Hubbry Logo
BoNDBoNDMain
Open search
BoND
Community hub
BoND
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
BoND
BoND
from Wikipedia

BoND (Bureau of Noam & Daniel) is a New York City–based architecture and interior design firm founded in 2019 by architects and writers Noam Dvir and Daniel Rauchwerger.[1]

Background

[edit]

Dvir graduated from Tel Aviv University with a bachelor's degree in architecture and from Harvard Graduate School with a Master of Architecture in urban design.[2] They were both correspondents for the Israeli newspaper, Haaretz.[3] Rauchwerger wrote as an arts correspondent and Dvir covered architecture.[3]

Rauchwerger graduated from Bezalel Academy in Jerusalem with a bachelor's degree in architecture and a master's in design studies from Harvard Graduate School of Design.[2]

Work

[edit]

Dvir and Rauchwerger formed BoND in 2019 after studying together at graduate school. Their project focus on commercial projects as well as experiential and workplace environments. Projects include spaces in New York City such as Company and David Lewis Gallery and high-end collaborative homes in East Hampton and Fire Island Pines; exhibitions in Cambridge, Massachusetts; and structures in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, Israel.[4]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
BoND, short for Best-of-N Distillation, is a reinforcement learning from human feedback (RLHF) algorithm developed to align large language models (LLMs) by replicating the quality improvements of Best-of-N sampling—selecting the optimal output from multiple generations—while eliminating its high inference-time computational demands. Introduced in a 2024 research paper by Lihan Wang et al., BoND functions as a distribution-matching method that adjusts the policy's output distribution to approximate the ideal Best-of-N distribution, enabling single-pass generation with enhanced performance. It leverages the Jeffreys divergence, a symmetric measure combining forward and reverse Kullback-Leibler divergences, to strike a balance between mode-covering (broad exploration of possible outputs) and mode-seeking (focusing on high-quality generations) behaviors, preventing issues like over-conservatism or hallucination in LLMs. For practical implementation, BoND employs an iterative optimization process with a moving anchor mechanism, which dynamically updates reference distributions to improve training stability and efficiency without requiring excessive resources. The algorithm's effectiveness has been validated through experiments on tasks such as abstractive text summarization using the XSum dataset, where BoND-aligned policies achieved better reward-KL trade-offs compared to baselines like REINFORCE. When applied to the Gemma family of open-source LLMs, BoND demonstrated improvements in reward-KL trade-offs over REINFORCE, with aligned models showing enhanced performance in safety and instruction-following metrics. Key design choices, such as the choice of divergence measure and anchor strategy, contribute to its robustness, making BoND a promising approach for scalable LLM post-training in resource-constrained settings.

History

Founding

BoND, formally known as Bureau of Noam & Daniel, was established in 2019 in New York City by architects Noam Dvir and Daniel Rauchwerger, who are partners in both professional and personal life. The founders, who first connected in Israel through their overlapping work in architecture journalism and later pursued graduate studies together at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, sought to merge their architectural training with journalistic insights to pioneer innovative interiors and experiential spaces. This interdisciplinary approach was driven by a desire to launch their own studio, an ambition they discussed early in their relationship, while centering queer community perspectives in design as encouraged by mentor Charles Renfro of Diller Scofidio + Renfro. From its inception, BoND operated out of New York City with a lean structure comprising only the two principals, allowing flexibility to tackle initial commissions in galleries and homes as a means to develop their portfolio. This modest setup emphasized conceptual depth over scale, drawing on the founders' prior experience in exhibition design to prioritize narrative-driven projects from the outset.

Growth and Expansion

Following its founding in 2019, BoND initially concentrated on commercial projects within New York City's art scene, establishing a foothold through high-profile gallery designs that showcased the firm's innovative approach to spatial dynamics. A key early milestone was the 2021 expansion and relocation of Company Gallery to a 4,000-square-foot warehouse space in Manhattan's Nolita district, which encompassed three levels and highlighted BoND's ability to transform industrial structures into multifunctional art environments. From 2022 onward, BoND shifted toward residential work, particularly in queer-centric communities, marking a significant phase of project diversification and volume growth. The firm undertook numerous renovations and new builds in Fire Island Pines, a historic LGBTQ+ enclave, accumulating 13 residential projects by mid-2025, including restorations of mid-century homes and ground-up constructions that reinterpret the area's modernist legacy. Concurrently, BoND expanded into the Hamptons, delivering residential designs such as the Arched House in East Hampton, which earned recognition as a runner-up in the 2023 Cottages & Gardens Hamptons Design Awards for its interior innovation. This period also saw the firm's first forays into commercial projects beyond New York, exemplified by the 2024 debut of Le Père's West Hollywood flagship store on Melrose Avenue, featuring an open-concept layout with natural oak elements and minimalist lighting. Geographically, BoND has remained headquartered in New York City while extending its reach to East Hampton and Fire Island Pines in New York, West Hollywood in California, and additional sites in Miami and Chicago, reflecting a strategic focus on coastal and urban queer communities. Internally, the studio scaled from operating out of the founders' living room to a dedicated Flatiron District office accommodating models, samples, and client meetings, with staff growing to six or seven members to support structured workflows on an increasing project pipeline. Today, BoND stands as an award-winning practice, with accolades underscoring its contributions to residential and commercial spaces that foster queer expression and cultural solidarity, particularly in Fire Island Pines where the firm's work has been integral to preserving and evolving the community's architectural heritage.

Founders

BoND, as a reinforcement learning algorithm, was proposed by a team of researchers including Pier Giuseppe Sessa, Robert Dadashi, Léonard Hussenot, Johan Ferret, Nino Vieillard, Alexandre Ramé, Bobak Shahriari, Sarah Perrin, Abe Friesen, Geoffrey Cideron, Sertan Girgin, Piotr Stanczyk, Andrea Michi, Danila Sinopalnikov, Sabela Ramos, Amélie Héliou, Aliaksei Severyn, Matt Hoffman, Nikola Momchev, and Olivier Bachem in a 2024 research paper.

Design Philosophy

Influences

BoND's design aesthetic draws significantly from the historical adaptability of New York City's industrial lofts, which emphasize raw spatial flexibility and the reinvention of existing structures to suit contemporary lifestyles. This influence manifests in their approach to preserving architectural character while integrating modern needs, echoing the lofts' legacy of multifunctional urban living. Complementing this are roots in modernist architecture, informed by the founders' Israeli heritage, where architecture is viewed as inherently politicized and tied to cultural identity, prompting designs that navigate legacy and innovation with sensitivity to historical contexts. Cultural dynamics within the queer community profoundly shape BoND's spatial sensibilities, particularly through experiences in Fire Island Pines, a historic sanctuary for LGBTQ+ expression since the mid-20th century. Here, the island's ethos of communal freedom and hedonism inspires designs that incorporate elements of voyeurism, openness, and non-hierarchical layouts, challenging traditional domestic norms to foster chosen families and uninhibited social interactions. This cultural lens extends to broader queer narratives, where spatial freedom becomes a tool for exploring desire and identity without taboo. Environmental considerations underscore BoND's site-specific responsiveness, adapting to the unique challenges of coastal and urban landscapes such as the Hamptons' dunes or the dense fabric of Tel Aviv-Jaffa. In vulnerable areas like Fire Island, they prioritize elevation for flood resilience, material durability against sea exposure, and seamless integration with natural ecosystems, ensuring designs respect local ecologies while enhancing communal ties to place. Broader inspirations stem from the founders' post-Harvard Graduate School of Design experiences, particularly their time at OMA, which exposed them to experiential design emphasizing innovative problem-solving and philosophical depth in everyday spaces. Their shared background in journalism further infuses a narrative approach, treating architectural projects as stories that capture clients' personal and cultural fantasies through deliberate spatial storytelling.

Key Principles

BoND's core design approach centers on crafting atmospheric spaces that evoke desire and emotional depth while ensuring practical functionality, drawing from clients' personal narratives to create environments that resonate on an intimate level. This methodology prioritizes the infusion of identity into built forms, challenging conventional domestic norms to foster settings that reflect individual stories and lifestyles, often through bold material choices and spatial configurations that encourage presence and interaction. In renovations, particularly of industrial lofts and historic structures, BoND emphasizes preservation by exposing and integrating a building's inherent character, distilling key elements like raw textures or structural limits to honor the past without overwhelming contemporary needs. This adaptive reuse avoids generic overhauls, instead aligning new interventions with the site's history to maintain architectural continuity and narrative authenticity. The firm integrates light and spatial flow to cultivate intimacy, designing fluid transitions between public and private zones that balance openness for communal gathering with secluded nooks for personal retreat, thereby enhancing emotional connections within the space. These principles manifest in configurations that maximize natural illumination and views, creating dramatic yet cozy atmospheres suited to social and reflective moments. Sustainability underpins BoND's contextual sensitivity, with designs that respond to environmental challenges such as coastal flooding by elevating structures and preserving natural site flows, as seen in Fire Island projects that respect local ecologies through resilient, low-impact adaptations. This ethos ensures buildings harmonize with their surroundings, mitigating climate risks while supporting ecological integrity. At the heart of BoND's practice is a collaborative, partner-led process that incorporates client narratives through in-depth interviews, treating design as a journalistic endeavor to uncover and embed personal histories, particularly in queer-inclusive homes that accommodate nontraditional family dynamics and desires. This inclusive approach, informed by the firm's queer perspective, promotes spaces that celebrate diverse identities and foster community without imposing external norms.

