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Balance, Design October 24, 2011

Q+A: Designer Elizabeth Roberts

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We came across Elizabeth Roberts, who runs her design practice from her home in Brooklyn, on Remodelista back in February. Here Roberts talks about her work, how she found herself studying architecture at Berkeley to opening up her own practice after working at William Turnbull in Northern California and Beyer Blinder Belle in New York.


1. You are a designer based in New York. Tell us about your background. What led you into this field? In high school I thought about going into architecture. A friend of my mother’s who was an enviably strong woman and feminist suggested that it was a great field for women.  Everyone in my family were doctors so in my sophomore year in college I told my mother  I’d finally decided to declare my major as “pre-med”. She was silent and finally she blurted out that she’d hoped I would do something with my creative abilities. That summer  I spent as an intern at an architecture firm and I studied art in Paris during my Junior year. When I finally decided to study architecture my mother was the one who helped me apply to transfer to UC Berkeley while I was in Paris –I will always appreciate that encouragement from her!

After I graduated I ended up in New York City. It was a recession and there weren’t many jobs out there. One of my professors who I had worked with at William Turnbull Associates suggested that I specialize in Historic Preservation. It made sense. I had spent a few summers as a “site architect” at a dig in Crete and was interested in architectural history.  I’m glad that I followed his advice, mostly because I ended up in New York and haven’t left ever since…


2. Your work exudes a warm minimalism and I think part of that is your use of timber in your projects -whether it be a beautiful wood dining table or kitchen island. How would you describe your style? Are you conscious of keeping spaces spare but soft-edged? Yes, I think one of the things that is very important to me is to “showcase” certain elements in a space –to allow enough space and “quiet” around an object for it to be seen.  That often translates into wood against a painted surface, or a colorful item beside a white surface.

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Balance May 25, 2010

More Pets in the Office

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Illustrator Jordan Awan sent these pics of his sleek black cat named Nei-nei Noguchi. I want to see more so I’ve asked Jordan to send us some shots of his studio. His work has appeared in the New Yorker and McSweeney’s (to name a few) – you can check it out here. And below – an illo by Jordan of Nei-nei reclining on an Eames chair.

Balance March 26, 2010

A Work Time Revolution

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work-life-balanceNational Public Radio just finished a fascinating 3 part series on working from home. It’s an in-depth look at the way we work today exploring the benefits and costs of flexible work hours and family-friendly work. As NPR correspondent Jennifer Ludden reports “U.S. labor laws are perfectly suited to 1960, says University of Minnesota sociologist Phyllis Moen. The 40-hour workweek and 9-to-5 workday were all codified in an era when men went off to an assembly line and women stayed home. ‘We’re really in the middle of something like an industrial revolution,’ Moen says. ‘But it’s a work time revolution.’”

What is really interesting is that this debate is finally being framed differently. It’s not just about parents pushing for more flexible work hours so they can spend time with their children. Gen-X and Gen-Y are also keen for a better work-life balance regardless of whether they’ve got children or not.

If you don’t get a chance to listen to the series you can read it here.

I’d be interested to hear your thoughts on this topic. How flexible are your work hours? Do you feel you have a good work-life balance?

Image: Work Life Balance mittens from MouthyMitts.

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