San Francisco Designer: Abigail Turin


August 28, 2023 • Posted by Design Bay Area

Arkitektura has built a close connection with the design community over the years by creating a path for bringing together the world’s leading design thinkers and practitioners through an ongoing program of design talks and events. Visit Arkitektura IN/SIGHT which is dedicated to highlighting the work of leading Bay Area designers and architects.  The Arkitektura SF Showroom is open to the public located at 560 9th Street. The showroom can also be accessed virtually.

Photos and interview courtesy of Arkitektura SF





Established in 2003, by Stephania Kallos and Abigail Turin, Kallos Turin is an international design firm based in London and San Francisco providing both architecture and interior design services. The firm’s work combines the restraint and rigor of minimalism with a desire to challenge a more purely reductive approach to form making. Abby Turin runs the San Francisco office of KallosTurin. Prior to co-founding KallosTurin, Abigail focused on high-end residential and office design. She worked at David Chipperfield Architects in London.

Arkitektura sat down with Abigail to discuss how a trip to Italy as a teenager inspired her to become an architect, what it was like working with David Chipperfield and what Kallos Turin has in store.

French Laundry, Napa

Take us back to the beginning. When did you decide to become an architect?
When I was a teenager, I was on a trip in Italy with my parents driving between the Ligurian coast and Venice and we happened upon two incredible buildings in one day — the Brion family cemetery by Carlo Scarpa and the Villa Barbaro by Andrea Palladio. It was pure chance that they were both open and we were able to get tours. I remember thinking that these two buildings, separated by 400 years and seemingly disparate styles, still seemed to be in conversation with each other and I was completely fascinated thinking about the relationship between the two. Essentially…I was hooked. I just visited both buildings again this past summer and got to take my daughter as well. As expected, they hold up!

Even when I was in school on the east coast or living in London I always had one foot in California. There is something about that western spirit that infuses your thinking.

Can you tell us what it was like working with David Chipperfield?
It was formative. I was fresh out of graduate school and lucky enough to be hired to be on the residential team. Stephania joined the firm a few months later and that is how we first met.

I think David is one of the greatest architects of our time — history books great. And his work just keeps getting better. That move to London and to his office, changed the course of my career. When I moved back to California and went out on my own, I kept working with the office on a large project in the Lever House building in New York. And then, when Stephania left the office and we had both gotten our first solo projects (mine in France and hers in Austria) we decided to join forces and create Kallos Turin. That kept me connected to London, and it connected Steph to California. The international nature of our office has become an important aspect of our practice.

How does living in the Bay Area affect your design practice and your design thinking?
Even when I was in school on the east coast or living in London I always had one foot in California. There is something about that western spirit that infuses your thinking.

What would you consider to be the biggest change in the field of architecture since co-founding KallosTurin?
Since we have an unusual practice, split by an ocean and 5,000 miles, we have always relied on technology to make it work. In the early years we would talk on the phone at the end of the day in London day and the beginning of the day in SF. Steph would catch me up on what she had done during the day and I would carry on working and then fax her sketches or email drawings so she had them for the start of her day. With gotomeeting and other video conference systems we work much more collaboratively — it has become so easy to share screens, sketch over each other’s work, and to review samples over video, etc. When we stared it was a bit odd to have a virtual office and now it feels completely normal.

Have there been any notable influences on your career?
So many! We constantly refer back to Loos and Mies and Corbusier and Siza to name a few. Stephania worked with Claudio Silvestrin prior to moving to Chipperfield’s office and he remains a favorite of hers and mine. And we also love to look to artists as a source of inspiration.

VISIT ARKITEKTURA ASSEMBLY for more design inspiration, retail products and more.
VISIT www.kallosturin.com for more projects in California and elsewhere.

Photos and interview courtesy of Arkitektura SF.

Gallery:

Bouli Bar, San Francisco
Buried House, Uruguay
Buried House, Uruguay
Buried House, Uruguay
Residence, Uruguay
Apartment, New York
Casa Cavia, Buenos Aires
Casa Cavia, Buenos Aires
Garden, Buenos Aires
Casa Colibri, Uruguay
Casa Colibri, Uruguay
Apartment, Cabo San Lucas

Content courtesy of:


Arkitektura SF
560 Ninth Street, San Francisco View Virtual Showroom

Arkitektura’s flagship showroom was founded in San Francisco in the late-90s and has been a hub for good design in the Bay Area and across the country since then. The showroom is over 15,000 sq. ft. and houses over 60 of the best brands in furniture design.

Arkitektura was founded in 1984 in Detroit by Andrew Fisher, a graduate of the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and Ronald Saarinen Swanson, the grandson of Eliel Saarinen (nephew of Eero Saarinen). Arkitektura quickly established itself as a pioneer in the industry by making European, contemporary design accessible to the American public.

Arkitektura is distinguished for the amazing breadth of its offerings as well as its deep relationships with the world’s foremost design manufacturers such as B&B Italia, Minotti, Cassina, Poltrona Frau, Cappellini, Flos, Maxalto, USM, Bocci and many more. 

Our three thoughtfully curated showrooms located in San Francisco and Detroit are designed to help you find only the best collections to help make your space your own.


Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn