and a combination of extreme bravery and a forthright character made him the stuff of boys’ own legend; indeed he is said to be the model for Brigadier Ben Ritchie Hook in Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour trilogy. De Wiart’s first wife died in 1949 and in 1951, at the age of 71, he married Ruth Myrtle Muriel Joan McKechnie, a divorcee known as Joan Sutherland. The son of Irish and Belgian aristocrats, for his retirement De Wiart settled on his maternal country and took up residence in Aghinagh House where he devoted the remainder of his life to the pursuit of salmon and snipe.

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Just like De Wiart, Nuala and Michael Ryan came to Cork to find a more peaceful existence with plenty of opportunities for country pursuits. Around a decade ago they made the decision to return to Ireland with their young family and find a house in the countryside. It was a dramatic change on many levels – previously home was a Georgian townhouse in Camberwell, South London and Nuala had been embroiled in the high pressure environment of financial PR. While Michael continues to commute into London every week from Cork, for Nuala the move back home has represented not only a change in family life but in career.

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“I had always been interested in interiors and used to spend my weekends traipsing around the Fulham Road and Chelsea Harbour ogling the design shops and imagining what I would buy if I got a bonus that year!” remembers Nuala. “When we got back to Cork I wanted a career I could more easily combine with a family and so I decided to develop my hobby and train as an interior designer. It was at a Fine Arts course in Cork that I met Aine and then we both trained in Dublin before setting up our business.”

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After securing their first job immediately – being hired to re-design the interiors for a bar and restaurant in Ovens, County Cork, the duo have gone on to work on a wide variety of properties, from commercial to private, contemporary to period, both in Ireland and Europe – recent projects have included a villa in Estepona, a townhouse in Munich and apartments in London; but their first love remains period projects. “We have found a niche in Georgian houses which need total reconstruction. There’s nothing better than getting your teeth stuck into a period project!”

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Working on Aghinagh House simultaneously with other projects, Nuala says that her own home was a great opportunity to try things out. Whilst there are plenty of consistent elements for continuity and flow – such as the neutral colour palette in creams and beiges which provides the backdrop for the reception rooms on the ground floor and the kitchen and family room in the basement below, in every room Nuala has looked to layer detail, blending complementary and unusual accessories and textures: “Our emphasis is always on being individualistic – and this comes down ultimately, to the detail.”

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Key alterations to the layout were mostly made to accommodate the transition from a country house, which had once been run with the help of full-time staff, into a home to meet the needs of 21st century family life. The kitchen, for instance, had originally been a pokey space in the basement and was connected to the ground floor via a steep staircase which emerged in a small butler’s pantry close to the front door. Nuala moved the kitchen to the front of the house to benefit from the light, closing off the staircase and turning the pantry into a guest loo where a full length mirror now disguises the former doorway. To gain more light and a more sociable space, she opened up the reception rooms on the ground floor to provide a large drawing-cum-dining room which can be closed off as necessary.

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Thanks to the attentions of Nuala, both externally as well as internally, Aghinagh House has been greatly revived; but she has been at pains to ensure that in essence it remains reassuringly recognisable from earlier times, as glimpsed in the 1951 photograph of the Carton De Wiarts outside the house. In the picture, Lady Carton De Wiart poses smiling in Tweed suit and pearls, springer spanel at her feet. Next to her is a welly-clad Sir Adrian, looking down at the ground; dog whistle around his neck, the empty sleeve of his jacket hanging and the famous eye patch just visible under the brim of a hat. As much as it is possible to ascertain from a mere photograph, the couple’s easy posture suggests they were happy at Aghinagh. Their legacy, which Nuala has embraced, is a quietly elegant house sitting contentedly within the lush landscape of its creation.

Internal Affairs – Email: nuala@internalaffairs.ie Nuala Ryan T: +353 87 224 9227 / Aine Powell O’Dwyer T: +353 86 853 4772 Hand-painted kitchen by David Kiely Kitchens. www.davidkiely.ie Limed oak library by Cedarlan. www.cedarlan.ie

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1 Clifton Avenue, Monkstown, Co. Dublin, t: +353 1 214 0907 f: +353 1 214 0906, e: info@bathhouse.ie w: bathhouse.ie 281

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Twentieth-century Fox A pre-war Manhattan apartment is transformed into a colourful home packed with modern day collectibles. When MR Architecture and DÊcor was hired by a fashion executive to transform a 3,200 square foot pre-war apartment into a dream home for herself and her new husband, founding partner and president David Mann was excited and inspired. It wasn’t his first job for this client (unusually he had also worked on projects for her parents, brother and aunt in the past) so he not only understood her aesthetic sensibilities, but was also familiar with her colourful and quirky art collection which would become an integral part of this Manhattan home.

Words: Jillian Bolger / Photography: Joshua McHugh

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The foyer sets the tone from the outset, marrying elegant furnishings with dramatic and tactile surfaces. Waxed black plaster walls and ebony-stained herringbone parquet are the perfect foil to a vintage Art Deco table and hexagonal mirror. A guest closet opens to reveal a fuchsia interior that shocks and delights, while coordinating with the humorous Erwin Wurm trouser sculpture beneath the chunky Venetian glass light. It’s a warm and witty welcome, the dark and formal styling carefully considered so that the adjoining living and dining room positively pop when you walk in to them. David had fun with scale here, ripping apart the original space to re-configure it for twenty-first century living.

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“Pre-war rooms restrict layout but we wanted to play with that typical chair-sofa-table layout,” David explains. “The couple wanted durable fabrics, yet we have this Yves Klein coffee table in the mix.” Sitting on a black horsehair area rug it’s filled with hot pink pigment, its tones bouncing off the Marilyn prints from Bert Stern’s ‘The Last Sitting’, shot for Vogue in 1962. The curvaceous chairs are another Deco nod, and sit comfortably with the 60’s sofa, an Ed Worley antique that was reupholstered in silk velvet. “We always bring lots of lamps to try them in a space,” David laughs, “and really liked the slightly unexpected scale of these.” And scale is hugely important to him. “The problem with Manhattan is you don’t get a lot of light. The ceilings here were 9 foot 6, so we raised all the doors from 7 to 8 feet to add a level of grandness.”

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The living room is home to several unusual art pieces, including an embellished taxidermy deer head by artist and animal rights activist Angela Singer and a colourful large-scale composition by Mickalene Thomas, a highly collectible New York artist. This hangs above a transparent Lucite table especially made to hold a giant Mohammad Ali Taschen book. Philippe Starck CafĂŠ chairs are a harmonious addition.

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The adjacent dining room sings with colour, thanks to Pop Art supremo Any Warhol. His Flowers, in a host of colour combinations set the tone for a formal space that doesn’t take itself too seriously. Despite the powerful artworks it’s the dining chairs that steal the show: vibrant robin’s egg-blue patent leather. A 1970’s Venetian glass chandelier and mid-century table balance the eras brilliantly. Casual dining takes place under the watchful gaze of Warhol’s Uncle Sam, positioned off the kitchen on a wall of brown grass cloth. Saarinen’s iconic table and Tulip chairs were hugely popular in The States in the 1960s and come into their own again in this contemporary home. They sit comfortably with the streamlined kitchen whose green painted cabinetry is a nice nod to pre-war sensibilities.

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Taking ten months to complete, this three-bedroomed Upper Eastside residence was beautifully transformed from dated and dark to sophisticated and relevant. Most impressive of all is the fact that such a broad sweep of twentieth-century design, from 1930’s Art Deco to 1950’s Pop Art and 1960’s Scandinavian furniture all work so harmoniously under the one roof.

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That’s down to the good taste of the collectors, and, in no small part, to the expertise of David Mann who brought style and synergy to this family home. MR Architecture & DÊcor 245 West 29th Street,10th Floor, New York, NY 10001 T 212.989.9300 F 212.989.9430 info@mrarch.com

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Minnie Peters Showroom

E-mail: info@artefaction.ie www.artefaction.ie 295

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Addition by subtraction The Japanese design tradition of less is more is just one of the global cultural influences woven into the free-flowing spaces of this beautiful London home. The post-Georgian house which architect and interior designer Shalini Misra shares with husband Rajeev and children Reeva, Rohan and Roshni, is located on a quiet street in leafy St John’s Wood, North West London. Its exterior looks much the same as when the house was constructed for a wealthy Spanish merchant in the middle of the 19th century, but behind the stuccoed double-fronted façade, the interior has been entirely reconstructed to create a spectacular, culturally diverse space, alive with rich colour and texture.

Words: Tracy Biggam / Photographers: Vipul Sango Tom Sullam 296

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Originally from India, Shalini qualified as an architect before her husband’s job caused the family to move first to New York and then to London in 1996, where she set up her own business, Spatial Innovations, now known as Shalini Misra. The company offers a full design and project management service to clients, including property search – an area in which Shalini has significant personal experience: “For the first few years in London we moved constantly because none of the houses were quite right for us. It took me three years of intense searching to find our house; but I knew immediately that it was the one. And now I can’t imagine living anywhere else – it’s very special.”

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To her delight, the house had hardly been altered since its inception and the only planning restrictions in place were connected to the façade. “This gave me a free hand to open up the interior and embrace the wonderful garden.” Unusually for a central London dwelling, the garden extends 150 feet and is full of mature trees, making it a wonderfully secluded outdoor space. Full height glazing at ground floor and upper ground floor levels has brought both abundant light and views of the garden into the house.

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Within, Shalini has created a completely open-plan living space strongly influenced by the Japanese style of architecture – “addition by subtraction” – she calls it. “My aim was to create a flowing series of rooms which were simultaneously uncrowded, yet warm and welcoming. I’ve used glazed sliding doors with blinds throughout which makes the space completely flexible”. Living accommodation is spread over both lower and upper ground floors, connected by a central oak staircase with glazed balustrade which descends over an indoor pebble garden, watched over by a bronze of the Hindu Goddess of the Arts, Sarasvati.

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“As well as creating interplay between cultural influences, I like to mix tactile textures – glass, leather, linen, bronze, granite, oak and so on. As far as colour is concerned, for the most part I’ve used a basically monochrome palette and introduced strong accents of colour. We also have quite a bit of art, which naturally introduces further colour and texture.” Art is a shared passion for Shalini and Rajeev and the house includes several important pieces such as Anish Kapoor’s hanging gold teardrop and Tony Cragg’s craggy abstract in white wood in the family room which Shalini says everyone feels compelled to touch.

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Home is also Shalini’s place of work and she has located her office and studio in the basement at the front of the house. “Basements can be a bit drab, so what I’ve done is to leave the brickwork exposed on the staircase and in the studio to bring in a bit of colour. To liven up the approach corridor, which is very dark, we decorated the end wall with bespoke wallpaper from Brussels and added some complementary chandeliers and Moroccan tiles.” Furniture in the studio has an eclectic vintage vibe with desks fashioned from old iroko wood mounted on sewing table bases, Roche Bobois units and bespoke shelving by Anthony Jackson.

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The upper ground floor terrace is one of Shalini’s favourite places to spend time: “We use the terrace as an extension of our formal drawing room. I spend as much time up here as possible as it’s such an inviting place to be in – you feel completely cocooned by the garden but simultaneously have a wonderful view.” She has furnished the space with an L-shaped sofa strewn with silk and velvet cushions, complemented by orange chairs: “To bringa in some spice”, and a large round B&B Italia chair to curl up in.

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The patio below is accessed either via the spiral staircase from the terrace or through the glazed doors of the family room. Arranged on two levels, the garden benefited from the horticultural passion of a former owner of the house and is packed with mature trees and plants which have created a series of secluded areas: “We have a barbeque corner in the garden which seats 12 people and a big trampoline – but both are completely invisible from the house.�

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As many meals as possible are taken on the sunny patio adjacent to the family room on the lower ground floor – another of the benefits of working from home, although Shalini says that these days the volume of work takes her away from the house a good bit: “Some recent projects have included a Grade II listed house in Little Venice London, another house in St Johns Wood with a conservatory extension and double basement, a 14,000 square foot house in New Delhi and a magnificent modern apartment in Mumbai.” She says that her international background has influenced the way she sees things and enables an easy transition between Europe, the US and Asia: “I think I have a good understanding and appreciation of different cultures and their icons. My specialism is in combining shapes and ergonomics with innovative finishes – but my desire is always to deliver the most exciting final result”.

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As many meals as possible are taken on the sunny patio adjacent to the family room on the lower ground floor – another of the benefits of working from home, although Shalini says that these days the volume of work takes her away from the house a good bit: “Some recent projects have included a Grade II listed house in Little Venice London, another house in St Johns Wood with a conservatory extension and double basement, a 14,000 square foot house in New Delhi and a magnificent modern apartment in Mumbai.” She says that her international background has influenced the way she sees things and enables an easy transition between Europe, the US and Asia: “I think I have a good understanding and appreciation of different cultures and their icons. My specialism is in combining shapes and ergonomics with innovative finishes – but my desire is always to deliver the most exciting final result”. www.shalinimisra.com

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Throw away the kettle

100ºC on tap

Imagine 100ºC boiling water instantly on tap. Tea, coffee, pasta or veg are ready to go now! Ultra-convenient and ultra-efficient, the iconic Quooker is fast becoming indispensable in the modern kitchen.

