• Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Members
  • Sign in
Westfair Communications
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2025 Women Innovators
    • 2025 C-Suite Awards
    • 2025 Doctors of Distinction
    • 2025 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2025
        • 2025 40 Under Forty
        • 2025 Women in Power
        • 2025 Millennial & Gen Z
        • 2025 Real Estate
      • 2024
        • 2024 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2024 Women Innovators
        • 2024 40 Under 40
        • 2024 Real Estate
        • 2024 Women In Power
      • 2023
        • 2023 Women In Power
        • Milli + Genz
        • Women Innovators
        • Forty Under 40
        • Doctors of Distinction
        • Real Estate
      • 2022
        • 2022 Millennial + GenZ Awards
        • 2022 C-Suite Awards
        • 2022 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2022 THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
        • 2022 FORTY UNDER 40
      • 2021
        • 2021 FORTY UNDER 40 VIRTUAL EVENT
        • 2021 TOP WEALTH ADVISORS Virtual Event
        • 2021 Milli + GenZ Awards
        • 2021 C-SUITE
        • 2021 DOCTORS OF DISTINCTION
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBEACT NOW
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2025 Women Innovators
    • 2025 C-Suite Awards
    • 2025 Doctors of Distinction
    • 2025 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2025
        • 2025 40 Under Forty
        • 2025 Women in Power
        • 2025 Millennial & Gen Z
        • 2025 Real Estate
      • 2024
        • 2024 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2024 Women Innovators
        • 2024 40 Under 40
        • 2024 Real Estate
        • 2024 Women In Power
      • 2023
        • 2023 Women In Power
        • Milli + Genz
        • Women Innovators
        • Forty Under 40
        • Doctors of Distinction
        • Real Estate
      • 2022
        • 2022 Millennial + GenZ Awards
        • 2022 C-Suite Awards
        • 2022 Doctors of Distinction
        • 2022 THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
        • 2022 FORTY UNDER 40
      • 2021
        • 2021 FORTY UNDER 40 VIRTUAL EVENT
        • 2021 TOP WEALTH ADVISORS Virtual Event
        • 2021 Milli + GenZ Awards
        • 2021 C-SUITE
        • 2021 DOCTORS OF DISTINCTION
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBEACT NOW
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusives

Where ‘the car is the star’

Georgette Gouveia by Georgette Gouveia
September 12, 2023
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Order your reprint PDF today
Print Full Article

When Alexander Zilberman was in high school in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, he fell in love with architecture. 

“The thing that sold me was a teacher who showed me a photograph of the Kaufmann House by Richard Neutra,” Zilberman, architect and principal of Alexander Zilberman Architecture, P.C. (AZA), said of the mid-century modern Palm Springs home built in 1946 for Pittsburgh department store owner Edgar J. Kaufmann Sr. “I looked at it and said, ”˜I want to do that.” 

The Aston Martin DB12 sits beneath a 2,100-bulb chandelier spanning 131 feet.

“That” would be luxury architecture. Zilberman ”“ who came to suburban Philadelphia from the former Soviet Union when he was 9 ”“ has created flagship and rollout works for luxe brands”¯around the world, from new Theory stores on Madison Avenue, in SoHo and at Palm Beach Gardens in Florida to Helmut Lang in Atlanta, Victoria”™s Secret in Savannah, Georgia, and Jimmy Choo in Newport Beach, California.  

Other recent works include storefront”¯prototypes and a global rollout for Michael Kors; a new executive lounge for”¯Equinox; a mixed-use commercial and residential building in Philadelphia, where Zilberman attended Temple University”™s Tyler School of Art and Architecture; and”¯new stores in airports and cruise ships globally. Manhattan-based AZA is also noted for hospitality works, including Soho House, as well as workplaces, headquarters”¯offices and select residential works. 

But Zilberman”™s design baby of the moment is the new Q New York, the first flagship of Aston Martin Lagonda, the luxe British car manufacturer beloved by King Charles III and James Bond alike. (Celebrating its 110th anniversary, Aston Martin merged with Lagonda in 1947 when both were purchased by British industrialist David Brown. The company is listed on the London Stock Exchange as Aston Martin Lagonda Global”¯Holdings plc.) 

The new Aston Martin flagship ”“ Q New York, a first for the luxe British car manufacturer ”“ is designed to show off the classy, sporty brand and emphasize the cars as the stars. It includes a prototype of the new DB12 in Iridescent Emerald, a Specification Room that has lounge seating with a fireplace, a limestone dining room spec table, a walnut library sample wall and a massive,”¯state-of-the-art video display as a backdrop.

While Queen Elizabeth II presented her son Charles, the present king, with a DB6 Mk2 Vantage Volante in Seychelles blue on his 21st birthday ”“ sparking his lifelong love affair with the brand ”“ it”™s probably best-known for an association with Bond, James Bond that began the moment Sean Connery climbed into a DB5 in the 1964 film “Goldfinger.” 

