“I love traditional architecture because it has proved, over and over again, that it works,” explains the Haitian-born architect Elizabeth Graziolo, who launched her own Manhattan-based practice, Yellow House Architects, last February. And she should know what works. After graduating from Cooper Union and spending a few formative years at Cicognani Kalla Architect, Graziolo clocked two decades at the AD100 firm Peter Pennoyer Architects, one of the city’s leading classicist voices, where she became a partner. Since going out on her own, she has been busy designing a number of projects, among them a mid-rise tower on Madison Avenue, a town house on the Upper East Side, and a ground-up pavilion bar for a home in the Caribbean. Carrying a historicist torch into the present day, she aims to design…