º Eco Friendly Delivers exactly the amount of water you need, when you need it º Energy Efficient Energy use only 3p a day, a saving of up to 55% against a kettle º Safe Teflon insulated so cool to touch, child-proof tap º Easy to Install Discreet tank fits neatly under the sink or nearby º Iconic Design CoolBrand top 100 innovation, modern and traditional styles

Eco Friendly

Energy Efficient

Time Saving

Safe

Quooker is Quicker! Easy Install

www.quooker.co.uk info@quooker.co.uk +44 (0)845 190 4008 317

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Andrew Ryan Furniture: Handcrafted kitchens designed around you. At the heart of every home is the kitchen. That’s why every kitchen we design is carefully designed around the lives of the people who will live there. The kitchens are meticulously handmade to exacting standards incorporating state of the art appliances and interior fittings. It is in these details that Andrew Ryan designers truly come into their own with their passion for perfection evident at every turn, from cupboard interiors to drawer liners and more. So you can rest assured that every detail - even those that the eye will never see - will be perfect. The craftsmanship we specialise in naturally translates into other rooms in the house and the quality remains equally high. So whether it’s a custom-built desk for a home office, built in wardrobes with custom shelving or even vanity units for a bathroom, we can apply our unique skills to remarkable effect. Andrew Ryan Furniture, Clonattin Lower, Gorey, Co. Wexford.Tel: 053 942 1585, www.andrewryan.ie

Apropos Tectonic: is one of the country’s leading suppliers of bespoke glass and aluminium structures, with a burgeoning international reputation and a history of high-quality, aluminium design stretching back over 70 years. Conservatories, roof lights, glazed links, pool covers and all manner of glazed extensions are typical examples of Apropos projects. With a complete design, engineering and construction service that allows customers’ imaginations to flourish, Apropos’ team is unsurpassed in their ability to make wonderful ideas a reality. For more details about apropos please visit: www. apropos-tectonic.com or call on 0800 328 0033.

Arena Kitchens: Arena Kitchens are one of the longest established kitchen companies in Dublin. Founded in 1987 by the Rafter family who still own the business today. Arena sells and installs Miele from Warendorf, Häcker from Germany, and the Arena Town and Country handmade kitchen. We undertake all aspects of the kitchen fitting, from initial full 3D computer plans through to the final fitting of the kitchen. Arena sells all the major appliances brands such as Miele, Siemens, Neff, Gaggenau, SubZero, Wolf and Viking. We install all major worktops; Silestone, Granite, Corian, Steel, Glass, Solid Timber and Ceramic. We sell furniture from top European design houses, namely La Palma, Team By Wellis, Spevka and Plank. Arena Kitchens showrooms are open 7.30am to 6.30pm Mon-Fri and 10.00am to 4.00pm on Saturdays. www.arenakitchens. com info@arenakitchens.com Tel: (01) 6715365 Fax: (01) 6715648 Arena House, 3-4 Cardiff Lane, Sir John Rogerson’s Quay, Dublin 2. 6 jc^dc d[ WZVjin [jcXi^dc

Artefaction: Artefaction have carried on a tradition of creating fine images in stone since the late 1800’s and operate today from their new showroom at Dockrell Complex, Ballymount Road Upper, Dublin 24 with the showroom and workshop under one roof. We at Artefaction offer clients a comprehensive range of natural stone products elegantly designed and hand crafted by our own in-house craftsmen from the highest quality natural materials sourced from around the world. Our product ranges include, flooring in a large variety of dimensions and materials, custom designed chimney pieces and fire places, commercial exteriors and interiors, counter tops, garden statuary and ecclesiastical pieces. Tel: (01) 408 9702.

Bath House: is the ‘must see’ showroom in Monkstown representing the absolute cutting edge of bathroom retail. With brands such as Gessi, Flaminia, Duravit, Burg, Planit Corian, Keuco KOS, Hansgrohe, Flaper, Bonomi, Ritmonio, Zazzeri, and Castello. We offer a complete range of products that have been specifically chosen for their contemporary design and quality, from Europe’s finest design houses. Bath House is also leading the way in a key emerging trend with the design and installation of incredible bespoke minimalist shower enclosures and wetrooms. Bath House was the winner of the Award for the Best Bathroom Showroom in the UK and Ireland at the bathroom and kitchen industry’s prestigious kbbrview Industry Awards 2008. They are open Monday to Friday from 09.30 to 18.00 & Saturday 10.00 to 18.00. 1 Clifton Avenue, Monkstown, Co. Dublin. W: www. bathhouse.ie E:info@bathhouse.ie T: +353 (0)1 2140907

Chalon: Visit a Chalon showroom for a complimentary kitchen consultation. For over 30 years Chalon has been handcrafting their uniquely styled kitchens and furniture from the beautiful Hambridge Mill, on the Somerset Levels, South West England. The Chalon style is typically classic and elegant, inspired by 18th and 19th Century English country furniture and flavoured with particular influences from France, Scandinavia and Ireland. Using only the finest quality materials, Chalon kitchens are made from solid wood (responsibly sourced) and handcrafted by a team of cabinet-makers whose skills have been recognised by The Worshipful Company of Furniture Makers’ Manufacturing Guild Mark for excellence. With an expanding network of showrooms around the UK and Ireland, the distinctive Chalon look is available to those wanting a unique kitchen, bathroom or furniture piece for any room of the home.www.chalon.com

Clive Christian Ireland: Furniture For Luxury Homes Of The World. Undoubtedly the most prestigious furniture brand in the world, Clive Christian have advanced considerably in the last 3 years. In addition to their famous chandelier kitchens and opulent bathrooms, Clive Christian furniture and panelling now regularly features in all rooms of the home, villa, yacht or office. Always retaining their signature of ultimate quality and timelessness, this ‘complete solution’ for all rooms has made their furniture so successful. The new Architectural Style furniture perfectly applies itself to the kitchen or lounge, and fits beautifully into the bathroom, bedroom, library or hallway. The exclusive showroom in Dublin, the biggest in Europe, offers free quotations, while design services will cost you e275/£230 m/ sq of floor space, which includes artwork, architectural plans, elevations and a visit to site anywhere in the world. Phone: +353 1 291 7020

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Belle Cheminée: Belle Cheminée is Ireland’s leading supplier of antique and reproduction fireplaces in marble and stone. We stock an extensive range of Georgian, Victorian, Regency and French chimneypieces, as well as a large selection of contemporary style fireplaces. Our stone masons are experts in the area of restoration. Samples of our work can be seen in Kilkenny Castle, Aras an Uactarán, and the National Museum. In addition to our chimneypieces we also carry an exclusive range of garden statues, busts, and over mantles, not to mention a vast selection of antique and reproduction grates and fire baskets. We have fire pieces to suit all tastes, so whether you live in an apartment of a mansion, Belle Cheminée has a fireplace to suit your home. Our showroom is located in 106 Caple Street, Dublin 1, and we promise you it well worth the visit.

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Blu: The Blu showroom is a statement of beauty and function. Brands renowned for unique design and innovation, showcase these qualities to design-savvy customers and trade professionals through inspiring visual interiors and customised service never seen before in Ireland. The Blu showroom allows people to view products exactly how they are designed to be used – in fully integrated bathroom suites. We offer a unique collection featuring exclusive pieces sourced from all over the world, including: Agape/Laufen/Aeon/Merriott/Bette/MHS/ Bisque/Merlyn/Catalano/Metalkris/Cosmic/ Nic Design/Decotec/Planit/Dornbracht Ritmonio/D’un jardin a l’autre/Roca/Duravit/ Samuel Heath/Geberit/Sonia/Grohe/The Radiator Company/Hansgrohe/Ultraheat Hueppe/Villeroy & Boch/Kaldewei/Zucchetti/ KOS. Whitemill Industrial Estate, Wexford, Tel: +353 (0)53 9143267 Email: info@ blubathrooms.ie Web: www.blubathrooms.ie

Cavey: Long established as one of Ireland’s leading Interior Designers, Aidan Cavey now brings a breath of fresh air to the world of Irish interiors with the opening of his relaxed and very stylish retail showroom in the heart of Dublin 4. Simply called CAVEY, the extensive store offers furniture, fabrics, lamps and accessories from all the names that matter. Several famous brands are exclusive to CAVEY, including iconic French designer Philippe Hurel’s furniture range. A complete design service is available for both domestic and contract projects. The recent refurbishment of the bedrooms at The Merrion Hotel, Dublin, the creation of the hotel’s much acclaimed Merrion Penthouse, and many prestigious private-client projects, indicate the high standards constantly achieved by CAVEY Interior Design. CAVEY, 4 Shaws Lane, off Bath Avenue (at railway bridge). Dublin 4. Tel: +353 1 660 0600 www.cavey.ie M[ Wh[ Z[Z_YWj[Z je j^[ [nf[h_[dY[ WdZ Xki_d[ii e\ X[Wkjo _d XWj^heec Z[i_]d # 8bk 9edj[cfehWho 8Wj^heeci

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Clive Christian France: Clive Christian have opened a brand new showroom in the heart of Paris’ St-Germain-Des-Pres district. The display includes a new Architectural style kitchen set into an ivory woodpanelled lounge and office space, running into a Regency style bathroom in cream and 24.5 carat gold leaf. Downstairs the ultrasleek Alpha style kitchen in dark walnut is on display. The showroom is situated in an ancient building which used to be a 14th century monastery. Huge front windows look out over the river Seine. It’s altogether a fantastic display of interior architecture in a beautiful setting and must be seen. Clive Christian, 57 Quai des grands Augustins, 75006 Paris. Tel: +33 1 40 46 00 00 Email: paris@clive.com

Design House: is an international bespoke and luxury kitchen specialist. Based in Dublin, we design, create and install customized classic and contemporary kitchens for private and commercial clients in Ireland and overseas. Our hand-crafted Living Kitchen range offers the ultimate in bespoke classic living while our luxury Poggenpohl and Porsche Design collections can be tailored infinitely to suit more contemporary tastes. Design House kitchens are powered by iconic global appliance brands Sub-Zero, Wolf and Miele but as bespoke specialists we can integrate any appliance range into our kitchen concepts. In addition to luxury kitchen creation we also hand-craft customized solid wood furniture for any living space in the home. www.designhousedublin.com

Ebony and Co: Ebony and Co invites you to share our passion for the most perfect, handcrafted wood floors on the planet. This passion starts during the cutting and milling process, when our professionals harvest and handcraft a unique range of native North American woods which become the raw materials for making the finest wood floors. Each wood is selected from old growth forests and dried for up to a year before being custom milled. At each stage of the production process we are rigorously committed to the highest possible quality standards in the achievement of perfection. The result is the creation of a floor with a timeless, ageless beauty... a true work of art that is always the subject of profound admiration. Our floors made from boards up to 20 inches wide and 16 feet long blend perfectly with any space, from elegant period surrounds to cutting-edge contemporary interiors. www.ebonyandco.com

Farrow & Ball: Farrow & Ball makes all of its paint and wallpaper at its factory in Dorset. Producing unrivalled colours, using only the finest ingredients, Farrow & Ball still makes paint and wallpaper by traditional methods and to original formulations. Farrow & Ball stands apart as Britain’s only paint manufacturer to produce a full range of modern and traditional formulations, and because its recipes have a much higher pigment content than other paints, Farrow & Ball colours are renowned for their visibly greater depth. With over 130 paint colours available in thirteen finishes, and over 700 wallpaper colourways in striés, stripes and block printed patterns, the choice is virtually unlimited. View all the paint colours and wallpaper ranges in the Farrow & Ball Dublin Showroom, 14 Cornmarket, Dublin 8. Tel: (01) 677 0111 or visit www.farrow-ball.com.

Flexform: Thanks to a perfect relationship between design and production, Flexform has been able to enjoy gripping contacts with more than one designers’ generation: from Cini Boeri to Joe Colombo, from Sergio Asti to Rodolfo Bonetto. Nowadays, Paolo Nava’s and Antonio Citterio’s lucid and inventive designs, which are responsible for much of the recent Flexform output, have been flanked by a number of significant strands of the Modern Movement culture with the production of some projects by the Lombard rationalists Asnago & Vender; Flexform Mood, an extensive collection for the home designed by John Hutton. His work is characterised by quality, glamour and classic simplicity. He combines contemporary design with classical foundation and in the process transforms the conventional into the extraordinary. Web: www.flexform.it

Florio’s Furniture: Florio’s Furniture is proud to announce their new Kitchen Design Studio in the picturesque village of Adare, a Co. Limerick, a prime shopping location, 2hrs from Dublin & Waterford; 1hr from Cork; 1hr 1/2 from Galway. Diego Florio, proprietor and kitchen designer, Exclusive Representative of the Italian, luxury kitchen brand, Marchi Cucine is convinced that the range will revolutionise the Irish Market. Marchi Cucinw, a new concept in kitchens with 25 different ranges, boasts excellent craftsmanship, using the finest raw materials. All kitchens are fully bespoke, 100% handmade, mixing contemporary and traditional features using solid oak, solid walnut, stainless steel and pewter. Florio’s have proudly fitted the Marchi Cucine range into some of Ireland’s most prestigious homes. Marchi Cucine is a userfriendly kitchen range, producing astonishing end products (fitted & free standing) both sophisticated, yet timeless. Tel: 061 396397; www.floriosfurnitureshop.com; info@ floriosfurnitureshop.com

Gaggenau: is Europe’s foremost manufacturer of luxury built-in appliances for the domestic kitchen offering the very best in design and performance. Specialising in cooking, cooling and dishwashing and ventilation appliances for building in to kitchen furniture, Gaggenau offers restaurant grade appliances for the domestic kitchen. Michelin starred chef, Raymond Blanc of Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons has selected Gaggenau appliances for the working kitchen in his world-renowned cookery school in Oxford and he waxes lyrical about his Gaggenau steam oven to the press on a regular basis. Gaggenau’s exclusive UK showroom in London at 40 Wigmore Street displays a wide range of the company’s extensive built in appliance collection. Exclusive cookery demonstrations and other special events are held here and personal viewings with expert staff can be arranged by appointment from Monday to Saturday. www.gaggenau.com

Hayburn & Co: is acknowledged as one of the leading designers and manufacturers of bespoke furniture and architectural joinery for the discerning homeowner. Specialising in hand-built kitchens, fitted furniture, hardwood windows and doors, architectural shutters and panelling as well as staircases, each commission is afforded a truly personal service. With an experienced team of designers, Hayburn & Co. offers expert guidance on design, internal layout, timber choice and specialist paint finishes, from conception through to final installation. Skilled cabinet makers individually craft each piece and clients are encouraged to view their commission during the manufacturing process. A selection of our work is available for viewing on our website www. hayburn.com or by visiting our Showroom. Alternatively contact our Offices on +44 (0)28 25 871442 to discuss your commission further or to order a brochure.

Houseworks: 2007 saw Mark and Rosie Shortt undertake renovations which saw the Upper Erne Street, Dublin 2 showroom treble in size with two demonstration kitchens and double the number of show kitchens. Designed by SieMatic architects, the new showroom is lifestyle oriented featuring full living solutions including dining and living furniture from Rolf Benz, living space solutions from Kettnaker and bedrooms from Wackenhut. Houseworks has been awarded both the kbbreview Master Retailer Award for Kitchens 2007 and the showroom Award for Kitchens for houseworks, Belfast. In the 13 years of the event, houseworks are the first retailer to win both awards in the same year. Houseworks has contributed to the ongoing success of SieMatic in Ireland supplying kitchens for developments such as The Four Seasons, the K Club, Carton House and Mount Juliet. 11-15 Upper Erne Street, Dublin 2, the Boucher Centre, Belfast and Donnybrook Commercial Park, Cork. www.houseworks.ie

House of Coolmore: is a long established family business and is acknowledged as one of the leading designers and manufacturers of hand crafted furniture throughout Ireland. We specialise in bespoke modern and traditional kitchens, bedrooms, bathrooms and studies, created in whatever wood you choose. All of our work is distinctive in design and we offer expert guidance from conception through to installation. All of our work is handcrafted at our workshop in Cork by our highly skilled craftsmen and is installed by our team of fitters who have been with us for the past 20 years or so. We also offer an extensive range of appliances to choose from including Miele, Neff, Gaggenau, Liebherr, AEG, Fisher & Paykel, Range Master and Aga. Consultations are by appointment please contact our Cork office 021 4378572 further information. A selection of our work is available to view at our showrooms and at www.houseofcoolmore.com

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Pumpkin armchair and sofa. Design: Pierre Paulin. For a catalogue visit www.ligne-roset.co.uk or call 0870 7777 202 T H E OR IGIN AL . HANDW O V E N F R O M W E AT HE R -R E SI STANT DE DO N F I B R E .

DEDON Collections HEMISPHERE and ORBIT. Design by Richard Frinier.

Helen Turkington Paint Collection: The Helen Turkington Collection of paints, produced in collaboration with Colortrend, is a unique palette of contemporary, classic colours in a premium quality acrylic paint. Helen’s paint colours work in harmony with her unique style and vision. The collection offers a range of paint colours created to compliment the projects undertaken by Helen and her team of Designers, with all of the colours marrying comfortably with Helen Turkington fabrics and soft furnishings. Contact 47 Dunville Avenue, Ranelagh, Dublin 6. Tel: +353 1 4215138 www. helenturkington.ie. Turkington Interiors, 27 Sweep Road, Cookstown, Co. Tyrone BT80 JW Tel: 048 867 63438. Colortrend, Maynooth Road, Celbridge, Co. Kildare Tel: +353 1 6288224.

Helen Turkington Fabric Collection: Helen Turkington fabric stores offer a unique product to the interior market in that we stock over 300 unbranded designer fabrics at 40% less than the recommended retail price. We stock linens, silks, velvets, cottons and wools in a wide range of colours and designs. Our buy off the rail ethos means we are giving customers a straight forward way to buy premium fabrics with prices starting from only €8.50 per metre. Our team of qualified interior designers are on hand to advise and inspire in-house or onsite.Helen Turkington Fabrics, 7 Terminus Mills, Clonskeagh, Dublin 6. Tel: +353 1 2602524 www.helenturkington.ie. Helen Turkington Fabrics, 4-5 The Parade, St. Johns Hill, Clapham, SW11 1TG. Tel: 02072289435 www.helenturkington.co.uk.

Leisure Plan: Leisure Plan is the exclusive importer and marketing partner for three of the most prestigious brands in the outdoor furniture market. Dedon, Ego and Fischer Mobel collectively represent the very best in design quality and reliability, with materials offering the highest level of outdoor performance. Each brand includes models that have achieved international recognition for outstanding design, all being a winner of the famous ‘Red Dot’ award. Leisure Plan’s furniture is specified by hotels, spas, cruise lines as well as residential projects furnishing terraces, patios, conservatories, deck areas, poolsides and gardens. All cushions are made in Leisure Plan’s own workshop, enabling items to be customised through to bespoke fabrics and colourways. Leisure Plan’s 2,000sq ft showroom within a converted old chapel (1836) is only 10mins from Stansted Airport and 40mins from London Liverpool Street station. The permanent display representing all three brands, is open to visitors throughout the year. www.leisureplan.co.uk

beautifully. Ligne Roset:Live“Ligne Roset is synonymous with modern luxury and invites consumers to revel in a contemporary, design-forward lifestyle”. Known for its artful collaborations with both established and up-and-coming talents in contemporary design, Ligne Roset offers consumers an entire lifestyle in which to live both boldly and beautifully via its furniture collections and complimentary decorative accessories, lighting, rugs, textiles and occasional items. Creativity is a key value of the Ligne Roset brand: if a new product demands new materials or productions methods, the company will simply acquire them. Seats, pieces of furniture, lighting, textiles, rugs or bed linens: the idea precedes and the technique follows. www.ligne-roset.com

Meadows & Byrne: Meadows & Byrne began with the concept of offering beautifully designed and great quality home furnishings at an affordable price. Today that belief has become the foundation for each and every one of our ten stores nationwide. With a passion for fresh perspectives on homewares, bringing effortless style and elegance to your home, Meadows and Byrne has also become the instinctive choice when purchasing a gift for any occasion. Contact us on 021 4344100 or info@meadowsandbyrne. com. Visit our website to shop online at www.meadowsandbyrne.com.

Miele Ireland LTD.: Miele Ireland Ltd. is a supplier of high end, superior domestic appliances. Milele believes wholeheartedly in quality and in keeping with this credo Miele produces a wide range of highly durable, stylish products that will fit in with any style of kitchen. The range comprises of washing machines, tumble dryers, domestic rotary ironers, dishwashers, built-in appliances (ceramic hobs, CombiSets, ovens, cooker hoods, steam ovens, coffee machines, refrigerators & freezers), microwave ovens and vacuum cleaners. The products are available in a range of colours to suit your needs including white, black and stainless steel. Miele products are available from all good stockists nationwide. A full list is now available on www.miele.ie or contact Tel: (01) 461 0701.

Minnie Peters: Miriam Peters is one of Irelands most outstanding designers; she offers a highly creative, bespoke personal service for projects around the world from her Dublin design studio where she is surrounded by a skilled design team. Since starting her company in 1994 her exquisite taste along with her dynamic talent for mixing old with new, is avidly sought after by clients who want unpretentious interiors filled with style and comfort. Miriam with her core design team focuses exclusively on project work and offers extensive expertise in interior and exterior architecture, design and management. The showroom displays many beautiful pieces of furniture and accessories, most of which are exclusive to Minnie Peters from bespoke companies from around the world. Designers are also available to help you choose anything from dining tables, dining chairs, sofas and lamps to make your home beautiful. www.minniepeters.com. To arrange an appointment please call 00 353 1 2933919.

McNally Design for Living: Since beginning the company over forty years ago in County Dublin, the McNally family have been establishing themselves as market leaders in the kitchen industry. They have long been associated with excellent design, cutting edge styling, first rate customer care and a savvy approach to budgeting. The flagship showroom on Serpentine Avenue houses four exceptional brands on four floors. Added to the portfolio of brands is Bulthaup which is revered in the design world for its stunning good looks, immaculate lines and Germanic precision engineered functions. There are also the innovative Hulsta bedroom and living storage solutions on the second floor, Leolux unique upholstery on the first floor and a ground floor dedicated to the Alno and own brand kitchen ranges. These sit alongside appliances by Gaggenau, Viking, Miele, Siemens and Neff. Be in the know at 44 Serpentine Avenue, Ballsbridge Dublin 4 Tel: (01) 6604856 or www.mcnallyliving.ie

Newcastle Design: Founded in 1997. Newcastle Design is now a Cornerstone of the Irish Kitchen and fine furniture market. Having gone through and continuing to work with intensive business and marketing coaching says Ronan Carey has kept us at the forefront of this business . This combined with our awe inspired new designs with influences from all around the globe and our ability to offer our clients unbeatable value and service time on time for all rooms in their homes. Newcastle Design also cater for building projects from the mere replacement of furniture electrical requirement, to full scale property renovation together with their associate list of trade professionals. The key to our constant repeat business is that each and every client deals with Ronan through the design process and with Phillip for the insured smooth running of their project thus experiencing an unrivalled customer service and turnaround. Visit www. newcastledesign. ie now and let us bring your home back to life. Tel: 0404 65000

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BBDO

Leisure Plan · UK Sales Office & Showroom Silver Street · Stansted Mountfitchet · Essex C M 24 8 HD Tel. 00 44 1279 816001 · Fax 00 44 1279 816089 sales@leisureplan.co.uk · www.dedon.de

Helen Turkington Interiors Collection: Dunville Avenue is now open over 8 years. The store stocks a wide range of furniture, lamps and accessories. We are constantly sourcing new products at affordable prices, this is reflected in our new Spring Summer stock. Our inspirational room sets, created by our team of interior designers, offer clients the very best in choice and service. Our Irish made furniture range can be customised to meet our customers varying needs. Our new in house fresh flower shop “Flowers on the Avenue” is the latest addition to the Turkington brand stocking a range of vases, planters and hurricanes for indoor and outdoor use with prices starting from €9.95 for vases and €22 for hurricanes. Contact 47 Dunville Avenue, Ranelagh, Dublin 6. Tel: 01 4215 138 www. helenturkington.ie

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THE FLOOR: Veneto Bianco 90 x 90 Slabs

DIRECT IMPORTERS OF THE WORLDS FINEST NATURAL STONE

For a VIP showroom launch invite please

Brook Buildings, Rossculban, Kesh, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland BT93 1TF T: 028 6863 2200 F:028 6863 2251 E:sales@porshastone.com www.porshastone.com

O’Connor Kitchens: From a small family run business founded in 1988 by Peter O’Connor, O’Connor kitchens has in its 24 years of operation grown to become one of Ireland’s leading kitchen design studios. With a state of the art 30,000sq ft facility, including a stunning showroom located in the picturesque Drumleck, O’Connors offers in-house bespoke manufacturing and design services to an extensive customer base throughout Ireland and the UK. O’Connor’s prides itself on its personal relationship with each customer from design to delivery, and the passion for beautiful kitchens ensures that its in-house design team will work with you to realise your dream kitchen. Contact us on 042 937 2625 Email:info@oconnorkitchens.ie www.oconnorkitchens.ie

Porsha Stone: At the heart of a beautiful email: sales@porshainteriors.com home and garden are stunning natural materials used in a creative way to produce breathtaking centre pieces. Porsha Stone, located in Kesh, Co Fermanagh, prides itself in assisting you design a stunning living space in and out-door. We are one of Ireland’s largest importers and stockists of natural stone, including marble and travertine through to mosaics and mouldings. Visit our luxurious lifestyle showroom and you will be overwhelmed by the fabulous range of products that we can use to help meet your specific requirements. Our bespoke design service is both pleasing and rewarding. We believe that to get the most enjoyment from creating your dream home and garden is team effort... so with you dreams and our vast experience and innovative ideas you will be thrilled at the end of the project. Natural stone ages with beauty so you will have a lifetime to enjoy it. www.porshastone.com

Quooker: The Quooker boiling water tap is one of those rare “must-haves”. If you ask anyone who has a Quooker they’ll often say ‘it’s my most useful and used appliance’. Switched on more than an oven, hob, dishwasher and easily blowing the blender away. If you think about all the myriad tasks that a Quooker tap can perform it’s really not surprising. For one thing - by dispensing 100°C water - it is the only tap of its kind that replaces that stalwart of the kitchen, the old-fashioned energy greedy kettle. On average a kettle uses the same amount of energy to boil a litre of water as it takes to run a fridge for about seven hours and in the UK we boil our kettle on average four times a day! In contrast using a Quooker, is quick, efficient and instant meaning you use only what you need because the 100°C boiling water is there, ‘on tap’. www.quooker.co.uk info@quooker.co.uk +44 (0)845 190 4008

