Budget Breakdown: How an "SNL" Prop Master and an Architect Refreshed Their Brooklyn Flat for $128K

They splashed out on a social kitchen, but used tricks of their respective trades to find thrifty solutions for punching up spaces and improving flow.

When they started looking to buy an apartment a few years ago, Brooklyn residents Graci Mills and Andrew Keck knew a space that required a renovation would help them get their dream home within their budget. "We wanted something that we could tear into pieces," Graci says. This led them to a dated two-bedroom railroad apartment in a pre-war building in Bed-Stuy. It became an exercise in updating a fairly typical plan into something more livable and distinct for about $175 per square foot.

In the Bed-Stuy neighborhood of Brooklyn, Graci Mills, an architect and founder of Go Bang! Studio, and her partner Andrew Keck, an SNL prop master and founder of The Fabrication Shop, renovated a narrow and long two-bedroom apartment into a live-work space that balances privacy and openness.

In the Bed-Stuy neighborhood of Brooklyn, Graci Mills, an architect and founder of Go Bang! Studio, and her partner Andrew Keck, an SNL prop master and founder of The Fabrication Shop, renovated a narrow and long two-bedroom apartment into a live-work space that balances privacy and openness.

Courtesy of Go Bang! Studio

The 725-square-foot apartment’s layout—a fourth-story, floor-through unit with bedrooms on either end and a dimly-lit kitchen and living area in the heart of the plan—is typical for older multifamily buildings in New York. While it was a generic space most recently renovated around 2010 with low-cost finishes, it had redeeming details including arched windows and nine-foot-tall ceilings plus its top-floor location with northern and southern exposures meant good natural light and cross ventilation.

The challenge for Graci, who is the founder of the architecture firm Go Bang! Studio, was making the whole space feel bright and cohesive without sacrificing privacy. What she didn’t want to do was turn it into a studio; walls were a must. "We needed the space to be super flexible for different uses, and that includes hosting, working from home, having an argument—whatever," she says. The apartment is around 45 feet long and Graci conceived of it as one continuous space that transitions from a public zone toward the street-facing side to private quarters in the back.

Located in a pre-war building, the floor-through unit had a fairly generic layout: two bedrooms on either end and a cloistered kitchen and living area in the center.

Located in a pre-war building, the floor-through unit had a fairly generic layout: two bedrooms on either end and a cloistered kitchen and living area in the center. "Everyone just wants to hang out by the windows," Graci says of these fairly common floor plans, noting that the center becomes dead space. She turned one of the bedrooms into this living room and office, removing a wall between it and the kitchen to create a free-flowing public area of the apartment.

Courtesy of Go Bang! Studio

Graci works from home so she turned a former closet in the living room into an office.

Graci works from home so she turned a former closet in the living room into an office. "I always get frustrated at how inefficient closets are," she says, noting how the very top of the space is difficult to access because doors are usually so much lower than the ceilings. Andrew designed and built a custom workstation for her, which takes advantage of the full width and height of the nook and has a surface that can be collapsed.

Courtesy of Go Bang! Studio

See the full story on Dwell.com: Budget Breakdown: How an "SNL" Prop Master and an Architect Refreshed Their Brooklyn Flat for $128K
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NYC’s Sauna Wars Are Heating Up—and Everything Else You Need to Know About This Week

Developers are buying up U.S. trailer parks to build more expensive housing, how Zohran Mamdani plans to update Gracie Mansion, and more.

  • In New York City, sleek bathhouses are popping up block by block from the Flatiron District to Williamsburg, competing for members with a a menu of hot-cold rituals. But beyond the rival steam rooms and sound baths, the bigger question is whether this trend can evolve into a true culture of communal sweating, like in Japan or Northern Europe. (Vanity Fair)
  • Miami’s Li’l Abner mobile home park—once a rare pocket of a kind of affordable homeownership—has been wiped off the map as developers cash in on the land, evicting hundreds of low-income families with nowhere else to go. Now, "affordable" apartments priced upward of $2,634 a month have been built in its place, and it’s not the only one. (Newsweek)

  • Zohran Mamdani has officially moved into Gracie Mansion, and the former Astoria renter has promised to be a "custodian of this beautiful home." His first design priority as such? To install bidets in the historic mayoral residence’s bathrooms. He also plans to do some repainting, and wants to bring in a cat. (Architectural Digest)

  • David Bowie’s childhood home in South London is being restored and will reopen by 2027 as a public heritage site and creative hub, turning the modest house where he grew up into a place for young people to attend workshops focused on art, self-expression, and confidence-building. (Design Boom)

David Bowie’s childhood home in South London is being turned into a museum.

