Press

“Leader of the Pack”
Design Week
April 17, 2008
Feature writer Mike Exon checks out the Harley-Davidson Museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, described in this cover article as “a new grown-up breed of visitor experience.”


“Case Study Houses Inspire Montauk Compound”
Architectural Record
October 2007
Editor Jane Kolleeny explores the similarities between mid-century Case Study Houses and the contemporary Montauk House designed by James Biber.


“West Meets East”
Robb Report Vacation Homes
August 2007
In a cover article, Jorge S. Arango and photographer Peter Mauss visit the Montauk House to see for themselves how a quintessentially West Coast aesthetic was transferred to a remarkably open design on the Atlantic Ocean.


“Cos It’s Worth It”
Retail Week
March 23, 2007
Reporter John Ryan “fights through the crowds” to assess the Regent Street flagship of H&M’s new up-market brand Cos designed by William Russell.


“A Winning Stadium”
SEGD Design
Number 15, 2007
“Great design can make people believers. But can it make people football fans?” asks Marisa Bartolucci of the Arizona Cardinals Stadium whose interiors program was designed by James Biber. “To judge from the enthusiastic hordes that have been thronging Arizona Cardinals Stadium this fall, it can,” she concludes.


“Mid-century Makeover”
Metropolitan Home
April 2007
Raul Barreneche visits the Spruce House, a renovated 1959 modernist gem in Ann Arbor Michigan, that James Biber transformed into a 21st century home.


“High Water Mark”
New York Times Magazine
August 6, 2006
Pilar Viladas pays a visit to the Montauk House, which she deemed “a modernist beach house that raises the bar on luxury.”


“Inside Out”
The Sunday Times (UK)
May 11, 2006
William Russell designed a home for his family off London’s Brick Lane, the result is a remarkable, ultra-contemporary structure constructed from concrete cast in-situ and glass.


“Moving on Up”
Kitchens, Bedrooms & Bathrooms (UK)
May 2006
When a young London couple decided to renovate the loft above their top floor apartment, William Russell designed a flexible space that would transition with the growing family.


“All Set”
Red
April 2005
“William Russell is leaving his own agency and traveling across London to join Pentagram, but it’s almost a world away,” observes Clare Dowdy