SheltonMindel

SheltonMindel Architecture, Interior Design, Product Design and Planning Established in 1978 by Peter L. Shelton & Lee F. Shelton’s untimely demise. Shelton and Lee F.

SheltonMindel℠ provides complete architectural, interiors and product design services for corporate, cultural, academic, retail, recreational, hospitality and residential clients. Mindel, FAIA, SheltonMindel℠ is now comprised of two legal entities: Lee F. Mindel, Architect, D.P.C. & Shelton, Mindel & Associates, Inc., due to Mr. The firm is the recipient of twenty-eight AIA awards for architecture

, seven Interior Design magazine Best of Year awards for residential and commercial interiors; eighteen design awards from the Society of American Registered Architects, a Progressive Architecture citation, three Roscoe awards for product design, as well as three Good Design Awards and two American Architecture Awards from The Chicago Athenaeum. The American Institute of Architecture, San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts, National Academy of Design and Houston Museum of Fine Arts have exhibited the firm’s work in both traveling and permanent exhibitions. Product design lines include collections for Knoll, Waterworks, Jack Lenor Larsen, and V’Soske. Architectural Digest has recognized SheltonMindel℠ as one of the top 100 design firms of the last century and Peter L. Mindel, FAIA were recognized as the Deans of American Design in 2005. Both Peter L. Mindel, FAIA, have been inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame and were the recipients of the prestigious 2011 Cooper Hewitt National Design Award.

https://10magazine.com/lee-mindel-hampton-home-tm63/
05/27/2026

https://10magazine.com/lee-mindel-hampton-home-tm63/

“What’s that dead bird on the fireplace mantle?” Lee Mindel asks in response to my question about how his sleek Hamptons spread landed him a lawsuit from a neighbour back in the late 2000s.

09/01/2022
A room that is also the view"Many of the pieces have the look of objects that were created by nature: the Pierre Chapo l...
03/21/2022

A room that is also the view

"Many of the pieces have the look of objects that were created by nature: the Pierre Chapo low table is like a deconstructed conch; Other pieces have nautical connotations: The arm of the Arne Vodder chaise could be an oar; the Franco Albini rattan arm chair reminds of old fishing traps; the Brge Mogensen chair sports the wood joinery of Nordic sailboats.

⁣The living room rug was designed to simulate a stone thrown into water. Concentric ripples continue past the edges of the rug relating to the more organic shapes beyond the glass facade⁣."

Written by Steven M.L. Aronson for , photography by

⁣SheltonMindel℠ New England Island Retreat, 2009 with Peter Rose and Partners ⁣⁣

⁣⁣Winner of the Boston Society of Registered Architects for Interior Architecture , 2010⁣⁣
⁣⁣Winner of the Best of Year Award, 2009⁣⁣
⁣⁣Winner of the Design Merit Award, 2011 + 2009⁣⁣
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Detail of an Award WinnerOcean Pond Residence & Independence Pass Residence (in collaboration with Winner of 2018 Intern...
03/18/2022

Detail of an Award Winner
Ocean Pond Residence & Independence Pass Residence (in collaboration with
Winner of 2018 International Architecture Awards from and Winner of the 2018 SARA NY Awards
Winner of the 2014 Best of Year Award
The International Architecture Awards, organized by The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and The Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design, remains the world's most comprehensive public program that promotes the best new architectural design worldwide.
Photography by

Bird's-Eye View-⁣Lighting by  acquired at ⁣⁣-⁣SheltonMindel European Townhouse, 2017⁣⁣-⁣Winner of the  Best of Year Awar...
03/16/2022

Bird's-Eye View
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⁣Lighting by acquired at ⁣
⁣-
⁣SheltonMindel European Townhouse, 2017⁣
⁣-
⁣Winner of the Best of Year Award, 2017⁣
⁣Published in Interior Design Magazine⁣
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⁣Photography by ⁣
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Lee F. Mindel

Immersion process"'This house is about an idea: the integration of site plan, architecture and interior,' Mindel says.Th...
03/15/2022

Immersion process

"'This house is about an idea: the integration of site plan, architecture and interior,' Mindel says.

The setting is a dream: the two-acre trapezoid plot faces a marsh, a bird sanctuary and, beyond, the bay.

'I wanted to show you can do architecture in the Hamptons that is respectful of the site,' says Mindel. 'Little did I know after I went to Harvard what impact the history of architecture would have on me. My design studio when I was there was led by Jerzy Soltan, who worked for Le Corbusier, and he familiarized us with the great influences of architecture: the Bauhaus, the work of Aalvar Aalto, Corbu, Jean Prouve, Charlotte Perriand, Arne Jacobsen, Louis Kahn, Richard Neutra and Mies van der Rohe.'

'As I began practicing architecture—mostly the interiors of small residences—the names of those mentors seemed even more important. I was determined to find a way to preserve and respect their history.'"

Published in
"Another Dimension" By Lilli Darrow
Photographs by

SheltonMindel℠ + Reed Morrison Architects Long Island Waterside Retreat

Interior Design Best of Year Winner: House of the Decade, 2015
Chicago Athenaeum - Best Global Design Winner, 2011
SARA - Design Merit Award, 2011
AIA New York State - Honor Award for Landscape Architectural Design, 2010
Chicago Athenaeum - Best Global Design Winner, 2010
SARA - Design Merit Award, 2010
American Society of Landscape Architects - Honor Award, 2010
SARA - Design Merit Award, 2009

Published in

Lee F. Mindel Cottages & Gardens

Hudson River continuumThe 140-feet of continuous arcaded window wall frames the views of the 3000 square feet exterior t...
03/14/2022

Hudson River continuum

The 140-feet of continuous arcaded window wall frames the views of the 3000 square feet exterior terrace and pavilion as well as the west exposure to the Hudson River. Interior and exterior are seamlessly integrated with the extended concrete wall.

