SOLID OBJECTIVES IDENBURG LIU
Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu is an architecture studio in New York and Amsterdam since 2008

The Mini Pavilions comprise five distinct, but formally coherent and physically interconnected structures, specifically designed to facilitate intimate, durational experiences with select works of art. Rotating exhibitions will be on view throughout the five galleries, attracting repeat visitorship and sustaining a dialogue between Art Omi Pavilions and the broader cultural context.
The architectural vision, led by Brooklyn-based firm Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL), treats each gallery as chapters in an unfolding perceptual encounter, successively inviting the viewer to deepening stages of contemplation. Unifying the five pavilions under a single roof, SO–IL’s design emphasizes a continuous and cohesive experience.
Learn more about the Mini Pavilions at the link in bio. #artomipavilions
Renderings: Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu

The Mini Pavilions comprise five distinct, but formally coherent and physically interconnected structures, specifically designed to facilitate intimate, durational experiences with select works of art. Rotating exhibitions will be on view throughout the five galleries, attracting repeat visitorship and sustaining a dialogue between Art Omi Pavilions and the broader cultural context.
The architectural vision, led by Brooklyn-based firm Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL), treats each gallery as chapters in an unfolding perceptual encounter, successively inviting the viewer to deepening stages of contemplation. Unifying the five pavilions under a single roof, SO–IL’s design emphasizes a continuous and cohesive experience.
Learn more about the Mini Pavilions at the link in bio. #artomipavilions
Renderings: Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

Mass timber construction is underway as the new home for the Williams College Museum of Art takes shape and we recently celebrated the topping off. @iwanbaan visited to document the innovative double-curved timber structure. Collaborating with our partners @perrydeanrogers, structural engineers from @fastepp, @consigliconstruction, and the pioneering mass timber fabricator @nordic_structures, we commend @williamsartmuseum and @williamscollege for their dedication to excellence. This project reinforces Williams College’s commitment to the arts.
Scheduled to open in fall 2027, the new WCMA building will host 11 galleries, multiple classrooms, a spacious auditorium, and a welcoming cafe, creating a vibrant cultural hub for the community.

We are thrilled to share that our office designed the new @isseymiyakeofficial flagship store at 45 Madison Avenue in New York City, which opens to the public on May 8th. Located on the ground floor of the iconic Cass Gilbert-designed New York Life Building, at the corner of Madison Avenue and 26th Street overlooking Madison Square Park, the new flagship spans 13,000 square feet of retail space. This project holds significant meaning for our team as we have long admired the brand's collaborations with artists, dancers, and architects.

We are thrilled to share that our office designed the new @isseymiyakeofficial flagship store at 45 Madison Avenue in New York City, which opens to the public on May 8th. Located on the ground floor of the iconic Cass Gilbert-designed New York Life Building, at the corner of Madison Avenue and 26th Street overlooking Madison Square Park, the new flagship spans 13,000 square feet of retail space. This project holds significant meaning for our team as we have long admired the brand's collaborations with artists, dancers, and architects.

We are thrilled to share that our office designed the new @isseymiyakeofficial flagship store at 45 Madison Avenue in New York City, which opens to the public on May 8th. Located on the ground floor of the iconic Cass Gilbert-designed New York Life Building, at the corner of Madison Avenue and 26th Street overlooking Madison Square Park, the new flagship spans 13,000 square feet of retail space. This project holds significant meaning for our team as we have long admired the brand's collaborations with artists, dancers, and architects.

For the next edition of Independent May 14-17, award-winning architectural firm @solidobjectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL) will transform the exterior of our new home at Pier 36 on the Lower East Side, giving the venue a distinctive visual identity in dialogue with the surrounding neighborhood.
Based in Amsterdam and New York, SO–IL was founded in 2008 by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu. They have worked internationally and collaborated with artists, curators, and cultural institutions, with a focus on community engagement, civic responsibility, and environmental sustainability.
#SolidObjectives #IndependentNewYork

For the next edition of Independent May 14-17, award-winning architectural firm @solidobjectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL) will transform the exterior of our new home at Pier 36 on the Lower East Side, giving the venue a distinctive visual identity in dialogue with the surrounding neighborhood.
Based in Amsterdam and New York, SO–IL was founded in 2008 by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu. They have worked internationally and collaborated with artists, curators, and cultural institutions, with a focus on community engagement, civic responsibility, and environmental sustainability.
#SolidObjectives #IndependentNewYork

For the next edition of Independent May 14-17, award-winning architectural firm @solidobjectives Idenburg Liu (SO–IL) will transform the exterior of our new home at Pier 36 on the Lower East Side, giving the venue a distinctive visual identity in dialogue with the surrounding neighborhood.
Based in Amsterdam and New York, SO–IL was founded in 2008 by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu. They have worked internationally and collaborated with artists, curators, and cultural institutions, with a focus on community engagement, civic responsibility, and environmental sustainability.
#SolidObjectives #IndependentNewYork

