High-end design comes to the fish tank

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, April 24, 2024


High-end design comes to the fish tank
A private freshwater aquarium designed by Infinity Aquarium Design, based in Los Angeles. Luxury home aquariums now can rival installations at public aquariums in size and scale, and they come with hefty price tags. Infinity Aquarium Design via The New York Times.

by Candace Jackson



NEW YORK, NY.- Stuck at home during the pandemic, many Americans took in dogs or cats. Others took up a more elaborate pet hobby: luxury home aquariums. Something of a cross between home decor, entertainment, wildlife and pet shelter, these custom aquariums can weigh more than 75,000 pounds and cost as much as $750,000 at the top end.

“We’ve seen a tremendous boom in business,” said Nic Tiemens, of Infinity Aquarium Design in Los Angeles. He said demand has grown by about 400% since the start of the pandemic and is still going strong. Clients who may have long wanted to splurge on a home aquarium were stuck at home and were finally willing to take the plunge, he said.

In more typical times, he would install a high-end home aquarium every few months — now he’s doing multiple aquariums every month. The company is fully booked into the third quarter of 2022. Some of these aquariums rival installations at public aquariums in size and scale.

With many affluent Americans upsizing or relocating, aquarium designers say a good part of the demand is coming from repeat customers upgrading their sea life’s home as they upgrade the human home that surrounds it. “The aquariums are getting bigger and bigger, and the homes are getting more expensive,” said Gerry Calabrese, founder and president of SeaVisions, a 40-year-old South Florida company that installs aquariums worldwide for homes and businesses. He has built home tanks as large as 5,000 gallons. “We’ve never been busier,” he said.

Craig Atkins, a real estate developer in Newport Beach, California, hired Tiemens to design and install a 1,500-gallon tank in the living room of his house on Lido Isle, a human-made island off the Newport Beach harbor. Atkins, an avid scuba and free diver who said he taught both his children to dive at age 5, wanted to bring the feeling of the sea into his home. “We’re fish geeks,” he said.

In his previous house, he had an 11-foot-long custom tank — the width of a supersize sectional couch. For his new house, he wanted to go larger. His saltwater tank is 15 feet wide — the length of the widest piece of seamless acrylic that was readily available. Tiemens said it’s big enough that the tank in the living room is visible from the length of a football field away through the home’s windowed glass exterior. “I like to say that it’s central to Newport Beach,” said Tiemens.

Retrofitting the tank into an existing home was a challenge. “I bought this house kind of on a whim because it’s on a corner lot on an island,” said Atkins. “Then it was like, ‘How do we fit a tank in?’” It wasn’t easy. Atkins said the crew slept at his house a couple nights, pulling all-nighters to get the tank installed on time.

First, a contractor had to install steel reinforcement into the floors to handle the 20,000 pounds of weight — water is heavy. Next, they retrofitted a basement space originally used as a wine closet into a filtration room with about a 300-gallon capacity. From there, saltwater gets filtered and pumped through six different pipelines built into the floors. Outside, there’s another 400-gallon tank for water changes. The setup ensures that the tank operates silently in the living room.

The tank is filled with synthetic coral and a colorful mix of tropical fish such as queen angels, parrotfish and cowfish. “It’s like living art,” said Atkins, who said he enjoys feeding the fish himself. (They eat sushi-grade seaweed, shrimp and krill.) Atkins said he spent about $125,000 on the aquarium and accompanying equipment.

The initial installation and setup is only part of what aquarium owners can expect to pay. The fish themselves can cost hundreds of dollar each or more (at the top end, a masked angelfish can cost as much as $15,000). And high-end companies say customers can pay as much as $5,000 a month for weekly cleanings and maintenance. Tiemens, of Infinity, said a loose rule of thumb is to figure in $2 per gallon per month for maintenance, although it can vary widely based on the type of food and medication the fish might require. (Medication comes in liquid form and is generally used in quarantine tanks to prevent disease.)

Brad Barton, an emergency room doctor in Orange, Texas, put a custom-built tank in his new home, which was completed about six months ago. Barton said the house, which overlooks a large human-made pond on the Texas and Louisiana border, was designed around two things: water views and his fish tank.

Barton said he has been a sea-life hobbyist since childhood. By the time he was in college, he had a 125-gallon tank, which he got for free after finding it discarded in a chemistry lab. When it came time to build his dream tank for his current house, he wanted something unique and custom-built to suit the space. He hired SeaVisions to design a 1,000-gallon, two-sided saltwater aquarium that would take the place of one of the archways in his living room.




His fish, he said, have unique personalities and form relationships with one another that are fascinating to watch. There’s a clown fish that feeds and plays with the sea anemone. And a leopard wrasse that goes to bed like clockwork at 7:35 p.m. and wakes up exactly 12 hours later. “If you think of it like a lava lamp, it’s like that times 10,000,” said Barton, who declined to say what he spent on the tank other than to say it was “a lot” and “I could have a really cool car for the same price.”

Because Barton lives in a remote area, he has not yet found a company that can service a tank such as his on a regular basis — so he has been doing the work himself, cleaning, feeding and maintaining the chemical balance, which he said takes daily monitoring and about 30 minutes every other week for cleaning.

The boom in high-end tank demand has coincided with a shortage in key aquarium building materials such as acrylic, said Tiemens. Grocery stores, restaurants, salons and many other businesses around the globe were using acrylic in massive quantities for sneeze guards during the height of the COVID crisis. Calabrese said the worst of the delays have passed, but supplies in general are still backed up. The time it takes to build an aquarium has doubled, from roughly three months to six months, he said.

Sourcing the fish has also become a challenge. Some remote tropical islands have cut off or have limited trade, said Calabrese, making some tropical fish difficult to come by. Yellow tangs, the brightly colored saltwater aquarium staple native to Hawaii, have shot up in price and gotten much harder to find, he said. (They now can cost more than $500 each, up from less than $100.) More aquaculture farms are cropping up to sustainably grow some popular fish, but not every species can be bred.

Keith Poliakoff, a lawyer in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, recently built a 550-gallon tank into a den area of his home — an upgrade from the 150-gallon tank in his previous house. His saltwater aquarium has live coral, which Poliakoff said is painstaking and expensive to grow and maintain, but also rewarding. (He purchases coral grown in captivity.) Poliakoff splices together small fragments, which eventually grow together to form larger coral — a process that can take years. He selected fish that are reef-safe, including clown fish, which don’t eat or hinder coral growth.

“To be able to have a tank where you can learn how to grow corals and make it thrive and succeed in a protected environment,” he said, “it helps others appreciate the beauty of coral and sea life.”

The tank, designed by SeaVisions, makes up the wall behind a bar area.

For those looking to install or build an aquarium into a new home, the process ideally starts early. Tiemens recently tagged along with a couple and their broker on their house hunt in Los Angeles.

The couple wanted a house with a living room that could accommodate a 1,500-gallon tank. They ended up finding a house with an ideal layout for the tank, with a bedroom and bathroom they have since converted into aquarium filtration operations and a separate quarantine tank. He and his team used a forklift to get the aquarium into the house and then built the custom cabinetry around it.

Putting a high-end tank in a high-rise brings added complexity. Justin Muir, owner and principal designer at New York-based City Aquarium, said additional structural supports, such as steel plates to reinforce the floors underneath, are a must. But that can add tens of thousands of dollars to the cost. Condo and co-op board rules often dictate how large a client can go. Still, he said it’s possible to build a pretty large aquarium — 300 to 500 gallons, or 6 to 8 feet in length — in many taller buildings.

During the pandemic, his business shifted toward suburban homes after many of his Manhattan high-rise clients relocated to Long Island, New Jersey and Connecticut. But he has gotten some new clients as well. “If you’re going to be stuck at home working,” he said, “then this is for sure the best time to start a fish tank.”

Technological advances in recent years have made maintenance easier and more precise. Calabrese said he remotely monitors many clients’ aquariums and gets alerts when pH levels or temperatures are off.

The downside, said Calabrese, is that he’s always on. “They’ll send me an email on Saturday at 10 at night saying, ‘A fish got stuck behind a rock and he can’t get out!’,” he said. “People get panicked. But fish like to hide.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 17, 2021

At Frieze London, the art world inches toward normalcy

Hirschl & Adler Modern opens an exhibition of works by James Castle

High-end design comes to the fish tank

'Mackinnon - Fine Furniture and Works of Art' at Christie's London this November

Tate acquires new works at Frieze thanks to fund supported by Endeavor

Heritage Auctions presents 'The Soul of a Nation: Black Art From a Distinguished Collector' in November

A trove of Georgia O'Keeffe's photographs on view for the first time in Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, exhibition

Queen Nefertari's Egypt opens at Portland Art Museum

Rare Posters Auction #85 presents 490 rare and iconic works

500 years of fashion, created from paper featured at Munson-Williams Museum of Art

The June Kelly Gallery opens an exhibition of sculpture by Colin Chase

Claire Tabouret's fourth solo exhibition with Almine Rech opens in Paris

P·P·O·W opens an exhibition of large-scale paintings by Robin F. Williams

The FLAG Art Foundation opens a solo exhibition of new work by Cinga Samson

Lilly Library acquires more than 20,000 linguistic books collected by 'Dame of Dictionaries'

Emma Enderby appointed Head of Program and Research (Chief Curator) at Haus der Kunst

The gaming console that never was: Infinium Phantom prototype rises at Heritage Auctions

Nirvana takes the stage: Kurt Cobain-signed Nevermind CD offered at Swann

Gabriel Garcia Marquez' clothes to go on sale in Mexico

'Just me and the fabric': Vietnam artist finds success with cloth creations

Explore cabinetmaker Jean-Henri Riesener with innovative new digital tools

The Neon Museum promotes Jennifer Kleven to senior development officer

Penn Badgley flexes new dance moves

Farewell to a ballerina with Borscht Belt humor and 'Legs of Life'

Stock Twits

10 Aruban Mind, Body, and Soul Rejuvenating Experiences in 2022

Greg Welch: The Man Behind Cannabiscapes Weed Art




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful