HC&G (Hamptons Cottages & Gardens) AUGUST 15, 2021

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hamptons cottages & gardens    august 15, 2021

COTTAGESGARDENS.COM | AUGUST 15, 2021

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THE ARCHITECTURE ISSUE





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FEATURES 62

STONY HILL

For his clients Jon and Janice Hummel, architect Paul Masi designs a home that rises from the grasses. by Craig Kellogg photographs by Bates Masi + Architects

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LATHHOUSE

Streamlined and utterly modern, a house in Sagaponack also pays homage to the past. interview by Wendy Moonan photographs by Peter Murdock

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PIKE & POND

On a busy Hamptons street, architect Nilay Oza creates an unexpectedly pristine sanctuary. by Craig Kellogg principal photography by Kay Media

photograph by Peter Murdock

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SHARP FOCUS

In Hampton Bays, architect Jonathan Marvel designs a home with a distinct point of view. by Michael Lassell photographs by Isabel Parra

MATT KISIDAY

84

ON THE COVER: “Lathhouse,” page 72

92


3730 US HWY 1 SUITE 2 N. BRUNSWICK, NJ. 08902 (732) 353-6383


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COLUMNS

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GARDENING

Gardeneering’s Tish Rehill champions the benefits of cutting gardens. by Alejandro Saralegui

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MADE IN THE HAMPTONS

The “Dahlia Lama” praises the North Fork’s floral beauty. by Doug Young

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DEEDS & DON’TS

The inside scoop on regional real estate.

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by Alyssa Bird, Bart Boehlert, Liza N. Burby, and Jean Nayar

HOME FRONT

Up close and personal with architect Kitty McCoy.

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by James Salomon

WINE & DINE

For late-summer get-togethers, these local reds are right on.

DEPARTMENTS

by Baroness Sheri de Borchgrave

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EDITOR’S LETTER

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LETTER FROM THE CEO

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OUR CROWD

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RESOURCES

CENTER: DOUG YOUNG

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SUMMER STOCK


Visit Our New Showroom | The Carpetman by Stark | 633 County Road 39, Southampton

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EDITOR’S LETTER

new construction landscape renovation seasonal containers lawn management property maintenance masonry

Master Plan Who knew that one could wake up in the morning to a failed backlight on his computer? I’ve heard of other things happening to computers, but I didn’t even know what a backlight was until a Genius Bar employee held his smartphone flashlight to my laptop to show me that there was still a faint heartbeat, but not much more, amid all the darkness on my screen. I had done a first edit on “Deeds & Don’ts” the night before and thought I would look at it with fresh eyes the following day, but that was impossible because my screen was completely black. Unresponsive. Not working. A brief rundown of the nauseating blur that followed: frantic trip to Apple store, diagnostics, bad news, repair needed, replaced logic board, new battery installed, all data lost, start over. ■ Surely not a recipe for summertime fun. But the ensuing reboot made me think of all that bigger-picture stuff, like not holding anything too dear and being thankful for what really matters and keeping the cobwebs clear. And as I got caught up to speed, I remembered the photo shoot for this issue’s “Sharp Focus” (page 92) and the picture I took of a guy paddleboarding on Great Peconic Bay. It was such a beautiful day, and I remember feeling just slightly jealous—I wanted to be that guy. But I had a job to do. One of these days, though, I’m going paddleboarding.

On A Clear Day Some Hamptons vistas really can give you a new perspective on life.