Urban presence — photo courtesy @valfl24 / architect: @solidobjectives / building: 144 Vanderbilt introduces a bold residential identity to Brooklyn through color, texture, and massing.
The building is composed as a series of stacked volumes, expressed through precast, pigmented concrete panels in varying sizes. This modular assembly creates a dynamic façade that reads as a vertical composition of interlocking blocks rather than a single monolithic mass.
Its distinctive pink tone gives the project a strong urban presence while softening the heaviness typically associated with concrete. Subtle shifts in volume generate terraces, recesses, and depth—enhancing light, views, and spatial variety for residents.
Responding to its context along Myrtle Avenue, the building rises asymmetrically, reinforcing the perception of upward movement and layered construction. The result is a contemporary reinterpretation of masonry—where color and prefabrication redefine residential architecture.
#Brooklyn #NewYorkCity #USA #ResidentialArchitecture #ContemporaryArchitecture

Urban presence — photo courtesy @valfl24 / architect: @solidobjectives / building: 144 Vanderbilt introduces a bold residential identity to Brooklyn through color, texture, and massing.
The building is composed as a series of stacked volumes, expressed through precast, pigmented concrete panels in varying sizes. This modular assembly creates a dynamic façade that reads as a vertical composition of interlocking blocks rather than a single monolithic mass.
Its distinctive pink tone gives the project a strong urban presence while softening the heaviness typically associated with concrete. Subtle shifts in volume generate terraces, recesses, and depth—enhancing light, views, and spatial variety for residents.
Responding to its context along Myrtle Avenue, the building rises asymmetrically, reinforcing the perception of upward movement and layered construction. The result is a contemporary reinterpretation of masonry—where color and prefabrication redefine residential architecture.
#Brooklyn #NewYorkCity #USA #ResidentialArchitecture #ContemporaryArchitecture

Urban presence — photo courtesy @valfl24 / architect: @solidobjectives / building: 144 Vanderbilt introduces a bold residential identity to Brooklyn through color, texture, and massing.
The building is composed as a series of stacked volumes, expressed through precast, pigmented concrete panels in varying sizes. This modular assembly creates a dynamic façade that reads as a vertical composition of interlocking blocks rather than a single monolithic mass.
Its distinctive pink tone gives the project a strong urban presence while softening the heaviness typically associated with concrete. Subtle shifts in volume generate terraces, recesses, and depth—enhancing light, views, and spatial variety for residents.
Responding to its context along Myrtle Avenue, the building rises asymmetrically, reinforcing the perception of upward movement and layered construction. The result is a contemporary reinterpretation of masonry—where color and prefabrication redefine residential architecture.
#Brooklyn #NewYorkCity #USA #ResidentialArchitecture #ContemporaryArchitecture

Urban presence — photo courtesy @valfl24 / architect: @solidobjectives / building: 144 Vanderbilt introduces a bold residential identity to Brooklyn through color, texture, and massing.
The building is composed as a series of stacked volumes, expressed through precast, pigmented concrete panels in varying sizes. This modular assembly creates a dynamic façade that reads as a vertical composition of interlocking blocks rather than a single monolithic mass.
Its distinctive pink tone gives the project a strong urban presence while softening the heaviness typically associated with concrete. Subtle shifts in volume generate terraces, recesses, and depth—enhancing light, views, and spatial variety for residents.
Responding to its context along Myrtle Avenue, the building rises asymmetrically, reinforcing the perception of upward movement and layered construction. The result is a contemporary reinterpretation of masonry—where color and prefabrication redefine residential architecture.
#Brooklyn #NewYorkCity #USA #ResidentialArchitecture #ContemporaryArchitecture

Urban presence — photo courtesy @valfl24 / architect: @solidobjectives / building: 144 Vanderbilt introduces a bold residential identity to Brooklyn through color, texture, and massing.
The building is composed as a series of stacked volumes, expressed through precast, pigmented concrete panels in varying sizes. This modular assembly creates a dynamic façade that reads as a vertical composition of interlocking blocks rather than a single monolithic mass.
Its distinctive pink tone gives the project a strong urban presence while softening the heaviness typically associated with concrete. Subtle shifts in volume generate terraces, recesses, and depth—enhancing light, views, and spatial variety for residents.
Responding to its context along Myrtle Avenue, the building rises asymmetrically, reinforcing the perception of upward movement and layered construction. The result is a contemporary reinterpretation of masonry—where color and prefabrication redefine residential architecture.
#Brooklyn #NewYorkCity #USA #ResidentialArchitecture #ContemporaryArchitecture
Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com
Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com
Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com
Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Pacific partnered with Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu to evolve the firm’s brand identity and design a new digital home for their practice. Rooted in the studio’s founding values of intellectual rigor and humanistic design, the comprehensive brand refresh is built to serve the firm’s dual base in New York and Amsterdam and scale across the next decade of work.
Building on that foundation, we designed and developed a new website that features a robust project database with advanced filtering and support for long-form editorial publishing — structured to reflect both the breadth and depth of the studio’s international portfolio. The result is a restrained, highly considered platform that meets the ambition and scale of Solid Objectives Idenburg Liu’s practice.
Visit solidobjectives.com

