These Renters Built a Dream Brooklyn Loft with DIY Furniture (and Lots of Plywood!)
Adrienne Breaux
Adrienne BreauxHouse Tour Director
For more than 10 years, I've led Apartment Therapy's real home content, producing thousands of house tours from around the world. Currently, I live in my maximalist dream home in New Orleans, Louisiana, with my partner, a perfect dog, and a cute cat.
Erin Derby
Erin DerbyPhotographer
Originally from California, but turned New Yorker since 2000, I've been shooting my entire life and am still inspired and excited about it. Lately I have been putting my energies into my Fine Art, which can be seen on my website and on Saatchi Art. Being infatuated with interior…read more
published Apr 25, 2025

These Renters Built a Dream Brooklyn Loft with DIY Furniture (and Lots of Plywood!)

Adrienne Breaux
Adrienne BreauxHouse Tour Director
For more than 10 years, I've led Apartment Therapy's real home content, producing thousands of house tours from around the world. Currently, I live in my maximalist dream home in New Orleans, Louisiana, with my partner, a perfect dog, and a cute cat.
Erin Derby
Erin DerbyPhotographer
Originally from California, but turned New Yorker since 2000, I've been shooting my entire life and am still inspired and excited about it. Lately I have been putting my energies into my Fine Art, which can be seen on my website and on Saatchi Art. Being infatuated with interior…read more
published Apr 25, 2025
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Bedrooms
Square feet

750

Sq ft

750

Christine Leahy and Nik Sparks have spent the last two years making this apartment — a 750-square-foot loft in an old factory building constructed in 1905 — into their incredibly dreamy home. Because the space is a rental, they’ve had to get creative with customizing it.

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“It’s been a journey to parse out how to optimize storage, make things comfortable and functional, and more broadly combine our possessions and respective tastes,” Christine writes.

Credit: Erin Derby
Christine and Nik share their home with their two dogs, Jolene and Chloe. "It took some time and patience to sort out how to combine our individual aesthetics; I tend to lean towards bright colors and whimsical details, where Nik gravitates towards an aesthetic that’s more vintage and warm (think: chrome vs. unlacquered brass). Over time, I think we struck a nice balance," Christine describes of how the couple merged their styles.

Christine explains that the building was converted into housing in 2000, and the apartment the couple rents started as “essentially, a big empty box” with sparse and industrial vibes. “It served as a blank canvas where we could really make it whatever we wanted.”

You might notice a few familiar elements as you peruse their apartment; we toured Christine’s previous home, a 350-square-foot studio that she customized with a brilliant wood bed platform and home office hybrid. The bookshelf/stairs from the small studio apartment found a home as a room divider in the new home, and other lumber from the studio was repurposed for things like a kitchen island, table, and benches. Even the curtains from Christine’s studio found a new home and purpose here, as a room divider.

Credit: Erin Derby

The biggest challenge the couple faced was “making the space functional for both of us —two people, two dogs, and all the stuff that comes with that many creatures in one space. Storage was key, but we wanted something that was both functional and discreet,” Christine writes.

Another challenge for the couple? Dividing the space in such a way that works for two adults. “We both occasionally work from home, so blocking out work areas for both of us was essential, and we managed to do it in a way where if only one of us was working, the other could go about their day in a relaxed way — no need to tiptoe around.”

Credit: Erin Derby

Not only does the space function for the couple, but it’s also actually quite a sanctuary. “Despite sitting in a rather chaotic slice of Brooklyn, the space itself feels peaceful. Our windows look out over a garden we share with our neighbors, and our dogs spend afternoons watching birds and cats in the neighborhood.”

Credit: Erin Derby

Resources

  • Contact Paper — $60
  • Workbench — $100
  • Butcher-Block Top — $300
  • Shelf Brackets — $8 each
  • Swag Pendant — West Elm $16
  • Paper Lantern — $3
  • Barstools — AptDeco $250 for Three
  • Pegboards — IKEA
  • Wall Storage Behind Sink — IKEA
  • Under-Cabinet Lighting — Street Find, via Herman Miller
  • Pond Mirror — Ferm Living
  • PS Cabinet — IKEA
  • Cabinets — IKEA BESTA
  • Bedroom Wall Sconces — IKEA

Thanks, Christine!

This tour’s responses and photos were edited for length/size and clarity.