A sleek, silvery successor ”“ the DB5 stunt car from the 2021 James Bond film “No Time to Die” — is ensconced in the 5,000-square-foot showroom at 450 Park Ave. at 57th Street in Manhattan where over coffee with Zilberman and us, General Manager Lisa F. Anastas detailed why Aston Martin is about a lot more than 007. Anastas ”“ who hails from Connecticut, where she sold Aston Martins and other luxury vehicles at Miller Motorcars in Greenwich ”“ described the Aston Martin as both a gentleperson”™s sports car and a vehicle for the T-shirt and jeans-clad pure car enthusiast.  

Or at least the gentleperson and pure car enthusiast who has $200,000 to $450,000 for a sports car or GT (grand tourer); or $1 million to $3 million for special supercars and high performance hypercars, all custom-made with more than three million options. An Aston Martin is purposeful, bespoke and unique, added Anastas, who has 26 years in the luxury car business and lives in New Rochelle. 

So how do you capture the classy, high-flying duality of the brand? By redoubling its duality with a design that marries public spaces with interior ones, accessibility with intimacy and modernism with traditionalism in a place where, Zilberman has said, “the car is the star.” 

In the former gallery of the Phillips auction house, which has moved to 432 Park Ave., the Aston Martin showroom is designed to engage the pedestrians and the thoroughfare first, he said, with a 22-foot-by-11-foot “Champagne Frame,”  one of the largest single”¯panes of glass ever installed in a New York City building, allowing passers-by to gaze at a prototype of the new DB12 in Iridescent Emerald and the DBX707 with Q Satin Jet Black exterior. They”™re illumined like sculptures by a 2,100-bulb chandelier spanning 131 feet. On the day of our visit, those passers-by included a gaggle of teenage boys and, in a poignant moment, a man who stopped at the door to ask about the cars, though he prefaced his inquiry by saying he knew he could never afford them. 

Zilberman noted that the creamy honed Grigio Alpi limestone used in the display flooring”“ the same material championed by the Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio ”“ appears in the long dining room spec table that sits between the library sample wall and a living room with a fireplace and bookshelves containing photos of Aston Martin devotees James Bond and (then) Prince Charles. The shelving is made of European quarter-sawed walnut. Massive sliding glass doors connect the sitting areas to the display area or seal it off, giving you the sense of being in a cozy British estate, albeit one with a 35-foot by 10-foot LED wall that offers an ultra-high definition, 360-degree”¯view of any Aston Martin in life size. The interactive screen allows clients to create the car of their dreams. 

A live video link from Manhattan to Aston Martin”™s studio”¯in Gaydon, England, also enables clients to communicate with designers and the Q by Aston Martin team. The Q stands for quartermaster, Anastas said, referring to a commissioned supply officer in the British Army and Royal Marines but also evoking Q, the tech-whiz quartermaster in the James Bond films. There”™s also a Formula One simulator that reminds you of Aston Martin”™s racing roots embodied today in part by Lance Stroll, son of Lawrence Stroll, who became executive chairman of Aston Martin Lagonda in 2020. It was a move, along with new investment, that”¯led to Aston Martin”™s return to the winner”™s circle of motorsports with the Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant”¯Formula One”¯Team.”¯ 

Alexander Zilberman, architect and principal of Alexander Zilberman Architecture, P.C. (AZA) in Manhattan, who designed the new Q New York in collaboration with Aston Martin for the brand’s first flagship, on Park Avenue and 57th Street. Courtesy Aston Martin.

Along with racing success, there has been significant growth for the Q by Aston Martin division with a record number”¯of Aston Martin units sold with bespoke touches and elements in 2022, representing a 51% year-on-year increase. The Americas is the fastest growing region for Q by Aston Martin, with”¯92% year-on-year growth in 2022. 

Hence, the location of the first flagship in New York City with design by Zilberman, who said he came to the Big Apple, establishing his firm of 11 members there in 2011, because he wanted to strive among the best. 

Clearly, Aston Martin thinks it”™s the place to be, too. As Lawrence Stroll said in a statement: “The opening of our first flagship Q”¯location, in our largest commercial market, is the latest distinct expression of Aston”¯Martin”™s shift to”¯an ultra-luxury brand. It demonstrates our ambition to drive global growth and create elevated”¯customer experiences to match our owners”™ passion”¯for Aston Martin. 
 
“We recognize the growing trend of personalization across the luxury goods segment and see huge”¯value in investing in our customer experience to create the best specification experiences available”¯anywhere in the world. With a 92% increase in Q by Aston Martin take-up in the Americas last year,”¯this is the perfect time and the perfect place for us to open our very first global flagship location.” 

For more on Q New York click here. And for more on Alexander Zilberman Architecture, P.C., click here.

This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.