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)

Der Kunstcampus Amant fügt sich als fein austarierte architektonische Struktur in das industrielle Gefüge Nord-Brooklyns ein. Über drei Häuserblocks hinweg entsteht ein Ensemble aus vier Volumen, das Ateliers, Galerien, Arbeits- und Lagerräume sowie ein Café vereint. Durchgänge, Außenräume und präzise gesetzte Eingänge verweben öffentliche und private Bereiche und öffnen den Campus zur Nachbarschaft. Der bewusste Einsatz von Backstein, Beton und industriellen Materialien erzeugt eine ruhige, zugleich taktile Atmosphäre. Jede Galerie besitzt eine eigene räumliche Identität in Proportion, Lichtführung und technischer Ausstattung und ermöglicht ein breites Spektrum kuratorischer und installativer Formate.
**********
The Amant arts campus integrates into the industrial fabric of North Brooklyn as a finely calibrated architectural structure. Spanning three city blocks, the ensemble comprises four volumes that bring together studios, galleries, work and storage spaces, as well as a café. Passages, outdoor areas, and precisely placed entrances interweave public and private realms, opening the campus to the surrounding neighborhood. The deliberate use of brick, concrete, and industrial materials creates a calm yet tactile atmosphere. Each gallery possesses a distinct spatial identity in terms of proportion, light quality, and technical infrastructure, enabling a wide range of curatorial and installation-based formats.
© Naho Kubato (1–5), Brad Ogbonna (7)
#ImmigrantStoryoftheWeek
Housing and sustainability are issues that concern most New Yorkers including architect Jing Liu. 🏡
Winner of our 2018 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Architecture, Liu grew up in Nanjing, China, before moving to the U.S. at the age of 13 with her family. Settling in New Orleans, Liu fell in love with architecture, later earning her degree from @tulaneu.
Now, with her Brooklyn-based firm @solidobjectives, she works on projects from around the world, including the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at the University of California, Davis, the venue for New York’s Frieze Art Fair, and a mixed-use district on the banks of the Seine River, commissioned by the City of Paris.
Liu’s practice showcases a distinctive playfulness as well as a serious inquiry into urban housing and sustainability. Her research places a strong emphasis on shared space that is rooted in her Nanjing upbringing.
Liu continues to dream up new visions of space that could transform life here in New York, like a communal, co-living project in Brooklyn. 💭✏️
Necto was designed collaboratively and globally, built locally, reusable, lightweight and biodegradable. The project explores the theme of Intelligens through an immersive, innovative, and both computationally derived yet intuitively driven membrane structure that speculates on the future of temporary structures—lightweight, flexible and efficient, and embedded with latent intelligence
Luminous threads seamlessly integrated within the textile follow selected stress pathways, forming a constellation of light and spatialized sound. Immersive animations dance across the membrane, transforming the structure temporarily into different environments, only to disappear entirely in the next moment again. The generative light and sound animations embrace lightness, exploring the expressive possibilities of a very minimal visual and sonic palette. Each atmosphere playfully speculates on the tensions between craft and algorithm, nature and technology, emergent process and design intent.
Necto - A 3D-Knitted Anticlastic Media Architecture by SO-IL, Mariana Popescu and TheGreenEyl
at the 19th International Architecture Exhibition in Venice, 10 May – 23 November 2025

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)

