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    www.nyspacesmagazine.com/pages.asp?id=746 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/27/2007    Last Visited: 11/27/2007  

    Gail Green212-541-3728

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    www.nyspacesmagazine.com/pages.asp?id=763 - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 11/27/2007    Last Visited: 11/27/2007  

    Gail Green of Green & Company, New York City, designed this Upper East Side powder room to embody the lightness and brightness of daytime.But to do so, she had to turn the tall and narrow space into a vivid and seemingly grander one."I needed to make it feel open and less like a tunnel," says the designer.To achieve her goal, she combined a horizontal tile pattern with a white sink, water closet and walls.

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    cooperator.com/articles/292/1/Kitchen-Makeover/Page1.ht - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/18/2009    Last Visited: 5/18/2009  

    Interior designer Gail Green would say very carefully. And that is exactly what she did for one family's kitchen in a co-op at 201 East 79th Street.

    The original kitchen was small and rectangular with only one entrance, from the dining room. In addition, it lacked many of the design elements that were featured throughout the rest of the apartment. The family also wanted the kitchen to be open and airy, with access from the foyer, dining room and living room, explains Green. But the challenge did not end there. The kitchen had to function in many different ways as well, she continues.
    ...
    It was difficult because I literally had to make the room three times the size on a modest budget, says Green. In order to accomplish the task she had to bring in David Estreich Architects to knock down walls, raise and lower ceilings and make the kitchen aesthetically compatible with the rest of the apartment. The great thing about the job was that the family was living in another apartment at the time of the renovation so we did not have to work around them while they were using the kitchen.

    In order to accomplish the design goals, Green created varying elements within the kitchen to give each area of the kitchen a different look. We dropped the ceiling in the eating zone to give it a more closed-in appeal and we raised the ceiling in the other areas to create a more open space, states Green. She also painted some of the architectural elements to create continuity with the rest of the apartment. By painting some of the beams the same historical green as other parts of the apartment we were able to make the kitchen relate to the apartment, she says.

    The new kitchen features many of the sharp angles found elsewhere in the apartment as well as geometrical shapes to contrast with those angles. The white Formica cabinets and white tile floor offer a clean, smooth look that softens the harsh angles of the architecture, while the backsplash features green and white checked tile. We used a white floor with a spherical design in the middle to offset the check on the backsplash, explains Green. This also helped to make the floor move much better and flow into the other rooms.

    Like the floor, the hardware of the kitchen was set up to contrast with the sharp angles of the apartment. The entire apartment has very intense architecture so it was important to add features that were different but at the same complimented the triangles and strong beams, Green says.

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    cooperator.com/articles/292/1/Kitchen-Makeover/Page1.ht - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/19/2007    Last Visited: 7/19/2007  

    Interior designer Gail Green would say very carefully.And that is exactly what she did for one family's kitchen in a co-op at 201 East 79th Street.

    The original kitchen was small and rectangular with only one entrance, from the dining room.In addition, it lacked many of the design elements that were featured throughout the rest of the apartment.The family also wanted the kitchen to be open and airy, with access from the foyer, dining room and living room, explains Green.But the challenge did not end there.The kitchen had to function in many different ways as well, she continues.
    ...
    It was difficult because I literally had to make the room three times the size on a modest budget, says Green.In order to accomplish the task she had to bring in David Estreich Architects to knock down walls, raise and lower ceilings and make the kitchen aesthetically compatible with the rest of the apartment.The great thing about the job was that the family was living in another apartment at the time of the renovation so we did not have to work around them while they were using the kitchen.

    In order to accomplish the design goals, Green created varying elements within the kitchen to give each area of the kitchen a different look.We dropped the ceiling in the eating zone to give it a more closed-in appeal and we raised the ceiling in the other areas to create a more open space, states Green.She also painted some of the architectural elements to create continuity with the rest of the apartment.By painting some of the beams the same historical green as other parts of the apartment we were able to make the kitchen relate to the apartment, she says.

    The new kitchen features many of the sharp angles found elsewhere in the apartment as well as geometrical shapes to contrast with those angles.The white Formica cabinets and white tile floor offer a clean, smooth look that softens the harsh angles of the architecture, while the backsplash features green and white checked tile.We used a white floor with a spherical design in the middle to offset the check on the backsplash, explains Green.This also helped to make the floor move much better and flow into the other rooms.

    Like the floor, the hardware of the kitchen was set up to contrast with the sharp angles of the apartment.The entire apartment has very intense architecture so it was important to add features that were different but at the same complimented the triangles and strong beams, Green says.

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    2009 Kips Bay Decorator Show House - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 2/28/2007    Last Visited: 5/17/2009  

    Gail Green for Green & Company

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    Adrienne Zoble - McKinney Associates Inc. - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/18/2006    Last Visited: 5/25/2009  

    Gail Green, Green & Co., Inc.

    Women President's Organization

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    Arabesque Interior Designer Beaded Panels - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/5/2006    Last Visited: 7/5/2006  

    ... Crafts-period artists, designer Gail Green, Green & Co.Inc, NYC ... Drapery panels in a Frank Lloyd Wright fabric (F. Schumacher & Co ... Interior Canvas September Editor's Picks (Download PDF) Custom ...

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    Board & Committees | Kips Bay Boys and Girls Club - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 5/17/2009    Last Visited: 5/17/2009  

    Gail Green

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    ContextoLatino - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 7/4/2004    Last Visited: 4/5/2005  

    Designer Gail Green of Green & Company, Inc. in New York City says that furniture shapes in ...

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    Dan's Papers - Read Dan's Papers - [Cached Version]
    Published on: 8/25/2002    Last Visited: 8/25/2002  

    Design, Peter Falk and Romaine Gordon of Falk & Gordon Interiors, Geoffrey A. Blatt of Geoffrey A. Blatt, Inc., Mariette Himes Gomez of Gomez Associates, Gail Green of Green & Company, Inc., Jeff Lincoln of Jeff Lincoln Interiors, Juan Montoya of Juan Montoya Design, Mark Epstein of Mark Epstein Designs, Inc., Matthew Patrick Smith, Nancy Corzine, Randall Ridless and Beth Martell of Randall A. Ridless, LLC, Richard C. Carpenter of Richard C. Carpenter Interiors, Richard Mishaan of Richard Mishaan Design, Roderick N. Shade of Roderick N. Shade, Inc., Scott Salvador of Scott Salvador, Inc. and Tonin Mac Callum of Tonin Mac Callum ASID, Inc.

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