Interior

Flatiron Loft

A personal apartment in New York that balances raw industrial bones with deliberate warmth

Lea Cojot converts a Flatiron District loft around original terracotta columns, adding a Calacatta Malva marble island and art collected from her mother's Paris gallery.

Lea Cojot, founder of Cojot Designs, reshaped her own 2,400-square-foot loft in Manhattan's Flatiron District into a private residence that reflects a decade spent designing for Soho House and Rockwell Group.

The pre-war building keeps its original terracotta columns, exposed brick, and heavy timber ceilings. All ten windows line a single wall, flooding the long rectangle with southern light while limiting layout options. Cojot solved this by relocating the front door, freeing the far end for a continuous primary suite that runs from bedroom through dressing area to bath.

The great room centers on a kitchen island built from eight slabs of Calacatta Malva marble. Each slab steps down in thickness toward the edges, turning a functional block into a sculptural presence. Blackened steel frames the millwork; oak floors run throughout. A Lawson-Fenning chaise, reupholstered in custom Jim Thompson silk, sits beside an India Mahdavi Bishop side table in pale pink resin. Vintage pieces from Paris and Los Angeles mix with new designs chosen for comfort rather than display.

Art comes mostly from Cojot's mother's gallery in Paris: large abstract paintings and photographs that add color against the neutral envelope. The loft holds terracotta columns, Calacatta Malva marble, blackened steel, and a collection of furniture and art gathered across two continents within a single pre-war shell.

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