Previous Post

Anti-cannabis lawsuit claims Connecticut is one toke over the wrong line

Next Post

Husband and wife doctors head to CHAM/Albert Einstein 

Georgette Gouveia

Georgette Gouveia

Winner of ArtsWestchester’s 2023 President’s Award for her 43-year career as an arts journalist, Georgette Gouveia is cultural writer and luxury editor for Westfair Communications Inc.’s Westfair Business Journal She is also the author of “The Games Men Play” blog and book series, exploring the power dynamic in culture. Her latest novel, the historical thriller “Riddle Me This,” was recently published by JMS Books. Gouveia is the co-curator of Lehman College Art Gallery’s “Framing the Female Gaze: Women Artists and the New Historicism” (Oct. 10 through Jan. 20). For more on Westfair, visit westfaironline.com. And visit her at thegamesmenplay.com.

Related Posts

Eye on Small Business: Miles, The Prince, North White Plains 
Business

Eye on Small Business: Miles, The Prince, North White Plains 

August 3, 2024
White-glove legal services for those on the brink of splitsville
Business Journals

White-glove legal services for those on the brink of splitsville

August 9, 2024
Urban Central comes to Hartsdale 
Exclusives

Urban Central comes to Hartsdale 

August 2, 2024
Next Post
Husband and wife doctors head to CHAM/Albert Einstein 

Husband and wife doctors head to CHAM/Albert Einstein 

Putnam plans to build new fire training center

Putnam plans to build new fire training center

Westfair to carry news from CNN

Bob Barker, former longtime host of ‘The Price Is Right,’ dead at 99: VIDEO

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to our newsletter

Lifestyle

  • Exclusives
  • Good Things Happening
  • Food & Restaurants
  • Travel
  • Health & Fitness
  • Home & Design

World News

U.S. and world news for Nov. 12
World News

U.S. and world news for July 10

by Peter Katz
July 10, 2025
0

New policy by Kristi Noem allegedly caused FEMA to be late in responding to Texas floods For months, officials at...

CNN WIRE — Tillis discusses his vote against Trump’s agenda: VIDEO

CNN WIRE — Tillis discusses his vote against Trump’s agenda: VIDEO

July 9, 2025
U.S. and world news for July 9

U.S. and world news for July 9

July 9, 2025
CNN WIRE — Tesla is in deeper trouble than you think

CNN WIRE — Tesla is in deeper trouble than you think

July 8, 2025
U.S. and world news for July 8

U.S. and world news for July 8

July 8, 2025
Likely impact of Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’ on NY health care calculated

CNN WIRE — Major medical associations sue Kennedy, Trump Administration

July 7, 2025
No Result
View All Result

Latest News

Kingston approves plans for 615 Broadway mixed-use development
Combined

Kingston approves plans for 615 Broadway mixed-use development

by Peter Katz
July 10, 2025
0

Kingston's Planning Board has approved the site plan for a mixed-use project with an estimated cost of...

Last of Poughkeepsie bank fraud ring sentenced

Last of Poughkeepsie bank fraud ring sentenced

July 10, 2025
State awards Fairfield coveted Section 8-30g affordable housing moratorium

Circle Hotel neighbors take Town of Fairfield to court over development

July 10, 2025
U.S. and world news for Nov. 12

U.S. and world news for July 10

July 10, 2025
Fairfield County luxury property transfers (Week of July 7)

Fairfield County luxury property transfers (Week of July 7)

July 9, 2025
Logo Westfair Business Journal

Latest News

Kingston approves plans for 615 Broadway mixed-use development

Last of Poughkeepsie bank fraud ring sentenced

Circle Hotel neighbors take Town of Fairfield to court over development

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Sign in

Trending Westchester

Subscribe to our newsletter

© 2024 Westfair Business Publications. All rights reserved. Westfair Communications (Westfair), a privately held publishing firm based in Mount Kisco, N.Y., publishes the Westchester County Business Journal in New York state and the Fairfield County Business Journal in Connecticut.

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
    • WESTCHESTER
    • FAIRFIELD
  • E-EDITIONS
    • Business Journal
    • Podcasts
  • MEMBERS
  • BUSINESS LISTS
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Real Estate
    • Economic Development
    • Hudson Valley
    • Courts
    • Banking & Finance
    • Construction
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Health Care
    • Food & Beverage
    • Government
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Nonprofits
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Home & Design
    • Health & Fitness
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • SMALL BUSINESS
    • Small Business
    • Food & Restaurants
  • EVENTS
    • 2025 Women Innovators
    • 2025 C-Suite Awards
    • 2025 Doctors of Distinction
    • 2025 Hispanic Innovators
    • Events Calendar
    • Past Events
      • 2025
      • 2024
      • 2023
      • 2022
      • 2021
  • GOOD THINGS
  • VIDEOS
    • Our Starting Lineup
    • News Videos
  • PARTNERS
  • ADVERTISE
  • SUBSCRIBE
    • NEWSLETTERS
    • DIGITAL ACCESS

© 2024 Westfair Business Journal. All rights reserved.