The Landon

JG Neukomm Architecture Breathes New Life into a Decades-Old Manhattan Residential Building

When envisioning a fresh aesthetic for a decades-old Manhattan residential tower, architect and designer Jean-Gabriel Neukomm looked well beyond the city’s bustling streets for inspiration. Drawing on his own photographs of Joshua Tree National Park in California and the deserts of New Mexico, the color and material palette for The Landon, a 329-unit residential building in Midtown West, began to take shape. “I was initially taken by the relationship of Manhattan’s West side to the American Southwest—two disparate places historically connected by a thin rail line—as a starting point in our design,” shares Neukomm, founder of his namesake firm. “To flesh that idea out, I turned to some of my images… I liked the images’ soft, dusky palettes, and how those could straddle color, tone, and texture.”

Photography by Jean-Gabriel Neukomm.
One of the images the design team referenced to create the aesthetic of The Landon. Photography by Jean-Gabriel Neukomm.

Neukomm even integrated a few of his photographs throughout, building on the subdued yet colorful palette. The resulting space is warm and inviting with plenty of room to unwind. In addition to renovating the existing apartment units, as well as the lobby and amenity spaces, the JGNA team converted a former mechanical space into a roof lounge and terrace. The team also redesigned the façade, adding a canopy with laser cut perforations to allow natural light to filter down to the street level. Inside, an oversized planter housing four trees partitions the expansive lounge area, which remains free of columns given its former use as a basketball court. An abstract sun motif even offers a subtle nod to the desert heat, beckoning guests to sink into one of the many plush chairs and stay awhile.

An oversized planter housing four new trees serves as a partition in the lounge.
An oversized planter housing four new trees serves as a partition in the lounge.
Globular lighting fixtures illuminate the dining area.
Alabaster wall sconces in the penthouse lounge are by Allied Maker.
The stairwell serves as a statement in the space given its soft edges and earthy palette.
The penthouse amenity stair is finished with plaster walls and features blackened steel handrails as well as oak treads and risers. “We wanted the shape to have an organic sensibility, and to be subtly referencing back to some of southwestern motifs and palette found on the lower floor,” Neukomm adds.
Plush seating throughout the lounge invites guests to unwind.
Plush seating throughout the lounge invites guests to unwind.
The rooftop terrace features sweeping city views.
The rooftop terrace features sweeping city views.

more