From the outside, 450 Warren stands as an unsuspecting building that anchors a Brooklyn corner with its field of grids: a tiled, textured facade with regimented punched openings and recessed balconies. But, from the moment you step inside, you are taken by a reimagined courtyard that sparks anyone’s curiosity through a combination of form, nature and materiality.
Thanks again to Tankhouse for the invitation to capture this project, completed back in 2022 and the first in their ongoing collaborations with SO-IL. Their continued partnership has developed a number of distinct, uniquely bold buildings that are tied together by an underlying drive to explore what it means to live as a community whilst simultaneously challenging residential conventions.
With 450 Warren, in my opinion, there’s a sculptural quality and plasticity to the void through a weaving of materiality and nature. Together, they both delineate and warp the boundaries by which we understand a space and how we move through it. I like to think of it almost as an art of the “in between”, where the push and pull of these delineations creates a layered experience of what a courtyard or a corridor can normally do within a building.
These are just some of the photos I was able to take on a Saturday a couple of weeks ago, which I hope help to illustrate my previous impressions, as I explored the ins and outs of this project.
Mix of digital and film
(PS: Would love to come back at a later date to see how the vegetation continues to blend with the architecture 😉)
인스타그램 스토리 뷰어는 인스타그램 스토리, 비디오, 사진 또는 IGTV를 비밀리에 보고 저장할 수 있는 간단한 도구입니다. 이 서비스를 통해 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 언제든지 오프라인으로 즐길 수 있습니다. 인스타그램에서 나중에 확인하고 싶은 흥미로운 콘텐츠를 찾거나 익명으로 스토리를 보고 싶다면, 우리 뷰어가 적합합니다. Anonstories는 신원을 숨길 수 있는 훌륭한 솔루션을 제공합니다. 인스타그램은 2023년 8월에 스토리 기능을 출시했으며, 이 기능은 흥미롭고 시간에 민감한 형식으로 빠르게 다른 플랫폼에 채택되었습니다. 스토리는 사용자가 텍스트, 이모지 또는 필터로 보강된 사진, 비디오 또는 셀카를 공유할 수 있게 해주며, 24시간 동안만 표시됩니다. 이 제한된 시간 동안 높은 참여를 유도하며 일반 게시물보다 더 많은 반응을 얻을 수 있습니다. 오늘날 스토리는 소셜 미디어에서 연결하고 소통하는 가장 인기 있는 방법 중 하나입니다. 그러나 스토리를 볼 때, 제작자는 자신의 뷰어 목록에서 당신의 이름을 볼 수 있으며, 이는 개인 정보 보호에 대한 우려를 일으킬 수 있습니다. 만약 스토리를 아무도 모르게 탐색하고 싶다면? 그때 Anonstories가 유용해집니다. 이 도구는 신원을 드러내지 않고 공개된 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있게 해줍니다. 관심 있는 프로필의 사용자명을 입력하면 해당 프로필의 최신 스토리를 확인할 수 있습니다. Anonstories 뷰어의 특징: - 익명 브라우징: 뷰어 목록에 나타나지 않고 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. - 계정 필요 없음: 인스타그램 계정에 가입하지 않고 공개 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있습니다. - 콘텐츠 다운로드: 스토리 콘텐츠를 직접 다운로드하여 오프라인에서 사용할 수 있습니다. - 하이라이트 보기: 24시간 제한을 넘어서 인스타그램 하이라이트를 볼 수 있습니다. - 리포스트 모니터링: 개인 프로필의 스토리 리포스트나 참여도를 추적할 수 있습니다. 제한 사항: - 이 도구는 공개 계정에서만 작동하며, 개인 계정은 접근할 수 없습니다. 장점: - 개인 정보 보호 친화적: 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 보면서도 눈에 띄지 않습니다. - 간단하고 쉬움: 앱 설치나 등록이 필요 없습니다. - 독점 도구: 인스타그램에서 제공하지 않는 방식으로 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 관리할 수 있습니다.
인스타그램 업데이트를 비밀리에 추적하고 개인 정보를 보호하며 익명으로 남을 수 있습니다.
개인 프로필 뷰어를 사용하여 쉽게 프로필과 사진을 익명으로 볼 수 있습니다.
이 무료 도구는 인스타그램 스토리를 익명으로 볼 수 있게 해주며, 스토리 업로더에게 활동을 숨길 수 있습니다.
Anonstories는 사용자가 인스타그램 스토리를 볼 때 제작자에게 알림을 보내지 않도록 합니다.
iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, Chrome, Safari와 같은 최신 브라우저에서 원활하게 작동합니다.
로그인 정보 없이 안전하고 익명으로 브라우징할 수 있습니다.
사용자는 간단히 사용자명을 입력하여 공개된 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. 계정이 필요하지 않습니다.
사진(JPEG)과 비디오(MP4)를 쉽게 다운로드합니다.
이 서비스는 무료로 제공됩니다.
비공개 계정의 콘텐츠는 팔로워만 접근할 수 있습니다.
파일은 개인적 또는 교육적 용도로만 사용 가능하며 저작권 규정을 준수해야 합니다.
공개된 사용자명을 입력하여 스토리를 보거나 다운로드할 수 있습니다. 서비스는 콘텐츠를 로컬에 저장할 수 있는 직접 링크를 생성합니다.