Brooklyn Wallpaper Interior Design
Photo by Genevieve Garruppo for Lonny

When Alex and Oliver Wight purchased their Brooklyn Heights condo two years ago, there wasn’t much in the space to inspire them. A developer’s renovation in the 1980s had reduced the triplex unit into a boring white space devoid of its original 19th-century detail.

But with the help of David Nastasi and Kate Vail of Nastasi Vail Design, the home is now a showstopper featuring playfully patterned wallpaper and elegant details.

The triplex is one of five units in a 19th-century brick mansion that had once housed a Civil War general and later a women’s club. But no hint of its colorful past was visible by the time the Wights came along.

Nastasi and Vail set about injecting contemporary character and bygone charm into the blank white void. They added walls to create defined spaces in the then-open layout and details that would have fit with the style of the home’s heyday — antique pocket doors, crown molding, picture rails, and baseboards.

“We wanted to bring back a lot of the period-appropriate details without making it feel old,” Nastasi told Lonny in a recent profile of the home. “It was more about creating an interpretation of what might have been there.”

But it’s the wallpaper that really makes the home a knockout. The dining room’s light blue pattern is a tiger-themed print by Clarence House. The wall space beneath the chair rail is covered in a textured, dark blue grasscloth.

Brooklyn Wallpaper Interior Design
Photo by Genevieve Garruppo for Lonny

In the entryway, Schumacher‘s Queen of Spain wallpaper adds visual pop. The dark-painted molding adds a more modern touch than natural wood or white.

Brooklyn Wallpaper Interior Design
Photo by Genevieve Garruppo for Lonny

The wallpaper in the kids’ room is a design depicting misbehaving moneys.

Brooklyn Wallpaper Interior Design
Photo by Genevieve Garruppo for Lonny

The warm, muted tones of the master bedroom’s grasscloth walls give it a different feel from the rest of the home.

But perhaps the most visually arresting space is the home’s glossy black kitchen with its chevron-patterned floor.

Brooklyn Wallpaper Interior Design
Photo by Genevieve Garruppo for Lonny

“I saw it in a magazine years ago, and it was one of those images I just couldn’t get out of my mind,” Wight told Lonny.

The home has more surprises, including a secret television cabinet and circular office turret. See the rest of the home on Lonny.

[Source: Lonny | Photos: Genevieve Garruppo | Style: Sarah Jean Shelton]

Related Stories
Brooklyn Heights “Brides’ Row” Gem Is Restored to Perfection
5 Interior Design Trends That Will Be Big in 2016
A Quick, Cost-Conscious Townhouse Reno in South Slope

Email tips@brownstoner.com with further comments, questions or tips. Follow Brownstoner on Twitter and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

[sc:daily-email-signup ]

What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Love the dining room, actually. The kids room looks like a something out of a creepy 50s horror film. That entry-way is giving me a migraine. That ladder in the kitchen is beyond stupid unless that kitchen is actually huge and they somehow store it out of the way most of the time.

  2. The more I look at this the more I love it. Brooklyn interior design has become a bit formulaic and this breaks the mold completely. It’s bold but still looks comfortable and quite livable. This reminds me of something you would find in London rather than Brooklyn. Kudos to the owners and the designers.

  3. And they don’t care about yours!
    If I can edit my above comment, I’d really tell you what you can do with your rolling pin 🙂

  4. This isn’t for sale. It’s newly renovated. This is what they choose for the renovation. Capisci!
    And that’s wall paper in the kids room, not paint.
    Go hang a rolling pin.

1 2