American design studio has created original Autum sofa, called Heretic, the sofa has the shape of a coffin with a very luxurious style.Sofa made of steel coffin, weighs 360 pounds and is lined with black Italian leather. Copies: 3 copies. It’s the american design studio Autumshere who created this amazing piece of design. Hand-Made 100% in the USA, Heretic is presented in a black italian leather texture. The whole thing is available for 4,500 $. An amazing way to design your mansion, or even better, your Church House. Autum’s Heretic Coffin Sofa is an elegant, stylish and super comfy piece that will add that extra spice to your dwelling.
If you’ve been looking for a place with an indoor basketball court, screening room, media room, and pond house, then look no further. 50 cent has put his 52 room Connecticut mansion up for sale. He remodeled it after purchasing it from boxer Mike Tyson. It’s suprisingly tasteful, even while being so Bling with it’s marble floors and crystal chandeliers. I wonder if Fanny Mae would float a loan for 18.5 Million on this one.
This luxurious paradise in Costa Rica is one of the amazing garden of the house plans that I have ever seen. With 4,000 sq. ft. of indoor living space and 2,000 sq. ft. of outdoor entertaining areas, the house takes advantage of environment, located on the crest of a coastal canyon with the Pacific Ocean crashing below and the Costa Rican jungle all around. An outdoor living space features a large infinity pool that flows from under an open sky to a roofed indoor courtyard, blurring the boundary between indoors and out. This wood, five-bedroom, 4.5-bathroom coastal home accommodates eight and includes a caretaker’s quarters to ensure you don’t have to lift a finger during your stay. Even when you’re indoors, vast open windows, terraces and decks evoke the feeling of being outside. Made for entertaining and relaxing, this luxury home boasts “tiki-chic” decor that lends the house a casual atmosphere perfect for you and seven lucky friends on vacation.
With their soft outdoor furnishings and cozy seating arrangements, Paola Lenti is creating a more modern, more luxurious, a different kind of interior. These outdoor interior designs have evolved beyond boundaries, part indoors and out. Their casual and comfortable, yet contemporary aesthetic is complemented by architectural elements like gazebos, sails and screens which belong in the outdoors, yet have made their way in. The versatile, modular furnishings in the Cabanne collection include benches, sectionals and unusual low-lying coffee tables that might be mistaken for minimalist wood platforms used in meditation or yoga! The whole atmosphere of these outdoor interiors is Zen to the nth degree. All these different elements find their common thread in a cohesive color palette and earthy, rustic materials.
Paola Lenti’s eponymous company specializes in outdoor furniture and rugs with a focus on the innovative exploration of both natural and synthetic materials. Sourcing both traditionally produced fabrics of the highest quality as well as adapting contemporary, technologically- advanced textiles, her products are unlike any others on the market. The pieces comprising Lenti’s lines have become new classics that can be seamlessly integrated within the domestic landscape, bringing sophisticated elegance to exterior as well as interior environments. Extremely resist- ant to the elements and maintaining their integrity from season to season, each collection features both materials and colors developed by Lenti, and which are exclusive to her company.
This charming outdoor interior design collection comes from Paolo Lenti. The design combine of soft outdoor furnishings with a cozy seating arrangement into something more charming than a charming lady. The arrangement resulting a nice livable, warm interior design which has evolved into something beyond our imagination and above expectation, as they are being partially in and also out. Not all here are interiors some are outdoors design too, and look how they’re very comfortable by using low sofas, woven rattan furniture, warmer colors and low table. More information please visit Paolo Lenti Official website.
This highly anticipated suite at the pinnacle of Manhattan’s tallest hotel is a collaboration between owner Ty Warner, designer Peter Marino and architect I.M. Pei, who came out of retirement to join in the creation of America’s most exclusive accommodation. With cantilevered glass balconies and floor-to-ceiling bay windows, set beneath 25-foot cathedral ceilings, the Ty Warner Penthouse offers a breathtaking 360-degree view of all Manhattan. Custom-commissioned in every detail, from semi-precious stone surfaces to fabrics woven with platinum and gold, the nine-room suite creates the sense of living within a multilayered work of art. It raises the bar for even the most seasoned travellers. Penthouse guests enjoy amenities as impressive as their quarters: TVs programmed for every channel worldwide, unlimited global telephone calling, the services of both a personal butler and a personal trainer/therapist, and a private chauffeur for unlimited travel during your stay in your choice of a Rolls Royce Phantom or a Mercedes Maybach.
The décor is contemporary and understated, featuring the finest handcrafted furniture, English sycamore panelling and imported fabrics in light, soothing colours.
All accommodations offer an oval desk with two leather-upholstered chairs. Standard amenities to maximise productivity and relaxation include wired or wireless Internet access, a refrigerated private bar, CD and DVD players and all-news cable network service. Other signature features include Florentine marble bathrooms with a glass-enclosed shower stall, a deep soaking tub that fills in 60 seconds and a private changing area.
When the hotel was announced in January 1989, it was to have a main tower of 46 stories and a smaller tower of some 20 stories, with a total of 400 rooms. Completion was planned for late 1991. Construction was financed by a loan from a consortium of six Japanese banks, led by the Long-Term Credit Bank. The others were the Ashikaga Bank, Mitsubishi Trust and Banking Corporation, Mitsui Trust and Banking Company, Nippon Credit Bank and Sumitomo Trust and Banking Company. The hotel was named Regent New York Hotel and managed by Regent International Hotels of Hong Kong, in which EIE International had a 30 percent interest.
When the Japanese real estate market imploded in 1990, the hotel was sold to the Four Seasons group to recover from bad loans. Today the hotel is owned by Ty Warner Hotels and Resorts.























































