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Feature: Screen Play

De Schofield

January 1, 2005

To prop up your feet in your own private screening room with friends or family is the ultimate luxury. It’s even better if you have custom-made oversize chenille chairs with dozens of throw pillows and a never-ending supply of cocktails and wine flowing from your own privately stocked bar and cellar. No one–and no big hairdos–to block your view of the screen. And you can watch your favorite film whenever you want without having to brave the crowds (and the on-the-loose teen­agers) at your local cineplex.


The theater is defined by its semicircular seating arrangement. (Click image to enlarge)

Today, media rooms are about much more than the perfect picture and stellar surround sound. Great design–the layout, fabrics, furnishings, lighting, artwork–sets the tone for any gathering, no matter how informal. The entertainment spaces on the following pages represent four dramatically different approaches to media room design.

THE GRAND SLAM

For the high-rise residence of Cincinnati Reds player Barry Larkin, interior designer David Millett cre­ated a free-form, loftlike design that encompasses the home’s main living areas within a series of “islands” that separate the space into distinctive zones. “Lisa Larkin requested that this space be designed specifically for Barry,” says Millett, who was given carte blanche to create a New York City—penthouse feel for the legendary baseball star’s home-away-from-home in Cincinnati, Ohio (the Larkin family’s main residence is in Orlando, Fla.).

“In designing the space, I was concerned with creating divisions for various uses–segmenting via soffits and layering instead of walls,” Millett says. “The penthouse has panoramic views of the Cincinnati skyline, so we wanted the plan to capitalize on the view [whenever] the theater setting was not in use.”

The entertainment venue, which is nearly 2,800 square feet, incorporates the living room, formal and informal dining areas, kitchen, media center and billiard and bar areas. The “soft contemporary” theme, says Millett, is defined by spaces that function as well-assembled units or as individual groupings–all colored in the Cincinnati Reds’ fiery red and black, and tempered with neutrals. From the entryway, where a trophy cabinet proudly displays Larkin’s sports memorabilia, black granite flooring leads into the kitchen and transitions into the main entertainment area in a khaki wool swirl-motif carpet. The kitchen boasts its own media center–a custom apron shelf above the range hood that holds three flat-screen televisions; an additional television is inset within a curved stainless steel cabinet above the sink. Larkin’s bedroom also has its own theater setup with a big-screen television and surround sound.


The bedroom has a mini theater complete with surround sound. Photograph by Barry Steinnecker
. (Click image to enlarge)

The home theater, anchored by a drop-down 100-inch screen and a retractable projector, features a semicircular grouping of black leather club chairs paired with a red sofa that was custom designed to fit the contours of that island’s stepped-up platform. The fourth media center, in the Larkins’ family room, provides a more intimate setting for theater viewing. Here, an oversize sofa, upholstered in red swirl-patterned cut velvet, faces a custom built-in that houses a 60-inch flat-screen TV. Articulated in a light maple veneer, the piece boasts a playful geometric shape. The result: a high-rise home that blends four high-end media systems into a coherent, sophisticated design.

SOURCES

INTERIOR DESIGNER
David A. Millett Inc., Interior Design
513.489.3887
www.davidamillett.com

ARCHITECT
Norris & Dierkers Architects
513.791.4524

CUSTOM INSTALLER
M. Alan Associates
513.469.6522

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