Profile

Bates Masi + Architects LLC, a full-service architectural firm with roots in New York City and the East End of Long Island for over 55 years, responds to each project with extensive research in related architectural fields, material, craft and environment for unique solutions as varied as the individuals or groups for whom they are designed. The focus is neither the size nor the type of project but the opportunity to enrich lives and enhance the environment. The attention to all elements of design has been a constant in the firm’s philosophy. Projects include urban and suburban residences, schools, offices, hotels, restaurants, retail and furniture in the United States, Central America and the Caribbean. The firm has received 232 design awards since 2003 and has been featured in national and international publications including The New York Times, New York Magazine, Architectural Digest, Interior Design, Architectural Record, Metropolitan Home, and Dwell. Residential Architect Magazine selected Bates Masi one of their 50 Architect’s We Love. In 2013, Bates Masi was inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame. Bespoke Home, the first monograph of the firm’s work, with introduction by Paul Goldberger was published in 2016. The firm’s highly anticipated second monograph, Architecture of Place, is available in bookstores now.

Paul Masi spent childhood summers in Montauk and currently resides in Amagansett. He received a Bachelor of Architecture from Catholic University and a Masters of Architecture from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. He worked at Richard Meier & Partners before joining this firm in 1998.

Harry Bates, a resident of East Hampton, received a Bachelor of Architecture from North Carolina State University. After ten years with Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, he was in private practice in New York City for 17 years before moving the firm to Southampton on the East End in 1980. Our offices have recently relocated to a new office building of our own design in East Hampton.

We are always looking for talented designers to join our team. If interested, please send resume and portfolio to info@batesmasi.com.

Contact

132 North Main Street
2nd Floor
East Hampton, NY 11937

21 West 46th Street
Suite 1106
New York, NY 10036

T 631.725.0229

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Wainscott

Lot size: 2.68 acres

Building size: 11,445 sq. ft.

Location: Wainscott, NY

Program: Single Family Residence

Photographer: Michael Moran

Contractor: Men at Work Construction, Inc

Interior Designer: David Kleinberg Design Associates

Landscape Architect: Perry Guillot Inc

 

At the end of the 19th Century a private beach community was established from over 100 acres of coastal farmland. Large specimen trees, winding roads, early colonial architecture, agricultural buildings, and views of a large pond and the Atlantic Ocean create a bucolic setting. The proximity to the pond and ocean however, brings with it the challenges of high ground water and flood risk. It was here that a family with a passion for art decided to build a home for their family, including future generations, and their art collection. They requested it to become a family heirloom. As such the home must anticipate the family’s growth, providing space and privacy for guests, the couple’s adult children, and their future grandchildren. It must be durable. It must also be elevated in anticipation of the future flood risk while preserving a connection to the landscape. Finally, the home must provide large openings to take advantage of the sweeping views, and at the same time limit direct sunlight on the art.

In response, the house was divided into three separate gabled structures dedicated to the couple and the 2 future families of their children. Each volume has it’s own staircase to the unconnected 2nd floor spaces, which include bedrooms, lounge areas, laundry facilities, and kitchenettes. These separate self-sufficient volumes are connected on the main level by an art-filled circulation spine that opens to larger display spaces around the stairs. To provide indirect natural light, continuous clerestory windows along the spine allow diffused light from the north to filter through a carefully detailed exterior shingle screen. The openings modulate the light that enters, which is then reflected into the gallery space through oak ceiling coffers. The mechanical system is elevated above the spine to meet FEMA requirements and the supply and returns are concealed within the coffers. Artificial lighting is also integrated in the coffers, illuminating the art and backlighting the exterior screen. The continuous screen is a subtle change in the siding texture during the day, but highlighted when backlit at night, revealing on the exterior the continuous spine that unifies the individual volumes.

In each of the volumes, the stairwells double as larger art display areas and are naturally illuminated by northern light through bronze chimney light wells. The structure and cladding of each stair taper as they approach the floor, referencing the way light dissipates from the skylights above. The final art display area is the most dramatic: a day-lit glass cube that connects two of the gabled volumes to the third and serves as a sculpture gallery. A delicate cedar lattice wraps the glazing to filter the light and includes operable portions over sliding glass doors to allow for frequent rotation of the sculptures within. Lighting in this flexible space is mounted with magnets to allow for easy customization for each piece.

To ensure the home as an heirloom will endure, it is clad in durable materials that are applied in redundant layers. Cedar boards are installed like shingles in layers over a weathertight shell. Custom stainless clips hold the boards securely without penetrating them, allowing for them to expand and contract, or be easily replaced in the future.

The gallery spaces, circulation, lighting, and mechanical systems are interwoven into a spine that both ties the individual structures together, and symbolically ties the family together around their appreciation of art. The family will grow and change, as will their art, but the home will endure as a place of appreciation for both.