Amy Marino Popular Books

Amy Marino Biography & Facts

Peter Marino (born 1949) is an American architect and Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. He is the principal of Peter Marino Architect PLLC, an architecture and design firm which he founded in 1978. The firm is based in New York City with 160 employees and offices in Philadelphia and Southampton. Education and career Marino graduated from Francis Lewis High School in Fresh Meadows, New York City. Marino earned a degree from the Cornell University College of Architecture, Art, and Planning. Marino began his architectural career working for Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, George Nelson, and I.M. Pei. In 1978, Jed Johnson hired him to do a renovation project for his and Andy Warhol's townhouse on the Upper East Side of Manhattan and the third incarnation of Warhol's Factory at 860 Broadway. His work for Johnson and Warhol led to residential commissions from clients in the art world as well as the European aristocracy. Notable projects Barneys New York, New York City (1985) In 1985, the Pressman family, who owned Barneys New York at the time, hired Marino to design the women's retail concept for the department store. This was Marino's first retail project, which led to his designing 17 freestanding Barneys department stores in the U.S. and Japan between 1986 and 1993. Marino's work for Barneys put him in contact with other fashion designers for whom he went on to design boutiques, such as Calvin Klein, Donna Karan, Giorgio Armani, Ermenegildo Zegna and Fendi, and eventually Chanel, Dior and Louis Vuitton. Giorgio Armani New York, New York City (1996) In 1996, Marino designed a freestanding boutique on New York City's Madison Avenue for Giorgio Armani. In 2004, The New York Times reported that Marino is "widely credited with proving the theory that architectural design can be a strong component of a shopper's identification with a brand", citing the freestanding Giorgio Armani flagship Marino designed in 1996 on Madison Avenue as the embodiment of Armani's "trademark minimalism." Chanel Ginza Tower, Tokyo (2004) The article also references the 2004 Chanel tower in Japan's Ginza district, "that takes Coco Chanel's signature black and white tweed and explodes it into three dimensions." The 56-meter high building incorporated a curtain wall of glass encapsulating a nest-shaped block of aluminum in Chanel handbags’ signature tweed pattern. Notable features included a first of its kind interactive glass façade with 700,000 embedded light-emitting diodes, and a system of 1,120 square meters of canvas roll blinds and state-changing electronic privacy glass which allowed office workers to see out during the day, while providing a black background for the display at night. 170 East End Avenue, New York City (2007) In 2007, Marino's first luxury condominium high rise project opened at 170 East End Avenue in New York City. The building has an expansive marble lobby, leading out to a garden and waterfall in the back. Bootheshop, Seoul (2014) In October 2014, Marino designed the flagship store in Seoul, Korea's Cheongdam-dong neighborhood for Boontheshop, a retail brand owned by Shinsegae, a South Korean luxury product specialist. The 55,000 square foot project consists of two angular buildings clad in white marble, connected by glass bridges. It was Marino's first multi-brand store since the Barney's project. Louis Vuitton, Rodeo Drive, Los Angeles (2015) In January 2015, Marino completed the flagship Louis Vuitton shop on Rodeo Drive, in Beverly Hills, California. The design included a three-layer facade consisting of louver-like stainless steel ribbons over glass over squares of white fabric, which LA Times' fashion reporter Adam Tschorn described as being designed to create an indoor/outdoor feeling. Hublot 5th Avenue, New York City (2016) Marino designed both the building and interiors of luxury Swiss watch brand Hublot’s flagship store in New York on Fifth Avenue between 57th and 58th streets. The tall and slender 1500-square-foot building’s design is inspired by the high-end timepieces sold in the store. The facade consists of hundreds of powder-coated black aluminum panels, positioned at various angles, some lined with LED strips. "The sculptural movement inherent in the facade is an abstract notion of time and the perpetual mechanism of the watch," said Marino. Chanel Badgat Street, Istanbul (2018) Completed in 2018, the 8,800-squarefoot building for Chanel in Istanbul, Turkey, includes offices and a rooftop terrace and is "set back behind an entry plaza of gray marble pavers with a black granite reflecting pool." Notable features include the angled white marble façade — which Interior Design calls the "architectural equivalent of Coco Chanel’s white pleated blouses" — and the mirrored stairwell, Marino’s homage to the original Chanel headquarters. Getty Residences, Lehman Maupin Gallery, Hill Art Foundation, New York City (2018) In 2018, Marino completed the Getty Building, a residential building in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood. The Hill Art Foundation occupies the third and fourth floors of the building, with an entrance located at 239 Tenth Avenue. Chanel Ginza Namiki, Tokyo (2018) Also in 2018, Marino completed a slender 9-story tower for Chanel in Tokyo. Mukai designed an art installation for the façade for the building's opening. The building includes a spa and offices, in addition to retail. Cheval Blanc Paris (2021) Constructed during the COVID-19 pandemic with its opening delayed until Fall of 2021, Cheval Blanc Paris, adjacent to the iconic ‘La Samaritaine’ department store in Paris put Marino in charge of conceiving 9 floors which includes 72 rooms and suites, lobbies, four restaurants (Le Tout Paris, Plentitude, Langosterie, Limbar), and the luxurious Dior Spa with the longest indoor pool in Europe. "Our intention was to transform the iconic Parisian building without disregarding its existing design heritage", Marino commented. Peter Marino Art Foundation, Southampton, New York (2021) Housed a 19th-century Queen Anne–style building in Southampton, Long Island, Peter Marino Art Foundation (PMAF) is an 8,000-square-foot exhibition space displaying around 200 artworks from Marino’s collection. Formerly home to the Rogers Memorial Library then the Parrish Art Museum, Marino purchased the 1895 RH Robertson–designed building in 2018 and spent three years restoring the historic façade and transforming the interior architecture. He also implemented a garden and restored the grounds of the property. The Foundation opened to the public in June 2021. The same year, it and the architect were awarded Designboom’s Design Prize 2021 for "best exhibition." Marino’s private collection, on view at PMAF, was acquired over 40 years and ranges from Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities to Baroque bronzes, paintings by Jean-Michel Basquiat and sculpture by Les Lalanne, by way of Delacroix, 19th-century faience and the photography of Robert Mappl.... Discover the Amy Marino popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Amy Marino books.

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  • Satire Part 1 synopsis, comments

    Satire Part 1

    Amy Marino

    This is a book of current satirical video clips and images, created by students at Duxbury High School.

  • Early American Authors-The Puritans synopsis, comments

    Early American Authors-The Puritans

    Amy Marino

    This a literature collection of early American authors that I compiled for my 11thgrade class. The material is in the public domain and/or from textbooks. The sources of the author...

  • Satire Part 2 synopsis, comments

    Satire Part 2

    Amy Marino

    This is a collection of satirical video clips and images, created by Duxbury High School students.

  • One Year synopsis, comments

    One Year

    Amy Marino

    This is a collection of lesson plans and reflections on using technology in a 1:1 ELA classroom.