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Celebrity hatmaker Rod Keenan works for people who own actual fortresses (Brad Pitt, Prince, Alicia Keys, Elvis Costello, Steven Tyler), so it makes a certain sense that he resides in a building in Harlem called the Castle. He bought the 1887 George B. Pelham-designed building, seen here in a state of near ruin, in 1998 and spent the next year and a half heroically bringing its limestone façade and crenellated tower back to life. He recently gave me a walk-through. Photo: Courtesy of Rod Keenan
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The building’s previous owner lost financing mid-renovation, so Rod bought it in a gutted state. Here the parlor floor before Rod and his partner Philip Hewat-Jaboor went to work on it, and after. The couch was custom-made by Classic Sofa, the armchair is Biedermeier 1830, and the oval églomisé-topped coffee table was found on the street. The large plates flanking the French doors are nineteenth-century Italian and depict scenes from Greek vases. Photo: Courtesy of Rod Keenan (Left); Wendy Goodman (Right)
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A Murano-glass chandelier in the parlor lights up a stairwell leading down to Rod’s basement studio and showroom, where the Parsons and F.I.T. grad makes all of his hats. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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The top-floor duplex was a perfect mess until menswear journalist Cator Sparks became a tenant in 2002. He is now working on a book about his life in the Castle. The bedroom on the right is filled with furniture from his family home in Atlanta. Cator calls it his “Bludoir”; the particular blue tone was inspired by a trip to Catherine the Great’s palace in St. Petersburg. Photo: Courtesy of Rod Keenan (Left); Wendy Goodman (Right)
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The gorgeously lit sitting area of Cator’s Bludoir is decorated with flea-market finds and family portraits. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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Cator’s office and guest room was inspired by Diana Vreeland’s red “Garden in Hell” apartment, designed by Billy Baldwin. His mother knit the starburst afghan on the bed. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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The stairwell leading to Rod’s basement studio is a sort of hatter’s Hall of Fame. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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The basement studio before and after Rod’s renovation. Photo: Courtesy of Rod Keenan (Left); Wendy Goodman (Right)
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A bit of fuchsia brightens up the sun-deprived workspace. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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Of all the pieces in Rod’s collection, this hat mold”from Freddie Fox, onetime milliner to Britain’s Queen Mother”might be the pièce de résistance. Photo: Wendy Goodman
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