Rhatigan & Hick: was founded by Ed Rhatigan & Gary Hick. Our team, work from a 10,000 sq foot converted barn in Co.Wicklow, with showrooms located in the award winning village of Aughrim Co.Wicklow, close to the Brook Lodge Hotel & Spa. Our primary business is to provide our clients with the best of all forms and styles of handcrafted freestanding and fitted furniture. Rhatigan & Hick are true bespoke furniture makers and designers. We draw on styles from a bygone era with new ideas and speculated styles of tomorrow. Understanding how furniture is made is the essence of furniture design. We employ a team of six specialist craftsmen with many years of experience producing Kitchens, Bedrooms, and Free-standing pieces of the highest degree of merit for both private and corporate clients. Tel: +353 (0)402 94661 Email:info@rhatiganandhick.ie www. rhatiganandhick.ie

Renaissance by Design: Paschal O’Reilly of Design by Renaissance is one of Ireland’s best kept secrets. With a high end portfolio of clients who return time and again either to refurbish their existing homes or to furnish new homes with his unique flair for design and colour and his unwavering direction. Paschal has been responsible for creating beautiful interiors for a wide range of both commercial and private properties. Clients can visit his elegant new showrooms at the Village at Lyons, Celbridge, where a friendly and professional service is guaranteed in a relaxing atmosphere. Design by Renaissance are specialists in bespoke soft furnishing and upholstery whilst also stocking leading furniture designs. If you are looking for quality and style, something unusual, either modern or traditional, conservative to unique, classical to avant-garde, we should be your first port of call – open Monday to Friday from 10am to 6pm and by appointment on Saturdays. Phone 00 353 (01) 627 5177 or email paschal@designbyrenaissance.com

Scavolini: has been Italy’s leading kitchen brand since 1984. They have been producing kitchens for over 40 years. Bringing quality within everyone’s reach has always been one of Scavolini’s top priorities, Scavolini has now a very strong presence within Ireland with stores in Newry and Derry in Northern Ireland and in Southern Ireland, Malahide, Newbridge, Waterford, Limerick, Cork and Galway. Scavolini kitchens are fitted in more than one million homes around the world. The range contains the ideal furnishing solution for an area of the home where we live a large portion of our home life. A host of models, from traditional to contemporary, Scavolini has an endless choice of materials and colours, an infinite range of units and accessories, Scavolini is an unrivalled source of kitchen furnishing ideas. Ravensdale Indoor Living Ltd, the Irish Agents for Scavolini and can be contacted on Tel: 048/028 3025 2324. The catalogues can be downloaded from our website at www.scavolini.com

Sub Zero & Wolf: The Sub-Zero Freezer Company pioneered residential refrigeration in the USA and is the leading manufacturer of premium refrigeration appliances worldwide. Synonymous with the cutting-edge design, Sub-Zero is the favoured brand of celebrities and renowned chefs.The collection includes built in, inherited and free-standing options, in addition to specialist wine storage. The unique dual compression system, which enables fridge and freezer sections to operate independently of each other, preserves food for longer. The Wolf Appliance Company offers a comprehensive range of ovens, cook-tops, ranges and ventilation products for the serious in-home cook. Every Wolf product, from the built-in ovens to dual fuel ranges, is designed from the ground up to give the user ultimate control and complete cooking confidence. Together Sub-Zero and Wolf form a natural partnership offering luxury goods and state of the art innovation to a premium market worldwide. Ph: +44(0)208 418 3800. www.westye.co.uk. Email: info@westye.co.uk

TileStyle: TileStyle, which is located in a stunning showroom at Ballymount Retail Centre has been offering customers a vast range of Tiles and Natural Stone for almost 30 years. Constantly adapting to customers needs, TileStyle introduced a beautiful Wood Flooring range from Kahrs in 2009, and this year TileStyle is delighted to have opened a brand new Porcelanosa Bathroom Showroom, offering the complete range of showers, baths, bathroom furniture, sanitary ware and accessories. The range of Tiles, Stone, Wood & Bathrooms now available at TileStyle is exceptional with something to suit all tastes and budgets. TileStyle is committed to offering customers an unrivalled range of quality products with value as standard. TileStyle, Ballymount Retail Centre, Ballymount Road Upper, D24. (Exit 10 off the M50) Tel: 01 8555200 Fax: 01 8557471 Email: info@tilestyle.ie Web: www.tilestyle.ie Open 7 Days.

Versatile Bathrooms & Interiors: Versatile Bathroom & Interiors’ aim is to create the epitome of luxury in its showroom. Appealing to all the senses, with live displays featuring running and bubbling water and evocative scents, there is a real sense of relaxation and harmony created within the space. With a mixture of room sets, lifestyle themes and individual displays. Opulence, tranquility, harmony, traditional, friendly and welcoming are all words that Versatile use to describe their showroom. Twice Winner if the Master Retailer Award for Bathroom’s for UK & Ireland. Catherine Treacy, joint Managing Director says “We believe in providing a high quality service, which includes comprehensive staff training, market research - we visit the European fairs to ensure we are up to date with the latest trends, and ensuring that our back of house operation is as efficient as our front of house is stylish”. www.versatile.ie

Waterloo Bathrooms: is without doubt one of Ireland’s finest and well renowned retailers of high quality, cutting edge, designer sanitary ware, ceramics, showers and bathroom furniture. We are very well known and highly respected by Architects, Specifiers and Interior Designers who have all used our products for both residential and commercial applications. Our extensive product portfolio covers a wide spectrum of design choices, from classic, time honoured traditional styles to the very latest in contemporary and minimalistic designs. Some of our brands include Duravit, Laufen, Grohe, Hansgrohe & Matki. We offer an excellent service that incorporates a complete design & installation package. Waterloo Bathrooms, 4 Wellington Street, Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin. Tel: +353 1 2842100 Fax: +3531 2842009 www.waterloo.ie

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Accessories

626 6798 (Baumatic). Kontinental Kitchen Supplies: Dublin 10 -

8070 - www.duff-tisdall.ie. Environment Furniture (at Maison

Adrian Interior Furnishings: Newry - Tel: (048) 3026 8333 - www. Tel: (01) 626 2314 - www.kks.ie. Miele Ireland: Dublin 24 - Tel: (01) 461

& Chateau): Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 636 0114 - www.maisonchateau.com.

adrian-interiors.com. Arnotts: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 805 0400 - www. 0710 - www.miele.ie. Neff: KAL Dublin 24 - Tel: (01) 413 6400 - www.neff.

European Living: Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 626 9005 - www.european_

arnotts.ie. Avoca: Dublin 2 -Tel: (01) 677 4215 - www.avoca.ie. Beaufort ie. Sub Zero & Wolf: Tel: +44(0) 208 418 3800 - www.westye.co.uk.

living.com. Fultons: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 4700 - www.fultons.

Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: (028) 9261 9508 - www.beaufortinteriors. Siemens: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 216 2402 - www.siemens.ie. Waterford

co.uk. Flanagans: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 0218 - www.flanagans.ie.

co.uk. Bellissima: Co. Cork - Tel: (023) 54740 - www.bellissima.ie. Stanley: Co Waterford - Tel: (051) 302 300 - www.waterfordstanley.com. Helen Turkington Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 - www. Brown Thomas: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 605 6666 - www.brownthomas. com. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685 1028 - www.

Bathrooms

helenturkington.ie. KA International: Co Dublin - Tel: (01) 278 2033 - www.kainternational.ie. Kenneth Hodgins: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 293

bushfieldinteriors.ie. Cavey: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600 - www.cavey. Absolute Bathrooms: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 276 5689. Alwood

8898 - www.kennethhodgins.ie. Limited Edition: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01)

ie. Coote & Co.: Co. Cavan - Tel: (086) 345 5024 - www.cooteandco. Kitchens & Bathrooms: Co. Armagh - Tel: (048) 3832 3296 -www.

453 1123. Living Quarters: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 7477 - www.

com. Design by Renaissance: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 - alwoodkitchens.com. Antica: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 296 0136 - www.

living-quarters.ie. Lomi: Dublin 13 - Tel: (01) 839 7001 - www.lomi.ie.

www.renaissancedesign.ie. Environment Furniture (at Maison antica.ie. Aqua Systems Ireland Ltd.: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01) 812

Just Beds: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 284 5281. McNally: Dublin 4 - Tel:

& Chateau): Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 636 0114 - www.maisonchateau.com. 8200. Armitage Shanks: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 456 4525 - www.

(01) 660 4856 - www.mcnallyliving.ie. Mimosa Interiors: Dublin 4 -

European Living: Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 626 9005 - www.european_ armitage-shanks.co.uk. Argos Showers & Bathrooms Ltd.: Dublin

Tel: (01) 269 8000. O-Hagan Design: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 872 4016.

living.com. Fultons: Belfast - Tel: (028) 9038 4700 - www.fultons.co.uk. 2 - Tel: (01) 478 2003. Bath House: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 214 0907

Quest Interiors: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 0299. Ray Shannon

George Francis Design Interiors: Co. Tipperary - Tel: (051) - www.bathhouse.ie. Beggs & Partners: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9023

Headboards: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 453 2889. Roche Bobois: Dublin

645495. Harriet’s House: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 7077. Hedgeroe 5791 - www.beggsandpartners.com. Bathroom Accessories: Co. 18 - Tel: (01) 653 1650 - www.roche-bobois.com. Silk Road: Dublin 17 Living with Design: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294 8932 - www.hedgeroe. Dublin - Tel: (01) 283 2244. Bathroom Design: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01)

- Tel: (01) 848 5044 - www.silkroad.ie. SKI Interiors: Co. Kildare - Tel:

com. Helen Turkington Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 454 8784. Bathrooms & Tiles Direct: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 812

(045) 874970 - www.skiinteriors.com.

- www.helenturkington.ie. Imagine Wallpaper: Co Kilkenny - Tel: 8282. Bathrooms of Tomorrow: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 296 2320 (056) 772 4760 - www.imaginewallpaper.com. Inreda: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) www.bathroomsoftomorrow.ie. Blu Contemporary Bathrooms:

Entertainment Systems

476 0362 - www.inreda.ie. Jennifer Goh: Co. Leitrim - Tel: (071) 962 Wexford - Tel: (053) 916 6623 - www.blubathrooms.ie. Ethos: Dublin 1

Bang & Olufsen: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 260 2404 - www.bang-oulsfen.

2208 - www.jennifergohdesign.com. KA International: Co Dublin - - Tel: (01) 823 0706. Fired Earth: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 663 6160 - www.

co.uk. Cloney Audio: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 9449 - www.cloneyaudio.

Tel: (01) 278 2033 - www.kainternational.ie. Kenneth Hodgins: Co. firedearth.com. Fitzmawn Interiors & Tiles: Co Dublin - Tel: (01)

com. Lyric Hi-Fi: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 1296 - www.lyrichifi.com.

Dublin - Tel: (01) 293 8898 - www.kennethhodgins.ie. Laura Ashley: 289 8822 - www.fitzmawninteriors.ie. Ideal Bathrooms: Dublin 12 -

Philips Shop: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 474 0788 - www. Phillipsshop.ie.

Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 679 5433 - www.lauraashley.com. Limited Edition: Tel: (01) 460 9911 - www.idealbathrooms.ie. Knobs and Knockers:

Sony Centre: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 6670990 - www.sony.ie. The Smart

Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 453 1123. Lomi: Dublin 13 - Tel: (01) 839 7001 - www. Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671 0288 - www.knobsandknockers.ie. Livingspace:

House: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 634 6000 - www.thesmarthouse.ie.

lomi.ie. Meadows & Byrne: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 652 0000 - www. Belfast - Tel: (048) 9024 4333 - www.livingspace-ni.com. Porcelanosa:

Co.Wicklow - Tel: (01) 204 6000 - www.powerscourt.ie. Roche Bobois: 3 - Tel: (01) 833 4125 - www.showercentre.ie. The Radiator Shop:

Fabrics & Window Dressings

Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 653 1650 - www.roche-bobois.com. Quest Co. Down - Tel: (028) 9181 5991 - www.radiatorshop.co.uk. The Yard:

Adrian Interior Furnishings: Newry - Tel: (048) 3026 8333 - www.

Interiors: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 0299. Select Interiors: Dublin 8 Belfast - Tel: (048) 9040 5600 - www.theyard.co.uk. John Usher Ltd.:

adrian-interiors.com. Alan Espey Interiors: Newtownards - Tel:

- Tel: (01) 454 6626 - www.selectinteriors.ie. Silk Road: Dublin 17 - Tel: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01) 817 9755. Vogue Bathrooms: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01)

(048) 9181 5076. At Home with Clerys: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294

(01) 848 5044 - www.silkroad.ie. SKI Interiors: Co. Kildare - Tel: (045) 812 8200 - www.voguebathrooms.com. Versatile: Co. Meath - Tel: (046)

1710. Beaufort Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 9261 9508 - www.

meadowsandbyrne.com. Marks & Spencer: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 872 Dublin 12 - (01) 458 4881 - www.porcelanosa.com. Shires: Wicklow - Tel: 8833 - www.marksandspencer.com. Powerscourt Garden Pavilion: (0402) 31288 - www.shires-bathrooms.com. Shower Centre: Dublin

874970 - www.skiinteriors.com. Watsham & Bohn: Co. Dublin - Tel: 9029444 - www.versatile.ie. Waterloo Bathrooms: Co. Dublin - Tel: beaufortinteriors.co.uk. Benedict: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 1693 - www. (01) 214 0741 - www.watshambohn.com.

