Steve Klinsky, a New York-based financier, renovated his new $8.5m Manhattan apartment with the help of arcitects at 212Box, who turned his apartment into a maze of puzzles and conundrums.
The Manhattan house of puzzles

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.

212Box’s architect Eric Clough saw the Klinsky’s apartment as the ideal challenge. Gathering the children’s birth times and other obscure information he devised a world of baffling puzzles. “It became a no-brainer, just tapping into that creativity stream,” he says.


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