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To Understand the Delacorte Theater Renovation, Peek Inside This Rowhouse

July 24, 2025
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To Understand the Delacorte Theater Renovation, Peek Inside This Rowhouse
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When the architect Stephen Chu bought a rowhouse in Ridgewood, Queens, more than 20 years ago, the neighborhood was far enough off the radar and cheap enough to be an architectural playground for a young designer.

The two-family brick house, with faint outlines of the old-fashioned decorative shutters long removed, was across from a warehouse on a quiet street. Mr. Chu bought it with his partner at the time for $380,000. “We broke up and I kept the house,” he said.

Mr. Chu, 54, now has a portfolio filled with landmark designs, including the newly renovated Delacorte Theater in Central Park, which is set to reopen on Aug. 7 with a production of Shakespeare’s “Twelfth Night.”

He said his home was “never intended to be my architectural showpiece.” Still, his decades of home renovations in Ridgewood reflect a thoughtful approach to preservation. The Delacorte was built in 1962 as a “pop-up,” in Mr. Chu’s words, and he and his team at Ennead Architects, where he is a partner, took pains to spare hawthorn roots when trenching the site. “Central Park is a scenic landmark, so the trees are protected,” he said.

Cracked structural footings, some without rebar, received new jackets of reinforced concrete. A soaring torqued canopy now cantilevers over the entry gates and box office. The redwood ribbed siding that now hides the grandstand is a variegated patchwork of locally sourced water tower staves salvaged from old tanks.

The $85 million renovation of the Delacorte, home to the Public Theater’s Free Shakespeare in the Park performances, began two phases of construction in 2022 and required a cast of thousands.

In Queens, Mr. Chu’s initial renovations of his two-family 1930 rowhouse were a solo show. He recalled how he had cut a series of holes in the floor of the unit he lived in to enhance spatial flow, “crawling around on my hands and knees with a circular saw.”

In 2008, he met his current partner, Cristina Ottolini, who is a graphic designer and former professional dancer. Her parents and sister are architects, and her grandfather was Carlo De Carli, the architectural protégé of the renowned designer and editor Gio Ponti. Ms. Ottolini, 53, said she saw potential in the rowhouse. “It wasn’t very polished,” she said, but Mr. Chu “clearly had taste.”

When Ms. Ottolini was pregnant with their oldest child, Edo, now 14, Mr. Chu took a year off. He was burned out at work, in need of “a reset,” and the house needed refashioning to accommodate a family. (The couple’s second child, Siena, 12, came soon after.)

This second phase of renovation was more ambitious, converting the garage into a living room. The kitchen of the family unit was gut renovated, a half bath was added and the bathrooms of both units were replaced.

Mr. Chu didn’t stop there. A decade ago, he bought the rowhouse next door — the owner, he said, was a police officer who wanted to retire to Florida. The houses already shared a driveway that was bracketed between their two front stoops. Although the house next door was a mirror image of Mr. Chu’s, it cost more than twice as much as the $380,000 he’d spent, and Mr. Chu sold a family property, in Saratoga, Calif., outside San Jose, to afford it.

Buying the second house kicked off another cascade of creativity, as Mr. Chu began to noodle concepts for transforming the rowhouses together.

“I’ll say a hundred, but realistically it was 50 plans,” Ms. Ottolini recalled. Mr. Chu admitted, “I was like a fire hose shooting ideas at her.”

The result was the most significant of his Ridgewood renovations by far, revising nearly everything. Each two-family house still has two units, which interlock like a Jenga puzzle that can’t be toppled. At just under 2,000 square feet, the family unit has become the largest of the units — a duplex with a bold new two-story stucco extension in the rear garden hosting a living room on the ground level and a primary bedroom and outdoor terrace on top. Each of the four of the units got a new kitchen, with IKEA white plastic laminate cabinets. Two of the original bathrooms were renovated, two have been moved and two are new additions.

Ms. Ottolini occasionally provided design feedback, when asked, but she pressed Mr. Chu for extra closets since “his vision does not include storage,” she said.

The entrance to the family unit is a rusty black steel door under the stoop of the original rowhouse, where the brickwork has been restored.

The garage door opening is now glazed with an oversized fixed window of reeded glass, for privacy. The former garage, no longer a living room, is now an open kitchen that flows into the dining area. The dining table and sideboard are a teak set his parents purchased years ago on vacation in Denmark.

Rather than shut themselves in their bedrooms upstairs, the children spend time on the garden level. The dining area opens into the stucco extension, where the beamed ceiling bumps up two feet, and an oversized living room picture window and glass door look onto a dining patio deck excavated from the hillside beyond.

It gives an Italian flavor, like “when I am in Tuscany at a table in an olive grove eating pasta,” Ms. Ottolini said by phone from a seaside summer Italian getaway in Ventimiglia, on the Mediterranean Riviera.

On Mr. Chu’s birthday this year, his family received a gift from Ms. Ottolini’s mother, who still lives in Milan. The present, an angular armchair, which now sits in their living room, was released by Carlo De Carli in 1950 and recently reintroduced in scarlet velvet by Gubi, the Danish manufacturer.

Having so much history under his roof, not to mention the possibility of more family someday living in the three other units, Mr. Chu argues, is “not just Italian, it’s also Chinese.”

He is currently at work completing an enormous international performing arts center in Shenzhen, China, that is amorphous in shape and clad in shiny gold panels. Every evening, downtown high-rises throughout the city play a Las Vegas-style light show on their facades, but Mr. Chu is resisting any LED lights embedded like pimples in his golden facade. “Why do we have to be part of that chaos?” he asked. “We are looking for timeless, not gimmicky.”

And in New York, Mr. Chu, who was appointed to the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission in 2023, is working on the renovation of yet another Manhattan landmark: the theater at Studio 54, for the Roundabout Theater Company.

The post To Understand the Delacorte Theater Renovation, Peek Inside This Rowhouse appeared first on New York Times.

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