RESIDENTIAL
CONTEMPORARY MASTER SUITE
A study in elevation and restraint, the Gibson Master Suite unfolds as a tonal symphony of light, texture, and permanence. Nestled beneath pitched ceilings and framed by original brickwork, the primary bedroom is at once grounded and soaring—its architectural language soft yet intentional. Here, a custom channel-tufted headboard in smoky velvet arcs gently around the bed, echoing the suite’s reverence for quiet grandeur. Bookmatched walnut and integrated nightstands further articulate the room’s tailored luxury, where softness is always structured.
Sunlight filters in through operable brick screening—casting an ever-changing lattice of shadow play across velvety plaster walls and sand-toned oak floors. Above, a sculptural glass chandelier hovers like a modern relic, catching light in its crystalline arms. The space speaks in slow tones. Every element is curated not for effect, but for emotional resonance.
Through discreet double doors, the suite transitions into an elongated dressing room—a serene gallery of whitewashed oak cabinetry inset with woven cane panels. Brass detailing adds a warm counterpoint to the cool plaster envelope. At the terminus, a single window punctuated by brickwork acts as both light source and sculpture, bringing a moment of pause into the procession.
And then, the reveal: the master bath—cathedral-like in its scale, monastic in its purity. The volume is anchored by an open shower clad in vertically fluted limestone, rising to a razor-sharp ridge lit by a concealed clerestory. This moment—a pure geometrical gesture—becomes the soul of the room. Water controls, recessed niches, and invisible drains are embedded with surgical precision, allowing the architecture to take center stage.
At the flanks, honed Viola marble vanities are carved like monoliths, each veined in deep oxblood and mineral greens. Wall-hung mirrors framed in walnut are flanked by pendant orbs of glass, suspended delicately like droplets of light. The herringbone floor continues underfoot, elongating the space and unifying the suite with quiet continuity.
This is not a bathroom. It is a sanctuary of intention—a meditative retreat defined by contrast: soft against solid, shadow against stone, the ephemeral against the enduring.