RAMSA | Robert A.M. Stern Architects
A global architecture firm based in New York City. Our research-driven practice is dedicated to preserving a sense of place.
To mark what would have been Bob Stern’s 87th birthday, we celebrate the legacy he built and renew our commitment to the principles guiding us forward.

Among three RAMSA projects honored with 2026 Palladio Awards from Traditional Building magazine, the Charles R. Jonas Federal Courthouse won the category of Adaptive Reuse/Addition.
The Jonas Courthouse renovation and new, eight-story wing modernize court facilities while preserving historic elements and Classical character.
The new wing integrates with the original building, adds courtrooms and chambers, and enhances connectivity, civic presence, and visibility on Charlotte’s skyline.
The Palladio Awards celebrate outstanding achievement in classical and traditional architecture, craftsmanship, and design.
Congratulations to the project team led by Grant Marani and Kevin J. Kelly with Paul G. Zembsch and Philip Chan, in association with Jenkins Peer Architects!
Interior Design: RAMSA | Robert A.M. Stern Architects
Historic preservation: Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates
Photography by Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
“Every business school is different, so students are learning in fundamentally different ways.” Our design unifies existing campus buildings at SMU’s Cox School into a connected, community‑focused academic hub shaped by evolving higher‑education needs. Link in bio for the full video.
Project led by Graham Wyatt and Kevin Smith with Will Gridley

One of three RAMSA projects honored with 2026 Palladio Awards from Traditional Building magazine, The Newbury of Brookline won the Residential Multi-Unit category.
The Newbury of Brookline transforms a former college site into a 160-unit senior living community, integrating new construction with a restored historic house.
Designed to respect neighborhood scale, it offers diverse housing, amenities, landscaped courtyards, and sustainable features.
The Palladio Awards recognize excellence in traditional design across a diverse range of residential and commercial categories.
Congratulations to the project team led by Sargent Gardiner and Paul Whalen with Tanya Lee, in association with Finegold Alexander Architects!
Interior design: Pembrooke & Ives
Landscape architecture: Verdant Landscape Architecture
Photography by Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
Contextual design, balanced composition, and crafted materials connect Sixteen Fifth Avenue into the picturesque, historical context of Greenwich Village. Here, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar presents the design principles behind this condominium tower with panoramic views of downtown Manhattan.
16 Fifth Avenue design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen with Hernán Chebar and Mario Cruzate; renderings by The Boundary
#RAMSAcityliving

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

The House in Southern California has won a 2026 Julia Morgan Award from the ICAA, in the category of Residential Renovation over 5,000 square feet.
Our clients sought to update their Hollywood Regency house, originally designed by John Elgin Woolf for the actress Eleanor Parker and later owned by the architect himself, and reverse changes made by subsequent owners.
During the design process, research uncovered preliminary drawings in the Woolf archives that depicted a wood-beamed ceiling and a Louis XV fireplace.
Once uncovered behind the plasterboard walls and ceiling, we left the beams exposed and whitewashed, and reconfigured the never-used fireplace opening with a cantilevered hearth.
Throughout, we preserved and faithfully re-created Woolf’s original interior details: modestly scaled baseboards, no crown between walls and ceilings, and compact bolection-style door casings.
Congratulations to the design team, led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell!
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAHouses

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

Our design for the UVA McIntire School of Commerce includes the expansion, preservation and renovation of an historic campus precinct.
Comprehensively preparing the McIntire school for rapid growth and global orientation, this project supports innovative, interdisciplinary academic programs.
Blending our design into the historic site, we delivered design solutions to:
✅ Preserve and renovate Cobb Hall (1917)
✅ Introduce the new Shumway Hall
✅ Create an outdoor courtyard and network of pedestrian spaces
✅ Connect the Commerce complex to establish a sense of place
Moreover, the design capitalizes on a significant grade change to bring prominence to Shumway Hall while also converting a vehicular drive into a welcoming, landscaped corridor supporting ADA accessibility and vibrant student life.
Project led by Melissa DelVecchio and Jennifer Rice Stone with Ken Frank, Kurt Glauber, Ron Ostezan, and Kasey Tilove in association with Glavé & Holmes Architecture and OLIN
Photography: Francis Dzikowski | OTTO
#RAMSAdesignsforlearning