David Bowie’s childhood home in South London is being turned into a museum.

Photo courtesy of Bowie’s House

  • Compass has acquired rival Anywhere Real Estate in a $1.6 billion deal, creating the world’s largest brokerage and taking control of subsidiaries like Century 21, Coldwell Banker, and Sotheby’s under one shared network. Here’s how the merger cements Compass’s rapid rise, but also could put more pressure on an already rocky housing market. (The New York Times)

Top photo by Adrian Gaut

Supper Clubs and "Apartment Cafes": The New Age of Hosting

You Enter This Japanese Home Through the Camping Gear Storage Area

A metallic barn door opens to a rough-and-ready lounge with racks of outdoors equipment; another slider leads to the backyard.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Hakusan City, Japan

Architect: Chidori Studio

Footprint: 1,065 square feet

Builder: Yamashita House Construction

Structural Engineer: Unno Structural Consultant

Landscape Design: Glove

Photographer: Yasuhiro Nakayama

From the Architect: "Attracted by the spacious site and the surrounding environment with its old townscape at the foot of Mt. Hakusan, one of Japan's three sacred mountains, a young couple sought a one-story house with a large garden and open living, dining, and kitchen areas. Traditional industries such as sake breweries, soy sauce, miso, and koji remain in the surrounding area, and the site is also surrounded by a group of sake brewery buildings.

"The adjacent land to the west of the site is vacant and has no fence. The vacant lot, as seen from the site, is surrounded by fields and beyond it are town houses and a view of the mountains. The layout of the building was studied in order to create a visually expansive courtyard that feels as if it’s borrowed landscape. In order to keep some distance from the bustling road in front of the house, the building was placed in an L-shape along the road. Considering the loading and unloading of camping equipment, since the owners love camping, we designed a floor plan that allows a view through the courtyard to the garage like a Japanese traditional gatehouse. Here, horses have been replaced by motorcycles and farming tools by camping equipment. The plan of the house is such that the living room, dining room, and kitchen can be seen through the courtyard.

"The site is surrounded by a mixture of buildings from different periods and typologies, including townhouses with matching eaves, a large sake brewery, and modern office buildings and factories. The lot across the street from the main site is slated to become a residential subdivision and will include a house with a carport. The various buildings that make up the streetscape are a living manifestation of the residents. In this environment, we wondered if it would be possible to create a house that could be interpreted as a building from different eras. The result is a house with a roof shape like an enlarged machiya (Japanese town house), a roof slope and construction similar to that of a warehouse, modern industrial exterior walls and components, and a layout that treats the adjacent vacant lot as its own site. Rather than referring to a single historical building or landscape feature, as was attempted with a prior build, Hokuriku Dwelling No. 1, we sought a form of architecture that would accept and participate in this townscape, which has undergone a mixture of changes over the years."

Photo by Yasuhiro Nakayama

Photo by Yasuhiro Nakayama

Photo by Yasuhiro Nakayama

See the full story on Dwell.com: You Enter This Japanese Home Through the Camping Gear Storage Area
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After a Complete Overhaul, a Luminous Warehouse Loft in Barcelona Seeks €1.3M

Originally built in the 1850s, the industrial space has been transformed into an airy three-story home adjacent to a tranquil courtyard.

Location: Carrer Emilia Coranty, Sant Martí, 08018 Barcelona, Spain 

Price: 1,250,000 (approximately $1,455,537 USD)

Original Year Built: Circa 1855

Original Architect: Josep Oriol i Bernadet, with later expansions by Josep Fontserè

Renovation Year: 2025

Renovation Architect: Daniel Mòdol

Footprint: 1,765 square feet (2 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms)

From the Agent: "Step into a masterful blend of history and modernity in this exceptional 164 square meter loft, set within one of four iconic 19th-century warehouses transformed into contemporary living spaces. Spread across three levels, the loft captivates with its soaring ceilings, open-plan layout, and abundant natural light streaming through floor-to-ceiling windows. A highlight of this unique home is its private garden and terrace—a rare sanctuary in the heart of the city. The property features a fully equipped kitchen with premium finishes, elegant bathrooms, air conditioning, and an elevator for convenience. It’s located in the dynamic 22@ district, Barcelona’s innovation and design hub, and residents enjoy proximity to creative studios, cafés, and urban green spaces—all while remaining well connected to the city’s historic core and the Mediterranean coast."

