Architectural Record
Corton
New York , New York
Stephanie Goto Design Group
Stephanie Goto redefines the architectural aesthetic of a Manhattan culinary landmark to launch its thoughtfully plotted metamorphosis.
By Linda C. Lentz
This is an excerpt of an article from the January 2009 edition
of Architectural Record.
When New York City—based restaurateur Drew Nieporent opened
his critically acclaimed Montrachet in 1985, he broke ground on
two fronts: launching the career of chef David Bouley (whose food
garnered a three-star rating from The New York Times just seven
weeks after it debuted), and pioneering a yet-to-be-exploited Tribeca
(the now über-hip neighborhood in Lower Manhattan). In contrast,
the interior space itself — in a two-story commercial brick
building typical of the area’s historic architecture — was “built
with the funds that we had at the time,” Nieporent said,
and notable only for its lack of ostentation. Consequently, when
the restaurant received several “tired” reviews after
a successful run of more than 20 years, he closed shop to revitalize
its image — which continued to evoke the promise of a great
meal — and give equal emphasis to its decor.
Conduit Restaurant
Photo © Richard Pare
What many thought would be a renovation,
however, evolved into a full-blown reincarnation, dubbed Corton.
The new restaurant, named as a reference to what oenofiles consider
the only other white Burgundy to rival a top-quality Montrachet,
was the brainchild of Nieporent and his newly enlisted partner and
chef, Paul Liebrandt.
Program
Known for his vanguard approach to contemporary
French cuisine, Liebrandt wanted the room to set the stage for — not upstage — his
food, with its artful flavors and presentation. So when he suggested
bringing in designer Stephanie Goto, a friend and self-acknowledged “foodie,” Nieporent
agreed.
A protégé of David Rockwell and Rafael Viñoly,
Goto was no stranger to restaurant design.
She had successfully completed
five restaurant projects — including
Tadao Ando’s Morimoto [record, September 2006, page 98] and
Christian Liaigre’s Buddakahn, for which she was associate
architect. Moreover, Goto understood the chef and his food. And
while the room that had been Montrachet held a certain charm and
comfort level with its tin ceilings and red tufted banquettes steeped
in nostalgia, she knew “it did not take Liebrandt’s
food into consideration.”
Comprising a series of three rooms — a front room with a
bar; a central, L-shaped dining room; and a kitchen at the back — Montrachet
was plagued with remote tables in its far corner. As a remedy,
Goto lobbied to relocate the kitchen to that back corner to open
up the central dining area as one large room. This strategy would
also reduce occupancy from up to 100 diners to 70. On the other
hand, says Nieporent, “People don’t want to feel that
they’re in a second-class situation.” Goto’s
plan would eliminate the problem. As a nod to the past, though,
he insisted that the footprint of the bar and banquette remain
similar to the original.
Solution
With limited funds, Goto aimed to create
something luxurious. “From
the onset, we wanted a room that would embrace the diner,” she
explains. She achieved this by gently sloping and curving the walls
and corners of the reconfigured space. The ceiling, too, slopes
toward a central canopy made of tensioned cables — a visual
connection between the dining room and entry that also houses ambient
lighting, offers a path for ventilation, and provides access to
the mechanicals hidden in the curvature of the walls and slope
of the ceiling. Also, says Goto, “The slow curve of the walls
allowed us to conceal the existing nuances of a Tribeca building.”
Not one for “decoration,” Goto admits, “restaurants
require an element of whimsy.” Taking her cues from the imagined
salon of an elegant French maison, she treated the warm white walls
with a textural plaster relief of leaves and branches — routed,
and then filled and sculpted by hand, and uplit by perimeter LEDs.
Golden leaves appear to float. The color palette recalls the restaurant’s
namesake wine with subtle variations of its greenish gold hue in
the mohair banquettes — embroidered with 19th-century herb
motifs — real and faux leather seats, and carpet. Lavender-topped
stools evoke the region’s flora and vintage red. The architect
designed delicate brass rod chandeliers fitted with fiber optics,
some with hand-blown glass eggs, and had structural columns coated
with luminescent mica dust.
Ever the star, the food shines at each
table via carefully pointed MR16 pinholes. And diners can glimpse
the chefs at work through the kitchen’s sliver of a window
set high into a stark black proscenium that never intrudes on the
experience.
Commentary
In a series of subtle architectural gestures, Goto crafted
a setting that does not overwhelm but reveals its character in the
course of the dining experience — like a fine wine as it breathes.
Nieporent reports that the redesign “is working tremendously
well.” There’s not a bad seat in the house now, he
says, and the customers are happy.
Formal name of project: Corton
Location: 239 West Broadway New York
NY 10013
Gross square footage: 2500 sq.ft.
Owner: Corton
Completion Date: October 2008
Architect:
Stephanie Goto Design Group
One Union Square West
New York Ny 10003 Usa
212 475 5575
212 475 0055
Specs:
the Products
Doors:
Custom oak doors, chocolate brown stain, by contractor
Interior finishes:
Suspension grid: Ceiling Canopy Feature – Fabricator: Kawahara
Design
Cabinetwork and custom woodwork: GBC CORP.
Wallcoverings: Relief Wall Feature; Silver
Hill Atelier
Bathroom Wall Tile: Urban Archeology,
Bathroom Floor
Tile: Lagos Gold Limetone, Urban Archeology
Carpet: Custom
Design Carpet, Evan Shatz (Distributor)/Signature Hospitality Carpets
Furnishings:
Chairs: Custom Design By Stephanie Goto; Fabricator: Jc Furniture
Tables:
Upholstery: Banquette Back, Mohair Aria Expanse Maharam. Banquette
Seat, Custom Color Leather, Cortina Caprone.
Bar Stools, Fabricator: Jc Furniture
Banquettes,
Fabricator: Munrod Interiors Upholstery, Inc.
Lighting:
Interior ambient lighting:
Perimeter Cove Lighting, Color Kinetics
Chandelier
Takeshi Miyakawa – Installation Coordination, Kawahara – Rod
Fabrication
Custom Glass Egg Fixture
Bruchetta Glass Blowing Studio And Gallery – Glass Globes,
Kawahara – Stems, Takeshi Miyakawa Design– Installation
Coordination
Downlights: DaSal Industries , Pin Hole Trimless
Series
Controls: Lutron Graphic Eye
Plumbing:
Bathroom Fixtures: Urban Archeology
the People
Owner:
Corton
Architect:
Stephanie Goto Design Group
One Union Square West
New York Ny 10003 Usa
212 475 5575
212 475 0055
Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special
credit:
Principal: Stephanie Goto
Design Team: Arianna Sacks, Gustavo Ramirez
General contractor: Gbc
Corp.
Photographer(s):
Richard Pare
T 973 641 6346
Renderer:
Stephanie Goto
CAD system, project management, or other software used:
Autocad, Rhino, 3dmax, Sketch Up, Photoshop, Illustrator