Notable Projects

Residential Designs

BoND's residential designs emphasize intimate, site-responsive spaces that blend modern aesthetics with historical or natural contexts, often tailored to the lifestyles of queer clients and families. These projects prioritize open layouts, material sensitivity, and experiential elements that foster connection and fluidity in private living environments. One of BoND's early residential works is the Tribeca Loft, a 1,000-square-foot renovation in a former industrial building in New York City's Tribeca neighborhood, completed in 2022 for a young gay couple. The design centers living, hosting, and dining areas along west-facing windows to maximize natural light, with bedrooms positioned at either end separated by large glass partitions rather than solid walls, promoting open-plan intimacy and visual connectivity throughout the space. All plumbing and wiring were replaced during the gut renovation, and furniture was sourced from brands like BOND, BassamFellows, and Design Within Reach, alongside vintage pieces, to create a cohesive, multifunctional home. In Fire Island Pines, a historic queer enclave on Long Island, BoND has completed over 13 residential projects since around 2020, including restorations and new builds that engage with the area's midcentury modernist legacy and queer architectural history. Drawing inspiration from architects like Horace Gifford, whose designs featured bold geometries and oversized windows reflecting liberated gay expression, BoND incorporates fantasy elements such as voyeuristic layouts and spatial clarity to evoke sensuality and non-nuclear family living. Notable examples include the 2022 Pines Beach Cabin, a renovated 1950s Sears catalog home for art collector Ilan Cohen; the 2023 Tarpon Beach House; the 2021 Pines Art House for a contemporary artist; and BoND's own 1965 home renovation, which uses altered siding, windows, and furniture to integrate themes of sexuality and openness with the surrounding natural environment. Their largest ongoing project there is a ground-up build elevated 20 feet above ground on a combined plot, featuring a floating box structure around a central courtyard to address climate resilience while enhancing communal and private interactions. BoND's high-end collaborative homes in East Hampton exemplify site-sensitive designs that harmonize modern interiors with natural surroundings. The 2022 Hamptons Arched House, one of the firm's first projects, involved a complete interior redesign of a historic cottage in East Hampton Village, preserving the existing envelope while introducing contemporary geometry through an architectural wall with recurring arched openings that improve flow between public spaces for enhanced hosting. Developed in collaboration with ATTN ATTN, the project strengthens indoor-outdoor connections, blending neutral material palettes and custom elements like pottery from Studio Davka with the village's verdant setting to create a balanced, light-filled residence. Beyond New York, BoND has contributed to urban-residential fusion through structures in Tel Aviv-Jaffa, leveraging principal Noam Dvir's Israeli roots. The Villa Salame renovation, a 1,400-square-foot 1850s stone house in southern Tel Aviv redesigned by Dvir in collaboration with Jonathan Canetti, transforms the abandoned orchard owner's dwelling into a modern oasis amid urban density. Original limestone walls and archways were exposed, paired with glass and steel additions to flood the space with light, while a central courtyard with fig trees, a water feature, and outdoor shower revives the site's historical verdancy, fusing private living with the bustling city through seamless indoor-outdoor transitions and minimalist interiors featuring concrete tiles, exposed beams, and neutral accents. BoND has applied its design principles to a range of non-residential projects, particularly in commercial and gallery contexts, where the firm emphasizes adaptive reuse, fluid spatial dynamics, and experiential immersion to support artistic and social functions. These works often transform underutilized or historic structures into versatile venues that prioritize viewer interaction and communal gathering, drawing parallels to the firm's residential emphasis on inclusive, queer-centered atmospheres. A prominent example is the interior design for Company Gallery on the Bowery in New York City, located at 145 Elizabeth Street in a former dry goods storage warehouse. BoND created over 4,000 square feet of exhibition, office, and support spaces across three levels, preserving the building's exterior brick facade—painted silver—while introducing bright, open ground-floor galleries that transition fluidly to a darker basement for film, video, performances, and events. Open sightlines connect storage, display, and administrative areas, enhancing communal inclusivity in line with the gallery's mission to showcase emerging artists. The project team included Noam Dvir, Daniel Rauchwerger, and Massimiliano Malago, with executive architecture by Brooklyn Root Design and lighting by Dot Dash. In TriBeCa, BoND undertook the adaptive reuse of a narrow, two-story street-level space on Walker Street for David Lewis Gallery, a 92-foot-long by 16-foot-high volume originally challenging for art display. To optimize viewing, the firm introduced two partitions: solid surfaces rising 11 feet, topped with translucent opal polycarbonate sheets that allow diffused light and maintain spatial continuity. A continuous fluorescent lighting field at the 11-foot datum unifies the subdivided, square-like areas, complemented by a minimal palette featuring a custom stainless-steel reception desk fabricated in Chinatown and wood-top tables designed with Vitsoe. This configuration supports flexible installations of contemporary art, fostering intimate yet expansive encounters. The design team comprised Noam Dvir, Daniel Rauchwerger, and Massimiliano Malago. Extending its commercial portfolio westward, BoND designed the 1,100-square-foot flagship for Le Père in West Hollywood at 8507 Melrose Avenue, serving as a bi-coastal outpost for the menswear brand's New York presence. The firm restored the building's original material palette through facade cleaning, black window frames, and a vertical yellow neon accent spanning two floors, with clear glass enabling unobstructed views into the boutique. Inside, a gray epoxy floor and oak millwork create a bright, open layout with sculptural displays for clothing, a DJ stand, bookshelves, and auditorium seating that promote social flow and interaction, nodding to Los Angeles' skate culture, parking lots, and theaters. Atmospheric lighting from the neon exterior enhances the welcoming ambiance, while Alvar Aalto furniture adds subtle elegance. Collaborators included local architect Isaac Howell, contractor Jacob Shapiro, millwork fabricator Knowhow Shop, and BoND team members Noam Dvir, Daniel Rauchwerger, and Thomas McCloskey. Earlier in their careers, Noam Dvir and Daniel Rauchwerger curated the Icons of Knowledge Exhibition at Harvard Graduate School of Design in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 2015, featuring lectures on iconic library architectures such as the Riyadh National Library by Eckhard Gerber and the National Library of China by Jurgen Engel. Co-sponsored by student groups Club MEDINA and China GSD, the event used temporary setups to facilitate interactive discussions on knowledge dissemination through design, highlighting the curators' interest in experiential public installations.

Recognition

The BOND method was introduced in a paper titled "BOND: Aligning LLMs with Best-of-N Distillation," which was accepted for presentation at the International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR) 2025. As of October 2024, the paper has received 56 citations according to Google Scholar.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.