15 Central Park West "proved to be the beginning of a major architectural trend [....] changing the face of America’s largest city," writes Ian Volner in Still Standing: 15 Central Park West, New York, 2007 for Architecture Today.
"Its greatest asset urbanistically is its immediate visual dynamism, a composition far more satisfying than that of the solid slabs that had become the norm in residential high-rise construction."
Full article: link in bio
Design led by Michael Jones, Paul Whalen
Photography: Peter Aaron | OTTO
#RAMSAcityliving

15 Central Park West "proved to be the beginning of a major architectural trend [....] changing the face of America’s largest city," writes Ian Volner in Still Standing: 15 Central Park West, New York, 2007 for Architecture Today.
"Its greatest asset urbanistically is its immediate visual dynamism, a composition far more satisfying than that of the solid slabs that had become the norm in residential high-rise construction."
Full article: link in bio
Design led by Michael Jones, Paul Whalen
Photography: Peter Aaron | OTTO
#RAMSAcityliving

15 Central Park West "proved to be the beginning of a major architectural trend [....] changing the face of America’s largest city," writes Ian Volner in Still Standing: 15 Central Park West, New York, 2007 for Architecture Today.
"Its greatest asset urbanistically is its immediate visual dynamism, a composition far more satisfying than that of the solid slabs that had become the norm in residential high-rise construction."
Full article: link in bio
Design led by Michael Jones, Paul Whalen
Photography: Peter Aaron | OTTO
#RAMSAcityliving

In the heart of Boston’s historic Back Bay, 350 Boylston Street offers 219,536 rentable square feet of sustainable, luxury office space.
LEED Gold for Core and Shell, the nine-story building features exceptionally large, energy-efficient, floor-to-ceiling windows in a facade of Alabama Silver Shadow limestone above a granite base.
350 Boylston offers 7,800 sq ft of outdoor terrace space, a tenant-only spa and fitness facility, onsite parking with charging stations, and almost 14,000 RSF of retail space facing the Public Garden.
Project led by Meghan McDermott with Scott O’Daniel in association with CBT Architects
Renderings by Neoscape

In the heart of Boston’s historic Back Bay, 350 Boylston Street offers 219,536 rentable square feet of sustainable, luxury office space.
LEED Gold for Core and Shell, the nine-story building features exceptionally large, energy-efficient, floor-to-ceiling windows in a facade of Alabama Silver Shadow limestone above a granite base.
350 Boylston offers 7,800 sq ft of outdoor terrace space, a tenant-only spa and fitness facility, onsite parking with charging stations, and almost 14,000 RSF of retail space facing the Public Garden.
Project led by Meghan McDermott with Scott O’Daniel in association with CBT Architects
Renderings by Neoscape

At Facades+ Monterrey, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar brings Torre Gala Residences into focus with “Torre Gala: Transformative Towers Face the Landscape,” a panel discussion on April 22.
Hernán will discuss RAMSA’s double-tower design located in the prestigious San Pedro Garza Garcia neighborhood with views to the Sierra Madre Mountains beyond.
The towers, along with garden walls and low-rise pavilions, shape a network of outdoor amenity spaces anchored by a motorcourt and pool courtyard, all linked by planted walkways inspired by both Mediterranean and local Mexican landscapes.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen, Hernán Chebar in partnership with Schwarz Desarrollo and One Development Group
Renderings by Binyan Studios, RAMSA
#RAMSAcityliving

At Facades+ Monterrey, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar brings Torre Gala Residences into focus with “Torre Gala: Transformative Towers Face the Landscape,” a panel discussion on April 22.
Hernán will discuss RAMSA’s double-tower design located in the prestigious San Pedro Garza Garcia neighborhood with views to the Sierra Madre Mountains beyond.
The towers, along with garden walls and low-rise pavilions, shape a network of outdoor amenity spaces anchored by a motorcourt and pool courtyard, all linked by planted walkways inspired by both Mediterranean and local Mexican landscapes.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen, Hernán Chebar in partnership with Schwarz Desarrollo and One Development Group
Renderings by Binyan Studios, RAMSA
#RAMSAcityliving

At Facades+ Monterrey, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar brings Torre Gala Residences into focus with “Torre Gala: Transformative Towers Face the Landscape,” a panel discussion on April 22.
Hernán will discuss RAMSA’s double-tower design located in the prestigious San Pedro Garza Garcia neighborhood with views to the Sierra Madre Mountains beyond.
The towers, along with garden walls and low-rise pavilions, shape a network of outdoor amenity spaces anchored by a motorcourt and pool courtyard, all linked by planted walkways inspired by both Mediterranean and local Mexican landscapes.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen, Hernán Chebar in partnership with Schwarz Desarrollo and One Development Group
Renderings by Binyan Studios, RAMSA
#RAMSAcityliving

At Facades+ Monterrey, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar brings Torre Gala Residences into focus with “Torre Gala: Transformative Towers Face the Landscape,” a panel discussion on April 22.
Hernán will discuss RAMSA’s double-tower design located in the prestigious San Pedro Garza Garcia neighborhood with views to the Sierra Madre Mountains beyond.
The towers, along with garden walls and low-rise pavilions, shape a network of outdoor amenity spaces anchored by a motorcourt and pool courtyard, all linked by planted walkways inspired by both Mediterranean and local Mexican landscapes.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen, Hernán Chebar in partnership with Schwarz Desarrollo and One Development Group
Renderings by Binyan Studios, RAMSA
#RAMSAcityliving

At Facades+ Monterrey, RAMSA Associate Partner Hernán Chebar brings Torre Gala Residences into focus with “Torre Gala: Transformative Towers Face the Landscape,” a panel discussion on April 22.
Hernán will discuss RAMSA’s double-tower design located in the prestigious San Pedro Garza Garcia neighborhood with views to the Sierra Madre Mountains beyond.
The towers, along with garden walls and low-rise pavilions, shape a network of outdoor amenity spaces anchored by a motorcourt and pool courtyard, all linked by planted walkways inspired by both Mediterranean and local Mexican landscapes.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen, Hernán Chebar in partnership with Schwarz Desarrollo and One Development Group
Renderings by Binyan Studios, RAMSA
#RAMSAcityliving

Known as Ocean Terrace’s “sunrise bar” because it faces east, the amenity pool bar features unique details that thematically connect to our design solutions throughout the site.
The bar is clad in terra cotta and glazed ceramic tiles, while an aquatic glass mosaic mural further enlivens the bar hospitality experience. Wood thresholds and millwork echo the Brazilian Modernism influences found in the interiors.
The recessed, radial light installation overhead creates ambient glow and reincorporates the circular and radial patterns that shape the interior amenities spaces.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen with Donny Silberman, Armando Amaral, and Frances Calosso
#RAMSAcityliving

Known as Ocean Terrace’s “sunrise bar” because it faces east, the amenity pool bar features unique details that thematically connect to our design solutions throughout the site.
The bar is clad in terra cotta and glazed ceramic tiles, while an aquatic glass mosaic mural further enlivens the bar hospitality experience. Wood thresholds and millwork echo the Brazilian Modernism influences found in the interiors.
The recessed, radial light installation overhead creates ambient glow and reincorporates the circular and radial patterns that shape the interior amenities spaces.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen with Donny Silberman, Armando Amaral, and Frances Calosso
#RAMSAcityliving

Known as Ocean Terrace’s “sunrise bar” because it faces east, the amenity pool bar features unique details that thematically connect to our design solutions throughout the site.
The bar is clad in terra cotta and glazed ceramic tiles, while an aquatic glass mosaic mural further enlivens the bar hospitality experience. Wood thresholds and millwork echo the Brazilian Modernism influences found in the interiors.
The recessed, radial light installation overhead creates ambient glow and reincorporates the circular and radial patterns that shape the interior amenities spaces.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen with Donny Silberman, Armando Amaral, and Frances Calosso
#RAMSAcityliving

Known as Ocean Terrace’s “sunrise bar” because it faces east, the amenity pool bar features unique details that thematically connect to our design solutions throughout the site.
The bar is clad in terra cotta and glazed ceramic tiles, while an aquatic glass mosaic mural further enlivens the bar hospitality experience. Wood thresholds and millwork echo the Brazilian Modernism influences found in the interiors.
The recessed, radial light installation overhead creates ambient glow and reincorporates the circular and radial patterns that shape the interior amenities spaces.
Design led by Michael Jones and Paul Whalen with Donny Silberman, Armando Amaral, and Frances Calosso
#RAMSAcityliving