Appliances

(01) 284 2100 - www.waterloo.ie.

benedict.ie. Brian S Nolan Ltd.: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 280 0564 - www.

Beds & Storage

briansnolan.ie. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685 1028 - www.bushfieldinteriors.ie. Castle Curtains and Blinds: Dublin 18

Aga: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 663 6166 - www.aga.ie. Appliance Adrian Interior Furnishings: Newry - Tel: (048) 3026 8333 -

- Tel: (01) 295 5100. Cavey: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600 - www.cavey.

Solutions: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 813 5535. C&F Quadrant Ltd.: www.adrian-interiors.com. Arnotts: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 805 0400

ie. Charisma Blinds: Co. Fermanagh - Tel: (048) 6632 7111. Charles

Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 630 5757 - www.cfquadrant.ie. Design House: - www.arnotts.ie. At Home with Clerys: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294

Newhaven:

Co. Kildare - Tel: (059) 916 2882. Collette Ward

Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 235 2222 - www.designhouseconcepts.com - (Miele, 1710 - www.clerysbedstore.ie. Beaufort Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: Interiors: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (0402) 36585 - www.collettewardinteriors. Neff, Gaggenau, Wolf, SubZero). D.I.D Electrical: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01) (048) 9261 9508 - www.beaufortinteriors.co.uk. Bedroom Drama:

ie. Cotton Box Designs: Co. Galway - Tel: (091) 777040 - www.

640 5002 - www.did.ie. Discount Electrical: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 874 Dublin - Tel: (01) 473 5990. Bedroom Elegance: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01)

cbox.ie. Cross Roisin Silks: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 284 6282 - www.

9666 - www.discountelectrical.ie. Drumms: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 460 872 8210 - www.bedroomelegance.ie. Beds Plus: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01)

silks.ie. Design by Renaissance: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 -

4355 - www.drumms.ie. ECD Appliances: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 864 671 2686. Brown Thomas: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 605 6666 - www.

www.renaissancedesign.ie. Designer’s Library: Cork - Tel: (021) 482

1976. Electrolux Group Irl: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 419 5100 - www. brownthomas.com. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685

4449. Duff Tisdall: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 855 8070 - www.duff-tisdall.ie.

electrolux.co.uk (Zanussi, AEG, Electrolux, Tricity Bendix). Elica: Dublin 24 1028 - www.bushfieldinteriors.ie. Cavey: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600

Farrow & Ball: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 677 0111 - www.farrow-ball.com.

- Tel: (01) 413 6400 - www.elica.ie. Fisher & Paykel: Dublin - Tel: 1800 - www.cavey.ie. Classic Furniture: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01) 822 2822 -

Flanagans: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 0218 - www.flanagans.ie. Fraser

625 173 - www.fisherpaykel.ie. Franke: KAL, Dublin 24 - Tel: (01) 413 www.classicfurniture.ie. Clive Christian: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 291 7020. Nolan Designer Interior Shutters: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9087 4244

322

6400 - www.franke.ie. Gaggenau: www.gaggenau.co.uk. Houseworks Design by Renaissance: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 - www.

- www.frasernolan.co.uk. Fultons: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 4700 - www.

Ltd.: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 676 9511 - www.houseworks.ie (miele, Siemens, renaissancedesign.ie. Diamond Furniture: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 293

fultons.co.uk. Furnishing Distributors: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 276

neff, gaggenau). KAL: Dublin 22 - Tel: (01) 413 6400 (Neff, Amana, Elica) - 7848 - www.diamondliving.ie. Dreambeds: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454

5811. Galway Curtain & Blind Centre: Galway - Tel: (091) 755

www.kal.ie. Kitchen Appliance Distribution: Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 6626 - www.selectinteriors.ie. Duff Tisdall: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 855

740 - galwaycurtainsandblinds.com. Anna Gleeson Interiors: Co.

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Dublin - Tel: (087) 264 7502. Harriet’s House: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) Fireplaces: Co Kilkenny - Tel: (056) 77 26177 - www.hardingfireplaces. Dublin - Tel: (01) 293 8898 - www.kennethhodgins.ie. Kris Turnbull: 288 4822. Harry Corry: Dublin 15 - Tel: (01) 822 1827. Hegarty com. Heating Distributors: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) 864 8950 - www. Belfast - Tel: (048) 9046 9659 - www.kristurnbull.com. Livingspace: Fabrics: Co. Cork - Tel: (025) 32084. Helen Casey Interiors: Co. heating-distributors.ie. Henderson Fireplaces: Co. L’Derry - Tel: (048) Belfast - Tel: (048) 9024 4333 - www.livingspace-ni.com. Limited Kerry - Tel: (066) 714 1300. Helen Turkington Interiors: Dublin 8674 8536. L & J Fireplaces: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 628 0657. T & A Edition: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 453 1133. Lindy Clarke Interiors: 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 - www.helenturkington.ie. Hogan Pey: Cork - Kernoghan: Co. Antrim - Tel: (048) 9084 2311. Lamartine: Dublin 12 Belfast - Tel: (048) 9045 0060 - www.lindyclarke.com. Lomi: Dublin 13 Tel: (021) 429 2671. Hugh Forkin Interiors: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) - Tel: (01) 450 2662 - www.lamartine-fireplaces.com. M & B Fireplaces: - Tel: (01) 839 7001 - www.lomi.ie. McNally: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 860 3003. Homefocus at Hickeys: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 284 5079 Dublin 9 - Tel: (01) 873 0053. Paramount Distributors Dublin: 4856 - www.mcnallyliving.ie. Meadows & Byrne: Dublin 17 - Tel: - www.hickeyfabrics.ie. Interior Dreams: Limerick - Tel: (061) 315 Dublin 7 - Tel: (01) 677 7474 - www.pdd.ie. Portadown Fireplaces: (01) 652 0000 - www.meadowsandbyrne.com. Meehan Handbuilt 799 - www.interiordreams.ie. Kevin Kelly Interiors: Dublin 4 - Tel: Co. Armagh - Tel: (048) 3833 3122 - portadownfireplaces.co.uk. Royale Furniture: Enniskillen - Tel: (048) 6634 1111. Minima: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 668 8533 - www.kevinkellyinteriors.ie. Ken Jackson Interiors: Fireplaces: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 298 7632. Ryan & Smith Ltd.: Co. (01) 662 7894 - www.minima.ie. Mimosa Interiors: Dublin 4 - Tel: Cork - Tel: (021) 4314 963 - www.kenjacksoninteriors.com. Kinsella Tyrone - Tel: (048) 8773 8071 - www.antiquefireplacesireland.com. Stoves (01) 260 2443. Minnie Peters: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 293 3919 - www. Interior Design Group: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 286 8017. KA Direct: Bangor - Tel: (048) 9147 9479. The Gas Company: Dublin 1 minniepeters.com. Mobilia: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 9844 - www.mobilia. International: Co Dublin - Tel: (01) 278 2033 - www.kainternational. - Tel: 1890 818 918 - www.thegascompany.ie. Wilsons of Ballymena: ie. Muji: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 679 4591 - www.muji.eu. O’Driscoll ie. Laura Ashley: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 679 5433 - www.lauraashley.com. Co. Antrim - Tel: (048) 2564 2588.

Furniture: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671 1069 - www.oddesign.com. Orior

Linum: Dublin - Tel: (01) 627 0080 - www.linumireland.ie. Luxury

by Design: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 30 262620 - www.oriorbydesign.

Carpets & Curtains: Co. Cork - Tel: (021) 463 1208. Lucinda Batt

Furniture

com. Quest Interiors: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 0299. Ravensdale

Interior Design: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 405 9856 - www.lucindambatt.ie. Adrian Interior Furnishings: Newry - Tel: (048) 3026 8333 - www. Indoor Living: Co Down - Tel: (048) 3025 2324 - www.ravensdale. Morrin O’Rourke Interior Design: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 628 4411. adrian-interiors.com. Antica: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 296 0136 - www.antica. com. Rhatigan & Hick: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (0402) 94661 - www. Jane Beer Interiors: Co. Wexford. Tel: (087) 662 0843. O’Connor ie. Arnotts: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 805 0400 - www.arnotts.ie. Beaufort rhatiganandhick.ie. Richmond Furniture: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) 827 Design Partners: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 8811. O’Riordan Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 9261 9508 - www.beaufortinteriors. 1999 - www.rfd.ie. Roche Bobois: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 653 1650 Interiors: Cork. Tel: (021) 439 2744. Quinn Interiors: Limerick - co.uk. Bellissima: Co. Cork - Tel: (023) 54740 - www.bellissima.ie. Bob www.roche-bobois.com. Select Interiors: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 Tel: (061) 314 802. Rainbow Fabrics: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 872 2341. Bushell Ltd.: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 671 0044 - www.bushellinteriors. 6626 - www.selectinteriors.ie. S.F Quinn Furniture: Monaghan - Tel: Regency Interiors: Co. Cork - Tel: (021) 497 7070 - www.regencycork. com. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685 1028 - www. (047) 81653. Silk Road: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 848 5044 - www.silkroad. com. Silk Road: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 848 5044 - www.silkroad.ie. SKI bushfieldinteriors.ie. Cavey: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600 - www.cavey. ie. SKI Interiors: Co. Kildare - Tel: (045) 874970 - www.skiinteriors. Interiors: Co. Kildare -Tel: (045) 874970 - www.skiinteriors.com. Slaney ie. Clive Christian: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 291 7020. Coote & Co.: com. Tadpole: Co Cork - Tel: (021) 470 1971. The Bedroom Interiors: Co. Wexford.Tel: (053) 918 4751. Tiffaney Blinds: Dublin Co. Cavan - Tel: (086) 345 5024 - www.cooteandco.com. Creations: Studio: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 235 2815 - www.bedroomstudio.ie. Top 3 - Tel: (01) 855 0001 - www.tiffaneyblinds.ie. The Fabric Shop: Co. Belfast - Tel: (048) 9032 3197 - www.creations-interiors.com. Design by Drawer: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 278 0022 - www.topdrawer.ie. Teuton Dublin.Tel: (01) 284 1775. The Interior Library: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) Renaissance: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 - www.renaissancedesign. & Company: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9032 5006. Watsham & Bohn: 405 9856 - www.theinteriorlibrary.ie. The Spinning Wheel: Belfast ie. Diamond Furniture: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 293 7848 - www. Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 2140741 - www.watshambohn.com. Wogan - Tel: (048) 9032 6111 - www.thespinningwheel.co.uk. TK Shutters: diamondliving.ie. Domain Furniture: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 454 7737. Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 983 9620 - www.woganinteriors.com. Co. Laois - Tel: (057) 866 0779 - www.tkshutters.ie. Trisha Young Donaldson & Lyttle: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 280 8454. Duff Tisdall: Whitehouse Furniture: L’Derry - Tel: (048) 7126 7626 - www. Interiors: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 668 9026. Upholstery Fabrics and Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 855 8070. Environment Furniture (at Maison whitehousefurniture.co.uk. Accessories: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 878 8516. Window Attire: Co. & Chateau): Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 636 0114 - www.maisonchateau.com. Clare - Tel: (065) 682 3866. Window Fashions & Interiors: Dublin European Living: Dublin 10 -Tel: (01) 626 9005 - www.european_living.

Interior Designers

6 - Tel: (01) 490 1655 - www.windowfashions.ie.

com. Fassbinder & English: Dublin 2 -Tel: (01) 661 7678. Flanagans: Annan Interiors: Co Fermanagh - Tel: (048) 663 4005 - www.

