Stonefox Design is a full service architecture and interior design firm with an established reputation for creating clean modern living spaces and custom furnishings. A major component of the firms work has been the design of homes and furnishings for collectors of modern and contemporary art. This work has been informed by an ongoing dialogue with artists, collectors, curators and museum directors. Their residences are acclaimed for displaying a true sensitivity to the interplay between light, landscape and the built environment, serving as a meeting ground for art and design.
With offices in New York City and Aspen, Colorado, Stonefox has designed a wide range of projects throughout the United States, including residences, renovations, and lofts in Manhattan, Westchester County, Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Austin, Texas. Stonefox’s work has been featured in Architectural Digest and Modern Painter Magazine.
Chris Stone, AIA, brings over 10 years of experience in architecture and design to Stonefox. Prior to founding Stonefox Design, he was with Rafael Vinoly Architects as project architect on Philadelphia’s Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts. Stone worked with artist Mary Miss on several installations, including the Union Square Station Project in New York City. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design (Bachelor of Architecture 1994), he also studied at the American University in Paris, where he did extensive research in both twelfth century and early modern architecture. Stone is a registered Architect in New York, Connecticut, and Colorado and is a member of the American Institute of Architects.
David Fox has worked in Berlin at the architecture firm HOK and in New York, at S. Russell Groves and Ohlhausen DuBois Architects. With these firms, he worked on a wide variety of projects – both commercial and residential – including Giorgio Armani, The Green House Spa, the Polo Market Place, and the Klein Residence in Santa Fe, NM. Fox is a graduate of Washington University’s School of Architecture (1999) and studied at the University of Stuttgart in Germany, where he focused on modern and contemporary European architecture.