631.726.4498 gardeneering.net

PORTRAIT: TOM MCWILLIAM

K endell C ronstrom Editorial Director kcronstrom@candg.com



LETTER FROM THE CEO

Architecture in the Hamptons is always on the move. Adventurous homeowners and daring experiments with volume and scale have produced a cornucopia of houses unmatched by any other small villages in the world. Fortunately, the most soughtafter architects of the day live and work here, many of them featured in HC&G’s annual architecture issue, and there are always surprises within our pages. Thatch, a centuries-old material that defines the picturesque cottages in my home countries of Scotland and Ireland, is alive and well on the East End, but not in the ye-olde-English-cottage sense. For the project featured in this issue’s “Stony Hill” (page 62), a spectacular new build in Amagansett, the always innovative Bates Masi + Architects has tucked thatch into the siding and used it as insulation on the walls and gable ends. Masses of grasses throughout the property further illuminate the theme. Architect Paul Masi—who designed the home for builder Jon Hummel, a friend and longtime collaborator—knew that his client was up to the task of incorporating thatch in an exciting, brand-new way. Along with Hummel’s decorator wife, Janice, it was a marriage made in homebuilding heaven. Enjoy their story and all the other creative collaborations featured in this special issue.

M arianne H owatson CEO/Publication Director mhowatson@candg.com

Available at monacellipress.com laguardiadesigngroup.com

Thatch Game The twee thatched cottages of yore (right) have given way to new iterations, such as the modern structure featured in this issue’s “Stony Hill” (above, page 62).

PORTRAIT: RICHARD LEWIN; BOTTOM LEFT: BATES MASI + ARCHITECTS

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LIVING PUBLICATION DIRECTOR

Marianne Howatson EDITORIAL DIRECTOR

Kendell Cronstrom

ART DIRECTOR

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Alexis M. Walter EDITORIAL ASSISTANT

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EDITORS AT LARGE

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CONTRIBUTING EDITORS

Pamela Abrahams, Heather Buchanan , Sheri de Borchgrave (wine), Beth Rudin DeWoody, Aime Dunstan , Cara Greenberg , Sharon King H oge , Isabelle Kellogg (luxury goods), Kelli Delaney Kot, Virginia Ludacer (North F ork ), David Masello, Wendy Moonan , Jean N ayar, Susan Penzner, Mallory Samson , Suzanne Slesin , R. E. Steele CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

T ria Giovan , Rick Lew , Richard Lewin , Stéphanie Lewin, Anastassios Mentis , Keith Scott Morton, Peter Murdock , Eric Striffler, Doug Young

C&G MEDIA GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTORS

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Kendell Cronstrom

DESIGN/PHOTOGRAPHY DIRECTOR

Julie Curtis -Paktinat

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EDITORS AT LARGE

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6 7 CRANB ERRY

OUR CROWD

HISTORIC MODERN MASTERPIECE

NILAY OZA

BROOKLYN HEIGHTS

This issue’s “Pike & Pond” (page 84) showcases the Sag Harbor home that architect Nilay Oza built for himself and his family. Originally from India, Oza began his studies in Ahmedabad, which he describes as “a fascinating city, home to pivotal buildings by Le Corbusier and Louis Kahn.” As for architecture in the Hamptons, he says, “There are great examples from every decade of the previous century. This history is still alive and unfolding under the same sky that has always drawn artists out East. What’s not to like about that?”

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“Water has always been a theme in my life,” says photographer Isabel Parra, who lived in Venezuela and Mexico until she was six, then moved to Florida and spent the summers at her family’s house on Cape Cod. After taking a photography class when she was a teenager, Parra “got hooked and started making pinhole cameras and Polaroid transfers—all the fun, nerdy things I love.” In this issue’s “Sharp Focus” (page 92), she captures the staggering water views and sparkling interiors of a home on Great Peconic Bay.

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“I’ve wanted to be an architect since I was four,” says Jonathan Marvel, who cut his teeth working with renowned heavyweights such as Emilio Ambasz, Peter Eisenman, and Richard Meier. Dividing his time between New York and Puerto Rico, he adds, allows him to “stay in tune with socioeconomic and weather extremes in the tropics and the Northeast, which heightens my sensitivity and improves my design awareness.” Marvel masterminded the stunning home featured in this issue’s “Sharp Focus” (page 92). —Shannon Assenza

OZA: SHARON SUH; MARVEL: CLAIRE HOLT

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SHOPPING

Summer Stock New and notable from the Hamptons and beyond

HIT THE BEACH!

MARKET EDITOR: LUCY BAMMAN

Summer always seems like it’s flying by, but there’s still plenty of time to dip your toes in the sand. So dive in for some fun in the sun with this beachready roundup of accessories and gear, including Sferra’s cabana-striped Mareta towels. Have a stack on hand, and let the party begin! Available in lime, tangerine, and navy, $73 each, 43 Jobs Ln., Southampton, 631-353-3137, sferra.com.

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SHOPPING

CUSHY JOB

BRIGHT IDEA

Frette’s plush terrycloth beach pillow will make your afternoon siestas absolutely dreamy. Available in white with saffron (shown), gray, or navy, $40, at the Roundtree, 273 Main St., Amagansett, 631-518-2515, theroundtreehotels.com.

It may look like an old-school campsite lantern, but this MoMA Design Store exclusive is so much more. Lightweight and portable, it features a rechargeable LED light and bluetooth speaker, a big improvement on the boomboxes of yore. $110, available in green (shown), gray, and white, 81 Spring St., NYC, 646-6131367, store. moma.org.

FEEL THE WAVE

Philip B.’s Maui Wowie beach mist will leave your hair looking tousled and surf-swept all day long—even when you can’t get away from the office. $28, at Knockout Beauty, 2400 Main St., Bridgehampton, 631-899-3401, knockoutbeauty. com.

BUNDLE UP

When the chill of late afternoon and early evening sets in, stay warm with this fresh-colored plaid beach blanket from Ralph Lauren. $100, 41 Jobs Ln., Southampton, 631-287-6953, ralphlauren.com.

Be smart in the sun: Naturopathica’s new calendula and butterfly ginger SPF 40 eye cream will help protect your peepers from harsh UVA/ UVB rays. $72 for .5 oz., at Naturopathica Spa & Healing Center, 74 Montauk Hwy., East Hampton, 631-329-2525, naturopathica.com.

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Go ahead, leave your phone at home and capture those priceless surfside moments with Sunnylife’s candyhued waterproof camera, suitably sized for quick snaps and selfies. $34, at Stevenson’s Toys & Games, 69 Jobs Ln., Southampton, 631-2832111, stevensonstoys.com.

MARKET EDITOR: LUCY BAMMAN

SAY CHEESE!

THE EYES HAVE IT



SHOPPING

TOTES SWEET

Floral fabric handles and woven abaca straw spell “stylish summer tote” from East Marion– based accessories designer Rafé Totengco—and it comes with a matching face mask, to boot. $295, at Aerin, 7 Newtown Ln., East Hampton, 631-5275517, aerin.com.

SOLE MATES

Wrap yourself up in this breezy screen-printed beach robe, and summer will be yours for the taking. Available in teal (shown), blue, and black, $170, at Hidden Gem NY, 47 Jobs Ln., Ste. B, Southampton, 631-259-3494, hiddengemny.com.

FUN IN THE SUN

Easy to pack and carry, the cheery canvas fringe hat from Frances Valentine looks pretty great, too. Available in an array of colors (shown: pink), $68, 78 Main St., Sag Harbor, 631-808-3315, francesvalentine.com.

ELECTRIC SLIDE

Prepare to dazzle: The Verda satin sandal from new kid on the block Manolo Blahnik is the slide of the season. $895, 52 Main St., East Hampton, 631-604-6922, manoloblahnik.com.

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THROWING SHADE

French fashion icon Inès de la Fressange has popped up at Simm’s on Shelter Island, where her chic Zoe sunglasses steal the show. $275, 181 N. Ferry Rd., 631-7495067, simmssi.com. MARKET EDITOR: LUCY BAMMAN

LIFE OF LEISURE

Designed in Italy and hand-crafted in Spain, Daniela Gregis’s groovy espadrille ballet flats will bring out your inner Europhile. $360, at Tiina the Store, 216 Main St., Amagansett, 631-267-6200, tiinathestore.com.