The L-shaped concrete walls also separate the public and private sectors before continuing on to the terrace for visual unification of interior and exterior spaces.

In order to open up the space by creating a central cabin, a structural column is exposed in the middle of space between kitchen and lounge space. A surf-board shaped bar cantilevers from the column, making the column a featured design element rather than an obstruction. The column capital is also shaped to honor the previous history of the building site, which was the Superior Ink Factory.

Finalist in Best of Year Awards 2020

Landscape by

Published in HIVE Magazine by

Lee F. Mindel

We mourn the loss of Gyo Obata. He was a true pioneer who overcame a complex series of obstacles to establish one of the...
03/11/2022

We mourn the loss of Gyo Obata. He was a true pioneer who overcame a complex series of obstacles to establish one of the greatest Architectural firm of our times.

In 2014, our Principal Lee F. Mindel had the privilege to tour the St. Louis Priory Chapel in Creve Coeur, Missouri and interview the late Gyo Obata about his early years.

"Designed by the master architect Gyo Obata, the St. Louis Priory Chapel, in Creve Coeur, Missouri, is one of America's greatest hidden treasures. Its distinctive flower-shaped reinforced-concrete shell was devised by the famed engineering firm Weidlinger Associates and comprises three symmetrical tiers of whitewashed concrete arches filled with a translucent fiberglass material known as Kalwall. Though it was completed in 1962, the building and its furnishings and appointments continue to thrive.

Obata’s pursuit of education and his commitment to architecture is a story of courage, perseverance, and brilliance. In a private conversation, he explained to me that during World War II, just as he had begun his architectural studies at the University of California, Berkeley, his father (the famed Japanese-American painter Chiura Obata), mother, and two siblings were forced from their San Francisco home and, along with many others of Japanese heritage, sent to an internment camp. The only way Obata could continue his education was to transfer to a school outside of California, which he did—he was accepted into Washington University in St. Louis, one of the few schools in the country accepting Japanese-American students at the time.

After graduating he attended the prestigious Cranbrook Academy of Art and was hired by the noted architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, then headed by John Dinkeloo. Obata returned to St. Louis in 1951 to work at the firm of Minoru Yamasaki (architect of the World Trade Center), where he was involved in the design and construction of the Lambert-St. Louis International Airport. Four years later he joined forces with fellow architects George Hellmuth and George Kassabaum to form Hellmuth, Obata and Kassabaum (known today simply as HOK).

On my recent visit to Priory Chapel, I lingered for hours to take in the full richness and sheer beauty of this special place, as well as Obata’s unique ability to seamlessly integrate architecture, landscape, and interior design. As Obata once said, “The language that architects use to define space is daylight. Each project offers new potential for discovery, for understanding the site and program, and an opportunity to do a thoughtfully designed building that will bring meaning and enjoyment to the people who will occupy it."

Pictured: The interior of the St. Louis Priory Chapel, which was designed by architect Gyo Obata, in Creve Coeur, Missouri.

An ethereal and immersive mid-morning breakThree Saros, 2015 in Award Winning New York Family Office designed by Shelton...
03/10/2022

An ethereal and immersive mid-morning break
Three Saros, 2015 in Award Winning New York Family Office designed by SheltonMindel and A+I
The installation is part of Turrell’s Ganzfeld series, in which he uses a timed LED light system and architectural design to create a landscape without a horizon. Ganzfeld is a German word meaning “complete field” that describes an unstructured region of stimuli and the resulting loss of depth perception. Turrell, an avid pilot who has logged over twelve thousand hours flying, compares the experience to that of a pilot flying through fog or a diver deep underwater. We lose sight of which way is up, but our perception adjusts.
On this, he says, “We create the reality within which we live but are quite unaware of how we do it.” Turrell explains that he’s not so much interested in using light to illuminate or reveal something. Instead, he’s interested in the “thingness” of light – that light is the revelation itself.
The design of Three Saros allows visitors to experience light almost in a tangible sense. The color installation combines Turrell’s study of light with his study of human perception. The color inside the installation is constantly changing throughout its 77-minute cycle. It strobes every six minutes as the colors transition from one to the next. This feature causes the neurons in viewers’ eyes to react in such a way that they perceive hexagonal patterns, which are a reflection of the inner structure of their own eyes. “My art is about you seeing,” he says.
The title of the work refers to the Saros cycle, a period of 18 years, 11 days that is used to predict lunar and solar eclipses based on the patterns of the sun’s relationship with the earth and moon. Turrell has been working in art for roughly three saros, so the title is also a reflection on this moment in his career.
Fabricated by SITU
Photography by

Architectural Digest - The Architect's Eye by Lee F. Mindel, FAIALee F. Mindel tours Paris’s venerable École des Beaux-A...
03/09/2022

Architectural Digest - The Architect's Eye by Lee F. Mindel, FAIA

Lee F. Mindel tours Paris’s venerable École des Beaux-Arts.

"Beaux-Arts was one of the first schools to admit women; famed California architect Julia Morgan (designer of San Simeon and Asilomar) enrolled in 1898. In 1945 noted modernist architect Auguste Perret designed new studio spaces to meet the needs of the growing institution."

Pictured: The restored enclosed courtyard of the Palais des Études is lined with Roman sculptures.

Photo credit: Lee Lee F. Mindel

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253 Church Street
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10013

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Tuesday 10am - 6pm
Wednesday 10am - 6pm
Thursday 10am - 6pm
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