Fireplaces & Stoves

flexform.it. Florio’s Furniture: Co. Limerick - Tel: (061) 396397 - www. 1028 - www.bushfieldinteriors.ie. Charles Newhaven: Co. Kildare

Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 0218 - www.flanagans.ie. Flexform: www. annaninteriors.com. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685

Antique Fireplaces: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 294 1556. Artefaction: floriosfurnitureshop.com. French Country Interiors: Co Tipperary - - Tel: (059) 916 2882. Gillian Morrow: Co. Mayo - Tel: (096) 71247 Dublin 24 - Tel: (01) 408 9702 - www.artefaction.ie. Architectural Tel: (052) 744 1187. Fultons: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 4700 - www.fultons. - www.trevormorrow.ie. Habu Interior Design: Dublin 3 - Tel: (01) Classics: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 3557. Ballymount Fireplaces co.uk. George Francis Design Interiors: Co. Tipperary - Tel: (051) 833 5127 - www.habu.ie. Helen Turkington Interiors: Dublin 6 & Marble Works Ltd.: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 459 2905 - www. 645495. Gilbert Logan & Sons Ltd.: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9080 8555. Tel: (01) 412 5138 - www.helenturkington.ie. Hilary Sharp Design: ballymountfireplaces.com. Bell & Co.: Dublin 9 - Tel: (01) 830 1777. Gillespie & Wilson: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9047 1074. Global Village: Dublin - Tel: (087) 282 2458 - www.hilarysharpdesign.com. Interior Belle Cheminée: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 872 4122 - www.bellecheminee. Blackrock - Tel: (01) 283 5550. Greg Kinsella: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) Spaces: Co. Dublin - Tel: (086) 805 3017 - www.interiorspaces. com. Buckleys Fires and Fireplaces: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294 286 8017 - www.gregkinsella.com. Hamptons: Lisburn - Tel: (048) 9267 ie. Kevin Kelly Interiors: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 668 8533 - www. 6863 - www.buckleyfireplaces.com. Burna Fireplaces: Bray - Tel: (01) 2220. Harriet’s House: Co. Dublin. Tel: (01) 288 4822. Hedgeroe kevinkellyinteriors.com. Kitt Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 405 5020 282 8282. C & R Fireplaces: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 873 1728 - www. Living with Design: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294 8932 - www.hedgeroe. - www.kittinteriors.com. Lucinda Batt: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 405 9856 crfireplaces.go2.ie. Crumlin Fireplaces: Dublin 6W -Tel: (01) 492 0363. com. Helen Turkington Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 www.theinteriorlibrary.ie. Mary Ryder Designs: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) Dun Laoghaire Fireplaces Gas & Stove Centre: Co. Dublin - - www.helenturkington.ie. Houseworks Ltd.: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 230 1245 - www.maryryderdesigns.ie. Minnie Peters: Dublin 18 - Tel: Tel: (1800) 562 562. Dunnes Fireplaces: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) 804 1390 676 9511 - www.houseworks.ie. Ideas: Bangor - Tel: (048) 9127 0466. (01) 293 3919 - www.minniepeters.com. Orna O’Reilly Design: Co. - www.dunnesfireplaces.ie. DP Fireplaces: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 9756 Inreda: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 476 0362 - www.inreda.ie. Inside Out: Co. Galway - Tel: (087) 244 7666 - www.ornaoreilly.com. 4949 - www.dpfireplaces.co.uk. Fenton Fires: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) Dublin - Tel: (01) 214 8685. Jennifer Goh: Co. Leitrim - Tel: (071) 962 287 4310 - www.fentonfires.ie. Fireplaces Direct: Co. Down -Tel: (048) 2208 - www.jennifergohdesign.com. KA International: Co Dublin - Tel:

Kitchens

9756 1534 - www.fireplacesdirectltd.co.uk. Fortress Stone: Co. Antrim (01) 278 2033 - www.kainternational.ie. Karls Furniture: Dublin 10 - Alan Brown Kitchens: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 214 8590 - www. - Tel: (048) 9335 0202 - www. fortressstone.com. Geddis Fireplaces: Tel: (01) 626 0600 - www.karlsfurniture.ie. Kelco Designs: Dublin 14 - alanbrowndesign.com. Alwood Kitchens & Bathrooms: Co. Lisburn - Tel: (048) 9262 1011 - www.geddisfireplaces.co.uk. Harding Tel: (01) 296 5500 - www. kelcodesigns.com. Kenneth Hodgins: Co. Armagh - Tel: (048) 3832 3296 - www.alwoodkitchens.com. Andrew

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323


Ryan Furniture: Co Wexford -Tel: (053) 942 1585 - www.andrewryan. Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685 1028 - www.bushfieldinteriors.ie. ie. Arena Kitchens: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671 5365 - www.arenakitchens. Cavey: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600 - www.cavey.ie. Coote & Co.:

2033 - www.kainternational.ie. Kris Turnbull: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9046

com. Ballygowan Kitchens & Interiors: Ballygowan -Tel: (048) 9752 Co. Cavan - Tel: (086) 345 5024 - www.cooteandco.com. Design by

9659 - www.kristurnbull.com. Livingspace: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9024 4333

8686. BC Kitchens: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 212 3613 - www.bckitchens. Renaissance: Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 - www.renaissancedesign.

- www.livingspace-ni.com. Living Quarters: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671

ie. Bulthaup: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9024 4333 / Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 ie. Duff Tisdall: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 855 8070 - www.duff-tisdall.

7998. Limited Edition: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 453 1133. Lomi: Dublin

0101 - www.en.bulthaup.com. Chalon Kitchens: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) ie. Dundrum Lighting: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 295 1857 - www.

13 - Tel: (01) 839 7001 - www.lomi.ie. McNally: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660

293 3914 - www.chalon.com. Coach House Kitchens: Co. Cork - Tel: dundrumlighting.com. Design Light: Dublin 6W - Tel: (01) 496 6177

4856 - www.mcnallyliving.ie. Meadows & Byrne: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01)

(021) 733 4098 - www.coach-house-kitchens.com. Classic Kitchens: - www.designlight.com. ECI lighting: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) 860 1860

652 0000 - www.meadowsandbyrne.com. Mimosa Interiors: Dublin 4

Dublin 5 - Tel: (01) 847 6396 - www.classickitchens.ie. Clive Christian: - www.ecilighting.ie. Falks Lighting: Dublin 6W - Tel: (01) 490 4813

- Tel: (01) 260 2443. Minima: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 662 7894 - www.minima.

Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 291 7020 - www.clive.com. Custom Kitchens: - www.falkslighting.ie. Fantasy Lights Irl: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 460

ie. Minnie Peters: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 293 3919 - www. minniepeters.

Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 848 5921. Danish Design Ltd: Co. Dublin - Tel: 1052 - www.fantasylights.com. George Francis Design Interiors:

com. Roche Bobois: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 653 1650 - www.roche-

(086) 822 7850 - www.danishkitchendesign.ie. déBros: Co. Meath - Tel: Co. Tipperary - Tel: (051) 645495. Greg Kinsella: Co. Wicklow - Tel:

bobois.com. Rolf Benz at Houseworks Ltd.: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01)

(01) 835 3100 - www.debros-marble.com. Design House: Co. Dublin (01) 286 8017 - www. www.gregkinsella.com. Helen Turkington

676 9511 - www.houseworks.ie. Silk Road: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 848

- Tel: (01) 235 2222 - www.designhouseconcepts.com. Designwood Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 - www.helenturkington.ie.

5044 - www.silkroad.ie. SKI Interiors: Co. Kildare - Tel: (045) 874970

Ltd.: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 497 7539 - www.designwoodltd.ie. Dundrum Hicken Lighting: Dublin 8 - Tel: 1800 77 70 77 - www.hickenlighting.

- www.skiinteriors.com. The Bedroom Studio: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01)

Kitchens: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 296 5980 - www.dundrumkitchens. com. Illumination: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 890 3988. Inreda: Dublin 2 -

235 2815 - www.bedroomstudio.ie. The Sofa Factory: Dublin 8 - Tel:

ie. Florio’s Furniture: Co. Limerick - Tel: (061) 396397 - www. Tel: (01) 476 0362 - www.inreda.ie. Kenneth Hodgins: Co. Dublin - Tel:

(01) 454 6877. Watsham & Bohn: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 214 0741 -

floriosfurnitureshop.com. Hayburn & Co: Co. Antrim - Tel: (048) 2587 (01) 293 8898 - www.kennethhodgins.ie. Kris Turnbull: Belfast - Tel:

www.watshambohn.com. Orior by Design: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 3026

1442 - www.hayburn.com. House of Coolmore: Co. Cork - Tel: (021) (048) 9046 9659 - www.kristurnbull.com. Lighting Design: Belfast -

2620 - www.oriorbydesign.com.

437 8572 - www.houseofcoolmore.com. Houseworks Ltd.: Dublin Tel: (048) 9066 6878. Lighting World: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 671 7788. 2 - Tel: (01) 676 9511 - www.houseworks.ie. John Daly Furniture Lumina: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 874 8652. Minima: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01)

Tiles & Flooring

Craftsmen: Co. Monaghan - Tel: (042) 9745075. KAL: Dublin 22 - Tel: 662 7894 - www.minima.ie. National Lighting: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01)

ADL Group: Armagh - Tel: (048) 3752 5839 - www.adlgroup.co.uk.

(01) 413 6400 - www.kal.ie. Kitchens Direct Ltd.: Dublin 24 - Tel: 709 9070 - www.nationallighting.ie. Select Interiors: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01)

Allied Carpets: Dublin 22 - Tel: (01) 456 6662 - www.alliedcarpets.

(01) 451 7666 - www.kitchensdirectltd.ie. Kontinental Kitchen 454 6626 - www.selectinteriors.ie. Silk Road: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 848

ie. Allied Ceramic Tiles Ltd.: Dublin 17 - Tel: (01) 867 4343 -

Supplies: Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 626 2314 - www.kks.ie. Kitchen Flair: 5044 - www.silkroad.ie. SKI Interiors: Co. Kildare - Tel: (045) 874970 -

www.alliedtiles.ie. Antica: Dublin 14 - Tel: (01) 296 0136 - www.antica.

Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 269 5370. Kitchen World: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 429 www.skiinteriors.com. The Lighting Emporium: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01)

ie. Architectural Classics: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 3557 - www.

1860 - www.kitchenworld.ie. Leinster Kitchen Studios Ltd.: Co. 478 2761 - www.lighting-emporium.com. The Light Store: Dublin 14

artefaction.ie www.artefaction.ie. Brooks Thomas: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01)

Kildare - Tel: (045) 409 141 - www.leinsterkitchenstudios.ie. Livingspace: - Tel: (01) 296 8719. Total Lighting: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 450 9999.

294 0200 - www.brooksgroup.ie. Dalkey Stone & Marble: Co. Dublin

Belfast - Tel: (028) 9024 4333 - www.livingspace-ni.com. Lomi: Dublin Roche Bobois: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 653 1650 - www.roche-bobois.

- Tel: (01) 202 4888. David Scott: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9023 2136 - www.

13 - Tel: (01) 839 7001 - www.lomi.ie. Máise: Dublin 8 - Tel: (01) 476 com. Watsham & Bohn: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 2140741 - www.

davidscotttiles.com. déBros: Co. Meath - Tel: (01) 835 3100. Doramics

3780 - www.maisegroup.com. Peter McAuley: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) watshambohn.com. Wink Lighting: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 276 2200

Ltd.: Dublin 9 - Tel: (01) 842 9744 - www.doramics.ie. Ebony & Co.:

983 6776. McNally Kitchens: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 4856 - www. - www.wink.ie.

Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 669 0970 - www.ebonyandco.com. Eurotile: Lisburn

mcnallyliving.ie. Newcastle Design Ltd.: Co. Wicklow - Tel: (0404)

- Tel: (048) 9260 3000. Fitzmawn Interiors & Tiles: Co. Dublin - Tel:

65000 - www.newcastledesign.ie. Nolan Kitchens Limited: Dublin

Sofas

(01) 289 8822 - www.fitzmawninteriors.ie. Fired Earth: Co. Dublin - Tel:

12 - Tel: (01) 456 7621 - www.nolankitchens.com. Minima: Dublin 2 - Adrian Interior Furnishings: Newry - Tel: (048) 3026 8333 - www.

(01) 663 6160 - www.firedearth.com. Floor Design Ltd.: Dublin 10 -

Tel: (01) 662 7894 - www.minima.ie. QK Living: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) adrian-interiors.com. Arnotts: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 805 0400 - www.

Tel: (01) 623 4157 - www.floordesign.ie. Lomac Tiles: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01)

450 0776 - www.qkliving.ie. Ravensdale Indoor Living: Co Down arnotts.ie. Beaufort Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 9261 9508 -

405 3560 - www.lomactiles.com. Kashan Oriental Carpets: Dublin

- Tel: (048) 3025 2324 - www.ravensdale.com. Rhatigan & Hick: www.beaufortinteriors.co.uk. Bellissima: Co. Cork - Tel: (023) 54740

18 - Tel: (01) 295 8154 - www.kashancarpets.ie. Porcelanosa: Dublin

Co. Wicklow - Tel: (0402) 94661 - www.rhatiganandhick.ie. Richwood - www.bellissima.ie. Bob Bushell Ltd.: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671 0044.

12 - (01) 458 4881 - www.porcelanosa.com. Porsha Stone: Co. Kildare

Designs: Co. Limerick - Tel: (061) 397 526. Robinson Interiors: Brown Thomas: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 605 6666 - www.brownthomas.

- Tel: (01) 654 4800 - www.porshastone.com. Regan Tile Design: Co.

Belfast - Tel: (048) 9068 3838 - www.robinsoninteriors.com. Scavolini: com. Bushfield Interiors: Co. Louth - Tel: (041) 685 1028. Cavey:

Dublin - Tel: (01) 280 0921 - www.regantiledesign.com. Rug Gallery:

Tel: (0039) 072 144 3333 - www.scavolini.com. Spendlove Furniture: Dublin 4 - Tel: (01) 660 0600 - www.cavey.ie. Design by Renaissance:

Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 1199. Scotts: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 662 5680 - www.

Co. Wicklow - Tel: (01) 287 0500 - www.spendlovefurniture.com. Sub Co. Kildare - Tel: (01) 458 7375 - www.renaissancedesign.ie. Diamond

scottsflooring.ie. Surface: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 663 8991 - www.surface.

Zero & Wolf: Tel: +44(0) 208 418 3800 - www.westye.co.uk. The Furniture: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 293 7848 - www.diamondliving.ie.

ie. TC Matthews Carpets: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 672 9353 - www.

Kitchen Shop: Dublin 12 - Tel: (01) 450 5301 - www.thekitchenshop. Donaldson & Lyttle: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 280 8454. Duff Tisdall:

tcmatthews.ie. Terrenus Tiles: Ballymena - Tel: (048) 2564 7699 - www.

ie. The Panelling Centre: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 268 6999 - www. Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 855 8070. Environment Furniture (at Maison

terrenustiles.com. The Hardwood Floor Company: Dublin 18 - Tel:

panellingcentre.ie. Teuton & Company: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9032 & Chateau): Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 636 0114 - www.maisonchateau.com.

(01) 294 8836 - www.thehardwoodfloorcompany.ie. The Italian Tile

5006. Watsham & Bohn: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 214 0741 - www. European Living: Dublin 10 - Tel: (01) 626 9005 - www.european_

and Stone Ltd.: Dublin 6W - Tel: (01) 492 4891 - www.tiles.ie. The

watshambohn.com.

living.com. Flanagans: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 288 0218 - www.flanagans.