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GARDENING

Cutting Remarks Gardeneering’s Tish Rehill sings the praises of flower gardens Wild At Heart A loosely structured cutting garden in Southampton features tuteurs for climbing plants and bright pink Echinaceas in the foreground. See Resources.

a vase with flowers every week, you’ll decimate your perennial borders, but if you have a dedicated cutting garden—or at least make a plan for cutting flowers within your garden’s borders—you can enjoy fresh posies and bouquets all season long. An ideal place for a cutting garden is within a vegetable garden, if you happen to have one. But don’t plant just one clump of cosmos or zinnias—you really need to keep planting

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for continuous blooms. Good fillers to mix in are Orlaya grandiflora, Alchemilla mollis, and Queen Anne’s lace. How can you make it look pretty and well organized?

A fenced-in cutting garden always looks really charming, as do various structures, like tuteurs, that can support taller, unwieldy plants. Even tall flowers themselves, such as Filipendula, can be used as stakes. And delicate blooms like sweet peas look great on a trellis or lattice obelisk. Plus, they’re perfect in little julep cups after you cut them.

TISH REHILL

HC&G: Why have a cutting garden and not just cut flowers from the garden? TISH REHILL, founder/owner, Gardeneering: If you want to fill


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GARDENING

Every Day, Another Bouquet (clockwise from top left) Scabiosas, Echinops, and hollyhocks in myriad colors make great additions

to cutting gardens. A Southampton flower garden lined with brick paths features dahlias (foreground) and alliums. See Resources.

“An ideal place for a cutting garden is within a vegetable garden”

astilbes, Digitalis, Agastache, Monarda, and Echinops are great, too. Which ones are more challenging?

Well, everything in gardening is an experiment. Years ago, I tried hollyhocks and failed, but then realized that they are hollowstemmed, so I burned the cut ends to seal them, and it worked! What foliage would you add for filler?

Try long-stemmed chocolate cosmos or Browallia americana, which has sprays of small blue or white flowers. I also plant Italian white sunflowers against cutting garden fences: They grow up to six feet, and their pale cream blossoms last till it frosts. You can cut Scabiosas at every stage of flowering, from pincushion to fully open and flouncy. Herbs like lemon verbena have good foliage, a wispy flower, and a nice scent. Zinnia ‘Envy’ is an all-time favorite of mine because its chartreuse green complements all other flowers. And who doesn’t love dahlias? Even their buds will eventually open in a vase, giving you a good long show. Dinner-plate dahlias can be difficult to arrange in a vase, but the Karma Collection, cactus, and anemone dahlias are all terrific. Perennials like

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Do you add spring-blooming bulbs to your cutting gardens?

Of course—and best to order now to avoid delays. I always include daffodils and a mix of early-, mid-, and late-flowering tulip varieties— parrot tulips and tall, graceful French tulips are especially good for cutting. And don’t forget early bulbs like Muscari and Chionodoxa, which brighten up small bouquets. Another tip: Plant Martagon lilies in the fall, near your peonies, so that their midsummer reds and oranges will extend the bloom season further. —Alejandro Saralegui

BOTTOM LEFT: TISH REHILL

Which flowers work best in cutting gardens?

Lysimachia clethroides. Not only is it a great cutting flower, but the greens last forever. And scented geraniums and lady’s mantle. You can plant shrubs like Abelia and Andromeda and use them in your arrangements, too. Grasses are a fleeting moment in a vase, although the flowers last a long time, and Hosta foliage looks amazing.


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MADE IN THE HAMPTONS

The Dahlia Lama On the North Fork, a flower grower pursues his passion with rigorous devotion

T

he bright warm days and cool nights of late summer are ideal for growing dahlias, says Keith Pierpont, whose Pierpont’s Blossom Farm in Baiting Hollow is profuse with them. Cutting the blossoms continuously throughout the season, he adds, “encourages them to push out more flowers.” Pierpont, a.k.a. the “Dahlia Lama,” is no stranger to abundance. After running a special-events company in Manhattan that was known for its grand centerpieces and floral installations, he decided to lease farmland on the North Fork to grow his beloved dahlias, in addition to peonies, French lilacs, and hydrangeas, all of which he sells in brown paper–wrapped bouquets at farmers markets from

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Westhampton Beach to Montauk. Back in the day, at the farmers market that used to occupy the parking lot of East Hampton’s Nick & Toni’s restaurant, Pierpont would frequently sell out by 11 a.m. “People didn’t expect my level of taste and quality of flowers,” he recalls. “Customers would buy 30 or 40 bunches at a time.” Creating these bouquets is a labor of love. At the end of the growing season, Pierpont digs up the dahlia tubers and stores them over the winter, then plants them the following May, when the ground temperature reaches 60˚F. More than 25 varieties of dahlia tubers are rowed out, planted, and labeled—many with memorable names such as ‘Brown Sugar’ or ‘Arabian

DOUG YOUNG

Transcendent Beauty At Pierpont’s Blossom Farm in Baiting Hollow, Keith Pierpont prepares bouquets of dahlias for farmers markets and wholesale florists. See Resources.


D I N I N G

With Walpole Outdoors, you can create amazing spaces for entertaining, dining, relaxing and enjoying time together. Choose from our inspiring selection of classical, contemporary, and historical designs, or let our designers and artisans customize unique elements that suit your property and express your style. Let us bring your ideal outdoors to life. Schedule your free design consultation today.

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RO O M

Live Outside Expectations.


MADE IN THE HAMPTONS

Flower Power (top left and right) Out in the field, Pierpont harvests ‘Brown Sugar’ dahlias, which are later cut and prepared for bouquets. (middle) After rows of dahlia tubers are planted, polypropylene cloth is laid on top to prevent weed growth. (above) ‘Arabian Night’, a dinner-plate dahlia, is just one of more than 25 specimens grown on the farm. (near right) The farm’s flower stand. See Resources.

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Night’. Additionally, swaths of polypropylene cloth are laid to deter weeds and to anchor stakes designed to support tall varieties like ‘Shiloh Noelle’, which can climb as high as five and a half feet. In mid-July, the flowers begin to mature. Pierpont cuts them in the morning and quickly places them in buckets of water and Chrysal, a post-harvest solution developed in Holland. After transferring them to his barn, he arranges them in bunches of 10, then neatly wraps them in brown kraft paper and packs them up for shipping to wholesale florists and markets in 45˚F refrigerated trucks. Pierpont also maintains a flower stand just outside the entrance to Pierpont’s Blossom Farm, where he sells freshly cut bouquets daily. (“I recommend that customers give the stems a fresh cut and put them in hot water to preserve the life of the bloom.”) Plans for expansion are in the works, both for an all-weather space that can accommodate custom and premade floral arrangements, in addition to flower-arranging classes. “What inspired me to grow these flowers was their staggering beauty,” Pierpont says of the dahlias, which happen to be the national flower of Mexico. “They even have their own genus. I look forward to them every season.” —Doug Young

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DEEDS DON’TS The Inside Scoop on East End Real Estate

Everything Old Is New Again This historic Grosvenor Atterbury–designed estate recently underwent a sensitive restoration and update by Garnett DePasquale Projects. Developer David Walentas has listed the property for $35 million.

The historic Atterbury estate at 199 Coopers Neck undergone a renovation during the 1980s and previously Lane in Southampton has emerged from a two-year serving as a two-family duplex.) “The exterior of handmade renovation commissioned by developer David Walentas burnt brick, an Atterbury signature, is magical,” says and executed by wife-and-husband architectural DePasquale. “We studied the bones, including measuring duo Becky Garnett and Pete DePasquale of Garnett each of the 150 unique windows, and what we learned DePasquale Projects. In 2019, Walentas purchased helped guide us to what it should be. On most projects, acclaimed architect Grosvenor Atterbury’s 1913 brick you’re following a set of plans, but we took a design-build Grosvenor Atterbury mansion for $11.6 million from 1stdibs founder Michael approach instead.” Aside from bringing the structure back Architect Bruno, who had dropped $15 million on the property in to a single-family home, the team added a pool house, a 2015, then taken the nearly 15,000-square-foot structure solarium that serves as a fitness pavilion, a greenhouse, down to the studs and stripped it of any remaining original interior and a four-car garage. The property is now listed for $35 million with features. (The house had long been a bit of a hodgepodge, having Christopher Burnside of Brown Harris Stevens. —Alyssa Bird

