

BOND, a clever acronym for “Bureau of Noam and Daniel”, is a Manhattan-based architecture and interior design studio from the creative minds of Noam Dvir and Daniel Rauchwerger. Since launching their firm in 2019, the “partners in practice and life” have carved a niche for themselves as the must-hire designers for art world clients and Fire Island homeowners—but anyone with a penchant for modernism, stainless steel, and color blocking will appreciate their style.
The duo describe their approach as “democratic and humanistic, elevated and editorial, impactful yet economical, and playful.” All of those descriptors are evident in their residential, commercial, and cultural projects, which can be found across their home state of New York, as well as in Chicago, Miami, and Los Angeles, where they’ve just opened a local office. Their West Coast expansion promises more of the mid-century magic and boundary-pushing whimsy they created in their own home, the Pines Beach Cabin—the perfect summer house hangout (see: A Mid-Century Home For a Non-Nuclear Family in Fire Island).
Today, Noam writes in with his go-to host gift, the art book he’d bring to a desert island, and the color he can’t get enough of.

A pair of BOND espresso cups. We designed them together with Daniel’s brother, Nadav, who has a pottery studio in Israel. The handmade cups have chatter marks in the middle and a soft lip. They’re really cute and remind your host of you every time they take a sip of their coffee.

A biography of Le Corbusier I picked up during my last visit to Maison La Roche in Paris. It’s great for brushing up on my French.

Absalon by Susanne Pfeffer. Absalon was an Israeli-French artist who died of AIDS complications at an early age in the 1990s. He designed and built “large white geometric sculptures that began as plain renderings of basic forms—rectangles, squares, triangles, circles—and developed into shapes resembling machine parts, eventually becoming contemplative dwelling units.” His work is deeply personal, moving, and very innovative.
Classical music. Fauré is my favorite composer.

Severance. It’s not very original, but it’s also the last show I’ve watched. It’s so beautifully designed and the attention to art and details is immaculate. I had a short one-year gig at WeWork and watching Severance makes me think about contemporary work culture.
@dasswerke–so good.

Tekla in brown.
Also brown—32123 Terre Sienne Pâle from Le Corbusier’s color system. I have it in my powder room in Manhattan.

My husband (and business partner), Daniel.
Thanks so much, Noam! Follow his and Daniel’s work at @bond_newyork and www.bond-ny.com.
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