Yard: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9040 5600 - www.theyard.co.uk. Tilestyle:

Lighting

ie. Flexform: www.flexform.it. Fultons: Belfast - Tel: (048) 9038 4700.

Dublin 24 - Tel: (01) 855 7471 - www.tilestyle.ie. Trunk Flooring: Co.

George Francis Design Interiors: Co.Tipperary -Tel: (051) 645495.

Kildare - Tel: (01) 654 4800 - www.trunkflooring.com Versatile: Co.

Arnotts: Dublin 1 - Tel: (01) 805 0400 - www.arnotts.ie. Beaufort Harriet’s House: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 677 7077. Hedgeroe Living

Meath - Tel: (046) 902 9444 - www.versatile.ie. Waterloo Bathrooms

Interiors: Co. Down - Tel: (048) 9261 9508 - www.beaufortinteriors. with Design: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294 8932. Helen Turkington

& Tiles: Co. Dublin - Tel: (01) 284 2100 - www.waterloo.ie.

co.uk. Bob Bushell Ltd.: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 671 0044 - www. Interiors: Dublin 6 - Tel: (01) 412 5138 - www.helenturkington.ie. bushellinteriors.com. Bellissima: Co. Cork - Tel: (023) 54740. Bright Inside: Dublin 18 - Tel: (01) 294 3869. Inreda: Dublin 2 - Tel: (01) 476 Lights & Interiors: Dublin 11 - Tel: (01) 903 0131. Bushfield 0362 - www.inreda.ie. KA International: Co Dublin - Tel: (01) 278

324

324


uk Accessories Atomic Interiors: 0115 965 7920 – www.atomicinteriors.co.uk.

Beds & Storage

Helen Turkington Fabrics: 0207 228 9435 - www.helenturkington.

Brissi: 0844 800 9912 – www.brissi.co.uk. David Mellor Cutlery:

Bo Concept: 0207 792 4111 - www.boconcept.co.uk. Brilliant

co.uk. Hus & Hem: 0153 163 1044 - www.husandhem.co.uk. Jim

0207 730 4259 – www.davidmellordesign.com. Ella Doran Design:

space: 0207 372 5853 - www.brilliantspace.com. Charles Page:

Lawrence: 0844 414 1612 - www.jim-lawrence.co.uk. Lizzo: 0207 823

0207 254 4744 - www.elladoran.co.uk. English Georgian: 0207

0207 328 9851 - www.charlespage.co.uk. Duxiana: 0207 486 2363

3456 - www.lizzo.net. MacCulloch & Wallis: 0207 629 0311 - www.

351 4433 - www.englishgeorgian.com. Fox Linton: 0207 368 7700

- www.duxiana.com. Geoffrey Drayton: 0207 387 5840 - www.

macculloch-wallis.co.uk. Jean Monro: 0207 259 7281 - www.jeanmonro.

- www.foxlinton.com. Golfar & Hughes: 0207 351 3700 - www.

geoffreydrayton.com. Hulsta: 0845 230 4510 - www.hulsta.co.uk.

com. Mulberry Home: 0207 352 3173 - www.mulberryhome.com.

golfarandhughes.com. Graham and Green: 0845 130 6622 – www.

Heals: 0870 024 0780 - www.heals.co.uk. Jali: 0122 783 3333 - www.

Nobilis: 0208 767 0774 - www.nobilis.fr. Nono: www.nono.co.uk.

grahamandgreen.co.uk. Handmade Interiors: 0207 729 5704 –

jali.co.uk. Jensen Beds: 0182 344 4300 - www.jensenbeds.co.uk.

North Light Design: 0186 524 8850 - www.northlightdesign.co.uk.

www.handmade-interiors.co.uk. Haus London: 0207 536 9291 - www.

The French Bedroom Company: 0845 644 8022 - www.

Rose and Grey: 0560 311 3405 - www.roseandgrey.co.uk. Sanderson:

hauslondon.com. Heals: 0870 024 0780 – www.heals.co.uk. Hus &

thefrenchbedroomcompany.co.uk. Habitat: 0844 499 4686 - www.

0189 583 0000 - www.sanderson-uk.com. J. Robert Scott: 0207

Hem: 0153 163 1044 - www.husandhem.co.uk. John Lewis: 0845

habitat.co.uk. Lombok: 0870 240 7380 - www.lombok.co.uk. One

376 4705 - www.jrobertscott.com. The Bradley Collection: 0207

604 9049 – www.johnlewis.com. Juliette’s Interiors: 0178 972

Deko: 0207 375 3289 - www.onedeko.co.uk. Savoir Beds: 0207

351 6496 - www.bradleycollection.com. The Silk Gallery: 0207 351

1911 - www.juliettesinteriors.co.uk. Liberty: 0207 573 9645 – www.

486 2222 - www.savoirbeds.co.uk. Strachan: 0800 013 8139 - www.

1790 - www.thesilkgallery.com. Timorous Beasties: 0141 959 3331

liberty.co.uk. Lombok: 0870 240 7380 - www.lombok.co.uk. LSA:

strachan.co.uk. Simon Horn: 0207 731 1270 - www.simonhorn.com.

- www.timorousbeasties.com. Tissus d’Helene: 0207 352 9977 -

0193 278 9721 - lsa-international.com. Mac & Mac Interiors: 0125

Smallbone of Devizes: 0207 589 5998 - www.smallbone.co.uk. The

www.tissusdhelene.co.uk. Turnell & Gigon: 0207 259 7280 - www.

271 7771 - www.macandmacinteriors.co.uk. Made In Design: 0207

Sleep Room: 0845 459 9937 - www.thesleeproom.com

tandggroup.com. Vanners Furnishings: 0178 737 2396 - www.

692 4001 - www.madeindesign.co.uk. Marks & Spencer: 0845 302

vannersfurnishings.com. Watts of Westminster: 0207 376 4486 -

1234 - www.marksandspencer.com. Muji: 0207 436 1779 – www.

Entertainment Systems

www.watts1874.co.uk. Wemyss: 0207 376 4430 - www.wemyssfabrics.

mujionline.co.uk. Nest: 0114 243 3000 – www.nest.co.uk. Next: 0844 844 8333 - www.next.co.uk. North Light Design: 0186 524 8850

Bang & Olufsen: www.bang-olusfen.com. Bose: 0800 085 9021

Zoffany: 0207 351 4269 - www.zoffany.com.

- www.northlightdesign.co.uk. Ochre: 0207 096 7372 – www.ochre.net.

- www.bose.co.uk. Bowers & Wilkins: 0190 326 4141 - www.

Oliver Bonas: 0208 974 0110 – www.oliverbonas.com. One Deko:

bowers&wilkins.com. Crestron: 0845 873 8787 - www.crestron.co.uk.

0207 375 3289 - www.onedeko.co.uk. Overmantels: 0207 223 8151

IteQliving: 0560 300 5340 - www.iteqliving.com. JVC: 0845 310

Fireplaces & Stoves

- www.mirrors.co.uk. Simpsons Mirrors & Furniture: 0207 352

8000 - www.jvc.co.uk. Samsung: 0818 717 100 - www.samsung.com.

Charnwood Stoves: 0198 353 7780 - www.charnwood.com.

0397 - www.simpsonsmirrors.com. The Rug Company: 0207 229

Yamaha: 0844 811 1116 - www.uk.yamaha.com.

Chesney’s: 0207 627 1410 - www.chesneys.co.uk. Flame Fireplaces:

com. Zimmer + Rohde: 0207 351 7115 - www.zimmer-rohde.com.

5148 – www.therugcompany.info. The Nanz Company: 0207 349

0156 270 0005 - www.flamefireplaces.com. Heritage Fireplaces:

0643 - www. nanz.com.

Fabrics & Window Dressings

0160 475 8668 - www.heritagefireplaces.co.uk. Living It Up: 0116

Barazza: 0178 722 4921 - www.barazza.co.uk. Baumatic: 0118 933

Abbott & Boyd: 0207 351 9985 - www.abbottandboyd.co.uk.

com. Victorian Fireplaces: 0152 253 6373 - www.victorianfireplaces.

6900 - www.baumatic.co.uk. Bosch: 0151 237 3201 - www.bosch.co.uk.

Andrew Martin: 0207 225 5100 - www.andrewmartin.co.uk. Alton-

com. Wessex Stone Fireplaces: 0166 650 4658 - www.

Britannia: 0800 612 3640 - www.britannialiving.co.uk. Elica: 0125 235

Brooke: 020-7376 7008 - www.alton-brooke.co.uk. Altfield: 0207

wessexstonefireplaces.co.uk.

1111 - www.elica.co.uk. Everhot Cookers: 0145 389 0018 - www.

351 5893 - www.altfield.com. Beacon Hill: 0207 352 0931 - www.

everhot.co.uk. Hotpoint: 0800 092 1922 - www.hotpoint.co.uk. LG:

beaconhilldesign.com. Borderline Fabrics: 0207 823 3567 - www.

0844 847 5454 - www.lg.com. Neff: 0844 892 9033 - www.neff.co.uk.

borderlinefabrics.com. Bell House Fabrics: 0158 0712 555 - www.

Furniture

Quooker: 0207 923 3355 - www.quooker.com. Samsung: 0818 717

bellhousefabrics.co.uk. Bennison Fabrics: 0207 7308 076 - www.

Anna Casa Interiors: 0207 352 8353 - www.annacasa.net. Atomic

100 - www.samsung.com. Siemens: 0127 669 6000 - www.siemens.

bennisonfabrics.com. Brian Yates: 0207 352 0123 - www.brian-yates.

Interiors: 0115 965 7920 - www.atomicinteriors.co.uk. Baker London:

co.uk. Smeg: 0870 990 9907 - www.smeguk.com. Sub Zero & Wolf:

co.uk. Brunschwig & Fils: 0207 351 5797 - www.brunschwig.com.

0207 823 3612 - www.bakerfurniture.com. Benchmark Furniture:

Tel: +44(0) 208 418 3800 - www.westye.co.uk. Whirlpool: 0866 698

Chase Erwin: 0208 875 1222 - www.chase-erwin.com. Christian

0148 860 8020 - www.benchmarkfurniture.com. Bo Concept: 0207

2538. Zanussi: 0844 561 4614 - www.zanussi.co.uk.

Fischbacher: 0207 351 9332 - www.fischbacher.com. Cole & Son:

792 4111 - www.boconcept.co.uk. Chaplins: 0208 421 1779 - www.

0207 376 4628 - www.cole-and-son.com. Cloth House: 0207 437

chaplins.co.uk. Charles Page: 0207 328 9851 - www.charlespage.co.uk.

Bathrooms

5155 - www.clothhouse.co.uk. Designers Guild: 0207 893 7400

Davidson London: 0207 751 5537 - www.davidsonlondon.com.

- www.designersguild.com. Colefax and Fowler: 0207 351 0666 -

David Seyfried Ltd.: 0207 823 3848 - www.davidseyfried.com. Decca

Ashton & Bentley: 0190 283 7436 - www.ashtonandbentley.

www.colefax.com. Colony: 0207 351 3232 - www.colonyfabrics.com.

Furniture: 0207 352 9578 - www.decca.com.hk. Decorus: 0207 349

co.uk. Matki: 0145 432 8811 - www.matki.co.uk. The Albion Bath

Jason D’Souza: 0207 351 4440 - www.jasondsouza.co.uk. David

9777 - www.decorusfurniture.co.uk. Encompass: 0239 241 0045 - www.

Company: 0120 679 4462 - www.albionbathco.com. Roca: 0153 083

Roos: 0207 485 8022 - www.david-roos.com. Edelman Leather:

encompassco.com. Flexform: 0207 376 5272 - www.interdesignuk.com.

0080 - www.roca-uk.com. Samuel Heath: 0207 352 0249 - www.

0207 351 7305 - www.edelmanleather.com. Elanbach: 0207 352 4459

Fox Linton: 0207 368 7700 - www.foxlinton.com. Furniture Village:

samuel-heath.com. Sanctuary Bathrooms: 0113 244 4400 - www.

- www.elanbach.com. Evitavonni: 0800 130 3180 - www.evitavonni.

0845 085 0480 - www.furniturevillage.com. Geoffrey Drayton: 0207

sanctuary-bathrooms.co.uk. Smallbone of Devizes: 0207 589 5998

co.uk. Fabric World: 0208 643 5127 - www.fabricworldlondon.co.uk.

387 5840 - www.geoffreydrayton.com. Graham and Green: 0845 130

- www.smallbone.co.uk. Victoria + Albert Baths: 0207 351 4378

Farrow & Ball: 0120 287 6141 - www.farrow-ball.com. Fox Linton:

6622 - www.grahamandgreen.co.uk. Habitat: 0844 499 4686 - www.

www.vandabaths.com. Victoria Plumb: 0844 804 4848 - www.

0207 368 7700 - www.foxlinton.com. Graham & Brown: 0800 328

habitat.co.uk. Haus London: 0207 536 9291 - www.hauslondon.com.

victoriaplumb.com. West One Bathrooms Ltd.: 0207 720 9333 -

8452 - www.grahamandbrown.com. GP&J Baker: 0207 351 7760 -

Hayburn & Co: Co. Antrim - Tel: (048) 2587 1442 - www.hayburn.com.

www.westonebathrooms.com.

www.gpjbaker.com. Harlequin: 0844 543 0200 - www.harlequin.uk.com.

