Before & After: A Gloomy Brooklyn Brownstone Gets Spruced Up With Splashes of Color

Frederick Tang Architecture restores an 1896 home’s historic details but takes things a step further with exuberant accents, wallpaper, and decor.

At a dinner party more than 15 years ago, architect Frederick Tang and Anne hit it off. "She was so interested in architecture," remembers Tang. Years later, when Anne and her wife, Alexis, purchased a run-down 1896 brownstone in Prospect Heights in Brooklyn, Tang was ready to take their call, in spite of the challenge. "It was a quintessentially vintage Brooklyn townhouse in a landmark district, and not in the best shape," says Tang. "They knew it was going to take some work."

Join Dwell+ to Continue

Subscribe to Dwell+ to get everything you already love about Dwell, plus exclusive home tours, video features, how-to guides, access to the Dwell archive, and more. You can cancel at any time.

Try Dwell+ for FREE

Already a Dwell+ subscriber? Sign In

Melissa Dalton
Dwell Contributor
Melissa Dalton is a freelance writer in Portland, Oregon, who has been writing for Dwell since 2017. Read more of her work about design and architecture at melissadalton.net.

Published

Last Updated