— Photographer:  / September 17, 2024
chic living room with pops of yellow and views of NYC out the window

When Matty Maggiacomo and Evan Feeley began hunting for their forever home, a prewar apartment on New York’s Upper West Side wasn’t high on their wish list. Though Evan was charmed by the neighborhood’s quiet streets and slower pace, Matty had lived through a renovation before and wasn’t eager to repeat the experience. But the panoramas from one Central Park West property proved so spectacular that the couple couldn’t help but sign on the line. There was just one problem: the interiors were nothing to look at.

“When we first walked in, I was questioning why the apartment had not sold,” says Matty, a tread and strength instructor for Peloton. “It’s above the tree line facing east over the park and Reservoir—but it was very plain. We had to make it look like a true Central Park apartment.”

The couple enlisted designer sisters Joan and Jayne Michaels, architect Ann Krsul and general contractor Charles Ramdass to reimagine the space, transforming it from a warren of tight, bland rooms into a stately yet practical home worthy of its iconic address and views. That meant maximizing sight lines throughout the home and reallocating square footage to give the formerly narrow living room more graceful proportions and make way for a showstopping dine-in kitchen. “Matty should be a TV chef,” Joan shares. “Cooking is such a big part of his personality and it’s how he releases stress.”

Home Details

Architecture

Ann Krsul, Ann Krsul Architect

Interior Design

Joan and Jayne Michaels, 2Michaels Design

Home Builder

Charles Ramdass, Cornerstone Construction & Remodeling, LLC

modern living room with a home bar

The living room is entertaining-ready with its Jacques Adnet coffee table and bar featuring mesh panels and Japanese water gilding by artist Matthew Mohr. An Interiors by George & Martha accent chair wrapped in Dedar fabric views artworks by Steve Miller (left) and Georgia Hupfel (right).

chic kitchen with a black chandelier and a black and white marble counter and backsplash
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black stools in front of a black and white marble island in a kitchen

To conceal an immovable gas pipeline, architect Ann Krsul wrapped it in the same Calacatta Viola marble from BAS Stone used for the countertops and backsplash. Sleek stools from Fair allow for casual dining at the island.