The private courtyard at the loft's entry offers respite from the neighborhood's active streets.

A private courtyard at the loft’s entry offers respite from the neighborhood’s busy streets. 

Photo by Jordi Soriano

Photo by Jordi Soriano

Photo by Jordi Soriano

See the full story on Dwell.com: After a Complete Overhaul, a Luminous Warehouse Loft in Barcelona Seeks €1.3M
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Budget Breakdown: This $290K Revamp Makes a Strong Case for Moving Into Your Parents’ Basement

Instead of hunting for a dream apartment, this Toronto couple made their own—in the lowest level of her family’s home.

The continuous birch plywood millwork spine anchors the 1,200-square-foot apartment, concealing structural columns and ductwork while organizing storage, display, and workspace in one fluid gesture.

When Ryoo Kim jokingly suggested moving into her parents’ basement in Richmond Hill, Ontario, she didn’t expect anyone to take it seriously. But as financial pressures mounted in the downtown Toronto condo she shared with her partner, Phil Chan—with three pets taking turns getting sick, unstable income, and mounting isolation—the joke became a lifeline.

"It started off like, wouldn’t it be so funny if we just moved into my parents’ place?" Ryoo says. "And then over time, as different stressors built, it became more like, maybe this could happen if we just explored it."

Before: Living Room

BEFORE: Once the boxes were out of the way, the couple could truly see the potential of the space.

After: Living Room

The continuous birch plywood millwork spine anchors the 1,200-square-foot apartment, concealing structural columns and ductwork while organizing storage, display, and workspace in one fluid gesture.

A continuous birch plywood millwork spine anchors the 1,200-square-foot apartment, concealing structural columns and ductwork while organizing storage, display, and work spaces in one fluid gesture.

Rémi Carreiro

A Luminaire Authentik dining table and Hay chairs sit beneath a Herman Miller Nelson Saucer Bubble pendant, anchored by vintage finds including a Ligne Roset Togo sofa.

A Luminaire Authentik dining table and Hay chairs sit beneath a Herman Miller Nelson Saucer Bubble pendant. The Ligne Roset Togo sofa was a vintage find.

Rémi Carreiro

See the full story on Dwell.com: Budget Breakdown: This $290K Revamp Makes a Strong Case for Moving Into Your Parents’ Basement
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Cor-Ten Steel Completely Wraps This $2M Vancouver Home

Designed by Prix de Rome–winning architect A.A. Robins, the ’90s residence has 25-foot-tall ceilings, abundant skylights, and a verdant backyard.

Designed by Prix de Rome–winning architect A.A. Robins, this ’90s residence has 25-foot-tall ceilings, abundant skylights, and a verdant backyard.

Location: 279 E 26th Ave, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Price: $2,799,000 CAD (approximately $ 2,015,321 USD) 

Year Built: 1990

Architect: A.A. Robins

Footprint: 2,152 square feet (2 bedrooms, 3 baths)

Lot Size: 0.07 Acres

From the Agent: "Designed by A.A. Robins, this modern residence sits discreetly just off Main Street. Heated concrete floors and high-efficiency systems—including a heat pump, A/C, and HRV—ensure comfort with low maintenance. The flexible layout offers a spacious primary suite, two office nooks, and a convertible study and loft. A heated garage adds convenience. Recent upgrades include the roof, plumbing, kitchen, boiler, windows, and EV charger. High-end appliances by Miele, Bosch, and Liebherr pair with designer lighting from Artemide, Bocci, and Akari. The property is steps to everything—yet unlike anything."

A.A. Robins, the home's architect, won the prestigious Prix de Rome in architecture.

The home’s architect, A.A. Robins, won the prestigious Prix de Rome for architecture.

Photo by Patrick Campbell

Photo by Patrick Campbell

Photo by Patrick Campbell

See the full story on Dwell.com: Cor-Ten Steel Completely Wraps This $2M Vancouver Home
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