Heals: 0870 024 0780 - www.heals.co.uk. House of Fraser: 0845

Appliances

325

co.uk. Henry Bertrand: 0207 349 1477 - www.henrybertrand.

269 5960 - www.livingitup.co.uk. Montpellier: 0145 271 4800 - www. montpellier.co.uk. Nostalgia: 0161 477 7706 - www.nostalgia-uk.com. Ryan & Smith Ltd.: (028) 8773 8071 - www.antiquefireplacesireland.

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602 1073 - www.houseoffraser.co.uk. Hus & Hem: 0153 163 1044 -

Dixon: 0207 183 9737 - www.tomdixon.net. Vaughan: 0207 349 4600

www.husandhem.co.uk. India Jane: 0120 288 7627 - www.indiajane.

Kitchens

co.uk. Interdesign: 0207 376 5272 www.interdesignuk.com. Interior

Afg Kitchens: 0844 800 2007 - www.afgk.co.uk. Alno: 0207 486 - www.wired-designs.com.

Supply: 0207 352 0502 - www.interiorsupply.co.uk. James Mayor

3080 - www.alno.co.uk. Alternative Plans: 0207 228 6460 - www.

Furniture: 0121 328 1643 - www.jamesmayorfurniture.com. Jimmie

alternative-plans.co.uk. Bespoke Kitchen Design: 0800 169 3979

Martin: 0207 938 1852 - www.jimmiemartin.com. John Lewis: 0845

- www.kitstone.co.uk. Boffi: 0207 590 8910 - www.boffi-chelsea.com.

604 9049 - www.johnlewis.com. J. Robert Scott: 0207 376 4705 -

Bulthaup: 0178 072 7212 - www.bulthaup.com. Clive Christian Aram Store: 0207 557 7557 - www.aram.co.uk. Bo Concept: 0207

www.jrobertscott.com. Juliette’s Interiors: 0178 972 1911 - www.

Harrods: 0207 893 8325/26 - www.clive.com. Connaught 792 4111 - www.boconcept.co.uk. Charles Page: 0207 328 9851 -

juliettesinteriors.co.uk. JVB Furniture Collection: 0207 751 4125

Kitchens: 0207 706 2210 - www.connaughtkitchens.co.uk. Dada by www.charlespage.co.uk. David Seyfried Ltd: 0207 823 3848 www.

- www.j-v-b.com. Kravet London: 0207 795 0110 - www.kravet.com.

Molteni & C: 0207 631 2345 - www.moltenidada.co.uk. Design davidseyfried.com. Dwell: 0845 675 9090 - www.dwell.co.uk. Heals:

Leisure Plan: 0127 981 6001 - www.leisureplan.co.uk. Lelievre: 0207

Space London: 0207 228 8088 - www.designspacelondon.com. 0870 024 0780 - www.heals.co.uk. House of Fraser: 0845 602 1073

352 4798 - www.lelievre.eu. Liberty: 0207 573 9645 - www.liberty.co.uk.

Devol Kitchens: 0150 926 1000 - www.devolkitchens.co.uk. Design - www.houseoffraser.co.uk. Jimmie Martin: 0207 938 1852 - www.

Lago: 0207 486 0311 - www.bakerstreet.lagodesign.eu. Ligne Roset:

House: 0778 693 8640 - www.designhouseconcepts.com. Mark jimmiemartin.com. Ligne Roset: 0870 777 7202 - www.ligne-roset.co.uk.

- www.vaughandesigns.com. Wired Custom Lighting: 0207 352 2921

Sofas

0870 777 7202 - www.ligne-roset.co.uk. Lombok: 0870 240 7380 -

Wilkinson: 0138 085 0007 - www.mwf.com. Evitavonni: 0800 Lombok: 0870 240 7380 - www.lombok.co.uk. Mebel UK: 0163 683

www.lombok.co.uk. Mac & Mac Interiors: 0125 271 7771 - www.

130 3180 - www.evitavonni.co.uk. Fired Earth: 0845 366 0400 - www. 1441 - www.mebeluk.co.uk. Minotti: 0207 323 3233 - www.minotti.com.

macandmacinteriors.co.uk. Made In Design: 0207 692 4001 - www.

firedearth.com. Forza: 0207 436 1808 - www.forza.co.uk. Hayburn Nest: 0114 243 3000 - www.nest.co.uk. Next: 0844 844 8333 - www.

madeindesign.co.uk. Metro Retro: 0124 536 3764 - www.metroretro.

& Co: Co. Antrim - Tel: (028) 2587 1442 - www.hayburn.com. Harvey next.co.uk. One Deko: 0207 375 3289 - www.onedeko.co.uk. Sofas &

co.uk. Muji: 0207 436 1779 - www.mujionline.co.uk. NGI Design:

Jones Kitchens: 0800 389 7365 - www.harveyjones.com. Lago: Stuff: 0808 178 3211 - www.sofasandstuff.com. Sofa Workshop: 0844

0178 076 6899 - www.nigelgibsoninteriors.co.uk. Ochre: 0207 096 7372

0207 486 0311 - www.bakerstreet.lagodesign.eu. Magnet Kitchens: 249 9161 - www.sofaworkshop.com. Wesley-Barrell: 0199 389 3130

- www.ochre.net. One Deko: 0207 375 3289 - www.onedeko.co.uk.

0845 123 6789 - www.magnet.co.uk. Metris: 0132 550 5590 - www. - www.wesley-barrell.co.uk.

Pierre Frey: 0207 376 5599 - www.pierrefrey.com. Pinch Design:

metriskitchens.co.uk. Mowlem & Co: 0207 610 6626 - www.

0207 622 5075 - www.pinchdesign.com. Raft Furniture: 0208 450

mowlemandco.co.uk. Neil Lerner: 0207 433 0705 - www.neillerner.

5078 - www.raftfurniture.co.uk. Robert Allen: 0207 352 0931 - www.

com. Nicholas Anthony: 0800 068 3603 - www.nicholas-anthony.

robertallendesign.com. Roche Bobois: www.roche-bobois.com. Rolf

co.uk. Plain English: 0207 486 2674 - www.plainenglishdesign.co.uk. Blenheim Carpets: 0207 823 3040 - www.blenheim-carpets.com.

Benz: 0207 318 8025 - www.rolf-benz.com. Romo: 0845 644 4400

Poliform: 0207 368 7612 - www.poliformuk.com. Poggenpohl: Bolier: 0207 352 9578 - www.bolierco.com. Brintons Carpets:

- www.romo.com. Rossetto: 0843 289 9625 - www.rossetto.co.uk.

0207 224 1986 - www.poggenpohl.com. Puro Design: 0207 462 0800 505 055 - www.brintons.net. Dinesen: 0045 7455 2140 - www.

Rubelli / Donghia: 0207 349 1590 - www.rubelli.com. Summit

0002 - www.puro-design.com. Rencraft: 0173 276 2682 - www.recraft. dinesen.com. Ebony & co: 0207 734 0734 - www.ebonyandco.co.uk.

Furniture: 0207 795 3311 - www.summitfurniture.com. Swivel UK:

co.uk. Round House: 0207 297 6220 - www.roundhousedesign.com. Fired Earth: 0845 366 0400 - www.firedearth.com. Forbo Flooring:

0207 100 7454 - www.swiveluk.com. The Hungerford Bookcase

Smallbone of Devizes: 0207 589 5998 - www.smallbone.co.uk. 0800 093 5258 - www.forbo-flooring.co.uk. Jacaranda Carpets:

Company: 0148 868 3262 - www.thebookcasecompany.co.uk. The

Space Fitting Furniture: 0292 045 5778 - www.spacefittingfurniture. 0207 351 6496 - www.jacarandacarpets.com. Mandarin Stone: 0160

Conran Shop: 0207 589 7401 - www.conranshop.co.uk. The Dormy

Stoneham: 0208 300 8181 - www.stonehamkitchens.co.uk. Stephen 071 5444 - www.mandarinstone.com. Martin Moore Stone: 0137

House: 0126 436 5808 - www.thedormyhouse.com.

Anthony Design Ltd.: 0239 248 6478 - www.stephenanhonydesign. 247 8955 - www.martinmoorestone.com. London Marble: 0208 690

Tiles & Flooring

com. Sub Zero & Wolf: Tel: 0208 418 3800 - www.westye.co.uk. 1011 - www.londonmarble.com. Marlborough Tiles: 0167 251 5287

326

Tsunami: 0207 408 2230 - www.tsunamiuk.com. Tisettanta: 0207 - www.marlboroughtiles.com. Marvic Textiles: 0207 352 3119 - www.

Interior Designers

491 2044 - www.tisettanta.co.uk. Urban Interior: 0207 739 4644 - marvictextiles.co.uk. Moss & Co: 0208 748 8251 - www.mosstimber.co.uk.

ACM Interior design: 0208 960 9898 - www.acm-interiors.

www.urbaninterior.co.uk. Wickes: 0500 300 328 - www.wickes.co.uk.

Porcelanosa: 0800 915 4000 - www.porcelanosa.com. Jill Campion

com. Carden Cunietti: 0207 724 9679 - www.carden-cunietti.com.

Tiles: 0143 882 0630 - www.jillcampion.com. The Plank Company:

Caroline Fooks Design: 0207 386 772 - www.carolinefooksdesign.

(028) 903 94422 - www.plankco.com. R.I.M Tile Boutique: 0207 376

com. Caz Myers Design: 0207 348 6464 - www.cazmyers.com. De

Lighting

Hasse: 0173 245 7008 - www.dehasse.co.uk. Granter Interiors: 0207

Bella Figura: 0207 376 4564 - www.bella-figura.com. Besselink & com. Solid Floor: 0207 486 4838 - www.solidfloor.co.uk. Surface

835 0671 - www.granterinteriors.com. Genny Henderson: 0207 7262

Jones: 0207 351 4669 - www.besselink.com. Cable and Cotton: Tiles: 0207 354 7000 - www.surfacetiles.com. Tai Ping Carpets: 0207

9107 - www.theroomcompany.com. Gordon Lindsay Design: 0137

0808 120 3890 - www.cableandcotton.co.uk. Christopher Hyde 808 9650 www.taipingcarpets.com. Tim Page Carpets: 0207 259 7282

958 6799 - www.gordonlindsay.co.uk. Jamie Hempsall: 0177 724 8463

Lighting: 0207 351 0863 - www.christopherhyde.com. Haus - www.timpagecarpets.com. Top Floor Rugs: 0207 795 3333 - www.

- www.jamiehempsall.com. Jessica Brook Design: 0207 731 8745 -

London: 0207 536 9291 - www.hauslondon.com. Heals: 0870 024 topfloorrugs.com. Tufenkian Artisan Carpets: 0207 352 8183

www.jessicabrookdesign.com. Kitty-lynne Jones Interior Design:

0780 - www.heals.co.uk. House of Fraser: 0845 602 1073 - www. - www.tufenkian.eu. Via Arkadia Tiles: 0207 351 7057 - www.via-

020 7387 7667 - www.kitty-lynnejonesinteriordesign.com. Langton

houseoffraser.co.uk. John Cullen Lighting: 0207 371 5400 - www. arkadia.co.uk. Worlds End Tiles: 0207 819 2100 - www.worldsendtiles.

Interiors: 0207 3763600 - www.langtoninteriors.co.uk. Limited

johncullenlighting.co.uk. Mac & Mac Interiors: 0125 271 7771 - www. co.uk. Wool Classics: 0207 349 0090 - www.woolclassics.com.

Editions Interior Design Consultants: 01903 744270 - www.

macandmacinteriors.co.uk. Made In Design: 0207 692 4001 - www.

limitededitionscom.co.uk. Marcia Tucker Interiors: 0203 409 3692

madeindesign.co.uk. Metro Retro: 0124 536 3764 - www.metroretro.

- www.marciatuckerinteriors.com. Oliver Steer Interior Design:

co.uk. North Light Design: 0186 524 8850 - www.northlightdesign.

0207 969 1802 - www.oliversteer.com. Pascoe Interiors: 0124 378

co.uk. Nest: 0114 243 3000 - www.nest.co.uk. Ochre: 0207 096

5100 - www.pascoeinteriors.com. Rima Coimbra Interiors: 0777

7372 - www.ochre.net. One Deko: 0207 375 3289 - www.onedeko.

605 7030 - www.rimainteriors.com. Source Interiors: 0207 243 1488

co.uk. Original BTC: 0207 351 2130 - www.originalbtc.com. Porta

- www.sourceinteriors.co.uk. Space Alchemy Ltd.: 0207 987 1622 -

Romana: 0207 352 0440 - www.portaromana.co.uk. Remains

www.space-alchemy.com. Steffan Interiors: 0208 209 0647 – www.

Lighting: 0207 349 0643 www.remains.com. The Limehouse

steffaninteriors.com.

Lamp Co. Ltd.: 0127 349 7070 - www.limehouselighting.com. Tom

5820 - www.rimdesign.co.uk. Ann Sacks: 0203 055 0802 - www.annsacks.

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327


Alan Brown Design

Designers & Makers of Exclusive Hand Crafted Fitted Furniture

328

Unit 2, Drummin East, Delgany, Co. Wicklow Tel: +353 (0) 1 214 8590 or 086 243 5730 Email: info@alanbrowndesign.com Website:www.alanbrowndesign.com

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