Game Changer

A dated Bucktown loft becomes a modern bachelor pad with a party-ready attitude

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Buy Guide

ABOUT OUR SOURCES We attempt to provide as much information as possible about the products and professionals involved in designing the homes we show in our pages. Items not sourced here are probably not available for sale; they might be antiques or part of an owner’s personal collection. When an item or product line is widely available, we may not list a specific store for it. If you have a question about our sources, please write to us at chicagohome@chicagomag.com.
 

Designer: Alison Victoria Interior Design, 702-610-8813, alisonvictoriainteriors.com. General contractor: Six Star Services, 773-827-6410. Kitchen: Cabinets, Kitchen and Bath 4 You, 4311 W. Belmont Ave., 773-545-9725, kitchenandbath4you.com. Bar chairs, Zuo Modern, zuomod.com. Appliances, KitchenAid. Living area: Sofa, Alison Victoria Avenue Collection. Coffee table, Restoration Hardware, restorationhardware.com. Rug, Calvin Klein, calvinklein.com. Artwork, Laura Beth Cartwright, laurabethcartwright.com. Dining area: Table, Alison Victoria Avenue Collection. Infinity narrow mirrors, CB2, cb2.com. Phillip Jeffries wallpaper, Holly Hunt, Merchandise Mart, 312-661-1900, hollyhunt.com. Clavius suspension chandelier by AXO, Lightology, 215 W. Chicago Ave., 312-944-1000, lightology.com. Louis Ghost chairs by Kartell, Luminaire, 310 W. Superior St., 312-664-9582, luminaire.com.

 
Chicago magazine
March - April 2011
  • Ravine Dreams »

    Sensitive design and smart engineering turned a topographically challenged property into a lovely, multilevel landscape

  • Game Changer
  • Longman & Eagle’s Inn Style »

    Longman & Eagle’s guest rooms have the rustic-hip thing down

  • Trading Spaces »

    How do you make a grand old house just right for a 21st-century family? Rethink which rooms should go where

  • Making It Work »

    With a few shrewd moves, an architect improves—majorly—on a gut-rehabbed Wicker Park house

  • Lines and Squares »

    An architect and a designer pare a 1930s International-style house down to its essentials—and give it back its edge