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses

Along a sweeping arc, the back porch and garden organize the butterfly-shaped plan of the House in Southern California, which we thoughtfully updated and restored in the spirit of John Elgin Woolf’s original design.
Outside the living room, a curved porch supported by Woolf’s ultra-thin colonettes follows the outline of the pool and frames the view of the city skyline.
At opposite ends of the oval-shaped pool, the garden room loosely mirrors the primary bedroom, with evocative views of the city and canyon through floor-to-ceiling sliding doors and picture windows.
Landscape architect Mario Nievera reimagined the site to encourage the free flow between indoors and out characteristic of Southern California living while heightening the garden with scents and colors that draw you through the house and out to the pool and its skyline view.
Design led by Roger Seifter with Brian Fell
Interior design: John Gilmer Associates
Landscape architect: Nievera Williams Landscape Architecture
Photography: Eric Piasecki
#RAMSAhouses
Instagramストーリービューアは、Instagramストーリー、動画、写真、またはIGTVを秘密に見たり保存したりできる簡単なツールです。このサービスを使用すると、コンテンツをダウンロードして、いつでもオフラインで楽しむことができます。Instagramで後でチェックしたいものを見つけた場合や、匿名でストーリーを見たい場合、このビューアは最適です。Anonstoriesは、あなたの身元を隠すための優れたソリューションを提供します。Instagramは2023年8月にストーリー機能を導入し、すぐに他のプラットフォームでも採用されました。このフォーマットは魅力的で、時間に敏感なため、ユーザーが写真、動画、または自撮りをテキスト、絵文字、またはフィルターで強化して、24時間限定で公開することができます。この限られた時間枠は、通常の投稿に比べて高いエンゲージメントを生み出します。今日の世界では、ストーリーはソーシャルメディアでつながり、コミュニケーションをとる最も人気のある方法の1つです。しかし、ストーリーを視聴すると、作成者は自分の名前を視聴者リストに見ることができ、プライバシーの懸念があります。もしストーリーを目立たずに閲覧したい場合、ここでAnonstoriesが役立ちます。これを使うことで、自分の身元を明かさずにInstagramのコンテンツを視聴できます。単に調べたいプロファイルのユーザー名を入力すると、その人の最新のストーリーが表示されます。Anonstoriesビューアの特徴:- 匿名閲覧:視聴リストに名前が表示されずにストーリーを視聴 - アカウント不要:Instagramのアカウントにサインインせずに公開コンテンツを視聴 - コンテンツダウンロード:ストーリーコンテンツを直接デバイスに保存してオフラインで使用 - ハイライト視聴:24時間を過ぎてもInstagramのハイライトにアクセス - リポストモニタリング:個人プロファイルのストーリーに対するリポストやエンゲージメントのレベルを追跡 制限事項:- このツールは公開アカウントでのみ動作し、非公開アカウントはアクセスできません。 利点:- プライバシー保護:Instagramのコンテンツを匿名で閲覧可能 - シンプルで簡単:アプリのインストールや登録は不要 - 独自のツール:Instagramが提供していない方法でコンテンツをダウンロードおよび管理可能
Instagramの更新をプライバシーを守りつつ、匿名で追跡できます。
プライベートプロファイルビューアを使用して、プロフィールと写真を簡単に匿名で閲覧できます。
この無料ツールでInstagramストーリーを匿名で閲覧でき、アクティビティがストーリーアップローダーに知られることはありません。
Anonstoriesを使用すると、作成者に通知されることなくInstagramストーリーを閲覧できます。
iOS、Android、Windows、macOS、ChromeやSafariなどの最新のブラウザで問題なく動作します。
ログイン情報なしで、安全かつ匿名で閲覧できます。
ユーザーは、ユーザー名を入力するだけで公開ストーリーを閲覧可能—アカウント登録は不要です。
写真(JPEG)と動画(MP4)を簡単にダウンロードできます。
サービスは無料で利用できます。
非公開アカウントのコンテンツはフォロワーのみがアクセスできます。
ファイルは個人または教育目的でのみ使用し、著作権法を遵守する必要があります。
公開ユーザー名を入力して、ストーリーを閲覧またはダウンロードします。サービスはコンテンツをローカルに保存するための直接リンクを生成します。