Magazine

Tour a Waterfront Miami Abode Designed to House a Young Family—And a Sailboat

The concrete dwelling offers a Floridian take on high-tech style

Living area with wall composed of windows two blue sofas around wood cocktail table plants several artworks on gray...
The living room of Emmett and Sarah Newberry Moore’s Miami house, designed in collaboration with Arquitectonica, features furnishings of his own design and a reworked vintage sofa that belonged to her grandparents.
Art: Ted Gahl
Screenedin porch area with table surrounded by four chairs two black busts of a man and a woman on ground beside table

Moore made the screened porch’s table and chairs using T-shirts; the charred-plywood busts of the couple are by Ray Smith.

Art: Ray Smith.

When constructing the foundation for the house, Moore unearthed heaps of Miami limestone or oolite—many call it coral rock—which became a new fixation. “It’s basically the reason Miami exists,” he explains of the city’s bedrock, often used (as he did) for retaining walls. He didn’t want to use the actual stone in his furniture practice so he devised a proxy, sculpting scrap foam embedded with shells and fossils and coating it with polyurethane and sand-textured paint. When he and Newberry Moore needed a bookcase, this concoction passed the strength test. Now he’s using it to make lamps and more.

Narrow hallway with multicolored rug a yellow door at the end of the hallway is painted in a way that appears tilted...

“I love neon because it’s gaudy and beautiful at the same time,” Moore says of the quintessentially Miami lighting, found throughout his home. The sign shown was made for the couple’s wedding. Moore painted the door to appear off-kilter.

To the right of a tall window an angular yellow chair beside a tall yellow acrylic artwork printed with text

An armchair that Moore made out of breeze-blocks sits with an engraved-acrylic artwork by Alicia Mersy.

Since their 2020 move-in date, the couple have turned the house into a playful backdrop for their lives, which now include two-year-old son, Iren. In the living room, a Moore-designed cocktail table, stamped with a smiley face, dollar sign, and Playboy Bunny logo, sits with woven-wool traffic cones by Katie Stout, Moore’s longtime friend from RISD. Bumper stickers plaster the kitchen bar. And while there’s presently no boat downstairs, a 2017 painting of one hangs over their bed. A wedding gift from their friend James A. Flood, the canvas depicts the couple sailing around Nantucket, a dreamy analogy for the home that has launched their lives.

This waterfront Miami abode appears in AD’s October issue. Never miss an issue when you subscribe to AD.