A Penthouse Made for Instagram

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Spotless walls, a “millennial pink” sofa, and a spa-style bathtub that’s waiting to be filled with flowers. And every inch of its 2,400 square feet is free from the clutter of everyday life.

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The living room area of Village Marketing’s penthouse photo studio in SoHo that has been crafted for influencers.CreditCreditAmy Lombard for The New York Times
Sapna Maheshwari

This penthouse apartment in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood is awash in natural light, with high ceilings, gleaming hardwood floors and a rooftop deck. The living room area includes a sofa in the rosy hue known as millennial pink, the kitchen comes equipped with a floor-to-ceiling wine fridge, and the library nook is filled with books chosen for their appearance, not their contents. The white walls are spotless, and there is never any clutter.

Nobody lives here.

The 2,400-square-foot space — which rents for $15,000 a month — was designed as a backdrop for Instagram stars, who have booked it through October.

It was opened in August by Village Marketing, an agency that connects advertisers like the eyewear company Warby Parker and the Equinox fitness company to the social media personalities known as influencers. The ones who work with Village Marketing — mostly stylish young women who are paid to promote products on Instagram — have amassed huge followings with images that capture an idealized version of daily life.

Vickie Segar, the 35-year-old founder of Village Marketing, came up with the idea for an apartment tailored to social media after noticing that many influencers — especially those living in New York, with its cramped, dim living spaces — were having a hard time getting the shots they needed. Some were even booking hotel rooms or making covert visits to furniture stores to get their work done.

“People get up and go to ABC Home the second the doors open to shoot — they do anything,” Ms. Segar said. “Spaces like this are gold for them, because then they’re able to have a place that’s a home to shoot lifestyle home moments in.”

Village Marketing, which has an all-woman staff of 17, invited a number of social media stars to make use of the apartment in recent weeks, and their posts have already racked up tens of thousands of likes.

The photographs of the apartment taken for this article, when viewed alongside the Instagram posts that resulted from photo shoots in the same space, give an idea of how the social media sausage is made. The apartment points to a future where Instagram moves further away from a do-it-yourself aesthetic toward a look that is more staged and polished.

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The bedroom at Village Marketing’s penthouse. The bed frame was selected so influencers could choose whether they want to include it in their shots.CreditAmy Lombard for The New York Times

The apartment itself is something of an advertisement. It was furnished by the online furniture company Wayfair and designed by Wayfair Design Services in exchange for the inevitable social media impressions, Ms. Segar said. Village Marketing plans to eventually charge brands for installations and events in the space, so that it can remain free for those who reserve it for photo shoots.

As Ms. Segar led a tour of the apartment, she invoked terms like “moments,” “feelings,” “scenes” and “vibes.”

In fashion- and Instagram-speak, a moment is a certain look, rather than a unit of time. And so Ms. Segar described the apartment’s library nook as “one of our favorite little moments.” She added that the books on the shelves — with “Crisis Economics” just below “Gone Girl” — were chosen for their muted colors to make the area “not as feminine and peachy as the rest of the space.”

Near the entrance is a spot that Ms. Segar described as a “fireplace scene,” which is likely to be a hit among influencers during pumpkin spice season (also known as fall). The chairs by the brick hearth have low backs, partly to avoid “anything reflective” from the mirror on the mantle. “When you think of all the products they’re trying to bring to life, they need as many moments and feelings as possible,” she said.

Ms. Segar noted that the “huge windows” and “really iconic” wallpaper helped make the bedroom Instagram-ready. The room has already yielded posts featuring a pillow fight and a bra ad. Village Marketing steams the pillows and sheets before every shoot.

“There’s tons of pillows in the bed for them to work with,” Ms. Segar said, adding that different textures like velvet and (fake) fur photograph well. A serving tray with shiny accessories has already appeared in numerous breakfast-in-bed shots. Another popular prop is the framed poster that says “The Future is Female.” And the custom rug has figured in Instagram posts promoting footwear.

“We wanted them to have something that would be able to feel like a moment where they could shoot their shoes,” Ms. Segar said.

Marianna Hewitt, who has more than 800,000 Instagram followers, recently took photos in the penthouse and hosted an event there for a skin care line she co-founded.

“If you shoot in a traditional photography studio, it almost looks too good for social,” Ms. Hewitt said. At the same time, she added, “we don’t want to shoot at our house every single day or the same streets we post on all the time.”

The velvety sofa was custom-made by Wayfair in a shade of blush called millennial pink, used throughout the apartment.CreditAmy Lombard for The New York Times

Social media users like Ms. Hewitt like the apartment because it allows for images that have style, without the off-putting slickness of traditional advertising.

The women who work with Village Marketing are drawn to the apartment’s “pink design moments and our iconic pink couch,” Ms. Segar said. The specific shade, she noted, is “millennial pink,” which was also used for the chairs around the dining table.

“Most of our influencers are millennials, most of them love this color palette,” she added. “The gold accents, the blushes, the velvets, the furs.”

There is also the “rah-rah-Instagram-slash-feminist-wall,” an area filled with photographs of Instagram influencers and messages of female empowerment.

The bathroom has become a destination for influencers who promote beauty products — and the distance between the entrance and the bathtub makes it easy to get a good shot. CreditAmy Lombard for The New York Times

The bathroom has become a destination for influencers who promote beauty products — and the distance between the entrance and the bathtub makes it easy to get a good shot. The spa-style tub was a party prop during Ms. Hewitt’s event, when it was filled with flowers. (Very Instagram.)

“I’m waiting for an influencer to do like a floating flower bathtub shot,” Ms. Segar said. “It will happen. It just hasn’t happened yet.”

The kitchen is a stranger to dirty dishes and splattered grease, but the Village Marketing team sometimes stocks it with baked goods or cheeses as props. Instagram-worthy vendors include Levain and Balthazar. During my visit, a batch of By Chloe cupcakes, with colorful frosting, lent a homey touch. The gold-accented dishes must be photo-ready at all times.

“We needed a really white, well-lit kitchen that had enough space that you could back out and put a camera to video and film,” Ms. Segar said.

Hanging on a nearby wall is a framed photo of Prada Marfa, the Italian fashion brand’s hut-like outpost in West Texas that has been the subject of countless Instagram posts.

“People literally travel to this space to shoot,” Ms. Segar said. “It felt like this was the exact perfect place we should have on here.”

The rooftop deck offers young influencers another option to capture an idealized version of daily life.CreditAmy Lombard for The New York Times

The roof deck allows for the staging of everything from yoga classes to dinner parties. And with a clever arrangement of the potted plants, the area can serve as a stand-in for “an outdoor space in the middle of the country,” Ms. Segar said.

Hannah Bronfman, the 30-year-old founder of the women’s wellness website HB Fit, said the variety of looks provided by the apartment has eased the challenge of scouting locations for the various types of Instagram posts. The fact that the place was meant for social media, rather than real life, seemed not to concern her.

“Listen, does Instagram create false reality? Yes, 1,000 percent,” said Ms. Bronfman, who has roughly 474,000 Instagram followers. “But having a place like this, for me, is not about pretending your life looks like something else. It’s about having a space you need to get your work done.”

Sapna Maheshwari covers advertising. She has won reporting awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers and the Newswomen’s Club of New York and was on Time’s list of “140 Best Twitter Feeds of 2014.” @sapna Facebook

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