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TOP: DAVE MIRANOWSKI

ATTERBURY 3.0?


COMING SOON SOON

AMAGANSETT I 7 BEDROOMS | 8 FULL, 2 HALF BATHROOMS | 8050 SQ.FT. | 2.44 ACRES I 669OldStoneHwy.com $11,500,000 AMAGANSETT 7 BEDROOMS 8 FULL, 2 HALF | 8050aSQ.FT. | 2.44 ACRES 669OldStoneHwy.com $11,500,000 Architect-designedI home in the heart of|Amagansett, on 2.5BATHROOMS quiet acres overlooking horse farm and the SouthIFork Golf Course with views to the ocean. This seven-bedroom, eight Architect-designed home in the heart of Amagansett, on 2.5 quiet acres overlooking a horse farm and the South Fork Golf Course with views to the ocean. This seven-bedroom, full and two half bathroom house is ideally situated on an elevated flag lot offering complete privacy. Currently in construction, the 8,050 sf residence has open living, luxurious finishes, eight fulland andsmart-home two half bathroom house ideally situated on an elevated flag lot offering complete privacy. Currently construction, the environments 8,050 sf residence open living, finishes, technology on isthree levels. The property has a resort feel: South-facing interconnected terracesin provide multiple with anhas oversized pool,luxurious gas firepit, and smart-home technology oncook threestation. levels.Inside, The property a resortforfeel: South-facing interconnected terraces provideformultiple environments withfloor an oversized pool, gas firepit, shaded dining and an outdoor the househas is perfect entertaining and offers removed accommodations guests and staff. The main encompasses a grand living room with two zones, massiveInside, fireplace, and 15-foot ceilings. There is an and adjacent dining room, a large eat-in kitchenand withstaff. dedicated pantry a family room shaded dining and anseating outdoor cookastation. the house is perfect for entertaining offersformal removed accommodations for guests The main floorand encompasses a grand with room fireplace the pool and spa.and The15-foot spacious primaryThere bedroom the upper leveldining has cathedral fireplace, and a balcony withpantry unobstructed views.room living withand twobalcony seating overlooking zones, a massive fireplace, ceilings. is an on adjacent formal room, aceilings, large eat-in kitchen with dedicated and a family Thefireplace lower level is dedicated to fitness and A cabana and roomprimary with fireplace andonwet are directly the poolside terrace. There’s and also a gym, playroom, media room,views. with and balcony overlooking thefun. pool and spa. Thelounge spacious bedroom thebar upper level hasoffcathedral ceilings, fireplace, balcony with unobstructed wine cellar, laundry, and multiple storage rooms. web# 879906. EXCLUSIVE. 1,500,000 The lower level is dedicated to fitness and fun. A cabana and lounge room with$1 fireplace and wet bar are directly off the poolside terrace. There’s also a gym, playroom, media room, wine cellar, laundry, and multiple storage rooms. web# 879906. EXCLUSIVE. $11,500,000

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DEEDS & DON’TS

LITTLE HOUSE IN THE HOLLOW

In Wainscott, a piece of the East End’s agricultural past has just been saved from the wrecking ball. Built in the 1920s on the grounds of the Strong family potato farm on

Wainscott Hollow Road, a 224-square-foot shingled cottage long known as the “Little House” has narrowly escaped demolition, thanks to preservation efforts led by Esperanza León, a member of East Hampton Town’s Architectural Review Board. The

single-room structure, which once housed migrant workers from the South, had sat neglected since the 1980s, but León caught wind that new owners of the farm property had plans to tear it down in May, so she

León galvanized locals “to preserve this reminder of Wainscott’s farming history, as well as the equally neglected history of its occupants” galvanized like-minded locals “to preserve this reminder of Wainscott’s farming history,” she says, “as well as the equally neglected history of its occupants.” The group was given a hard deadline of July 7 to find the cottage a new home, and as of press time, it was earmarked for transfer to a nearby property listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In advance of the planned move, local builder Michael Davis and Stan Kazel of Dawn House Movers meticulously dismantled the structure (it has

THIS ISSUE’S

BIG

DEAL

Architect William Pedersen, founding partner of Kohn Pedersen Fox, has designed some of the tallest skyscrapers in the world, but his most personal project is his own Shelter Island house, currently listed for $7.995 million with Sotheby’s International Realty’s Lawrence Ingolia and Jonathan Smith. Featuring 220 feet of frontage on Gardiners Bay, the sleek 4,640-squarefoot three-bedroom dwelling was built in 2005 and features an exterior of copper and New York bluestone, as well as glass, fir and iroko woods, and sandblasted concrete inside. “I work on large-scale buildings in my profesWilliam Pedersen sional life, so this house was a change of pace for me,” recounts Pedersen, Architect who purchased the three-acre parcel in 1981 and embarked on a lengthy design process with his late wife, Elizabeth. “It was a 20-year gestation. I was inspired by Gardiners Island rising out of the bay, so I wanted to design a building that appears to emerge naturally. It’s very much connected to the land.” —Bart Boehlert

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THIS ISSUE’S BIG DEAL: MICHAEL MORAN/OTTO (EXTERIOR), RISE MEDIA FOR SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY (INTERIOR)

Piece By Piece The “Little House” in Wainscott, once a migrant worker’s cottage, has been dismantled, with plans to rebuild it on a new site in the future.


New Step-In Project OFFERING


DEEDS & DON’TS

no foundation, so it couldn’t be kept intact), taking it apart in sections and labeling and photographing the pieces for reassembly later. Funding and permitting are required before the building can be erected in its new home, but Preservation Long Island—a Cold Spring Harbor–based nonprofit whose mission is to protect Long Island’s cultural

heritage—recently came on board to advise on fundraising opportunities, historic preservation, and a possible future listing with the National Registry. Wainscott’s sleepy hollow is indeed not so sleepy, it turns out, as builder Jeffrey Collé is simultaneously at work on Wainscott Hollow Farm, a seven-residence development located

directly across the street. He plans to maintain 28 of the 40 acres—which he purchased from Ronald Lauder in 2006—as a reserve, in addition to restoring and converting the site’s original farmhouse into a guesthouse for one of the new homes. The first residence, priced at $19.5 million, is set for completion next summer. —Liza N. Burby

MEASURE FOR MEASURE

The East End’s top architects discuss the future of Hamptons home design HOW ARE THE GOVERNMENT’S LATEST CLEAN-ENERGY POLICY INITIATIVES IMPACTING THE DESIGN OF NEW HOUSES TODAY? JAMES MERRELL: We currently have robust energy codes already, and there’s definitely increasing awareness among our clients about energy efficiency. Although most clients are not pushing us for a net-zero design in their new homes, we are really James Merrell looking forward to James Merrell Architects the day when green technology such as geothermal will become so standard that this will no longer be the case.

who can afford to be innovators should take the lead in making them carbon-neutral. JAMES MERRELL: Land-use regulations have expanded to protect groundwater and open space, so house sizes will definitely be limited.

oceanfront dwelling and its pool to make it more resilient to coastal erosion. Improvements include breakaway walls, placing HVAC equipment above the first floor, hurricane strapping, and impact-resistant windows and doors.

BLAZE MAKOID: The issue is more macro. If half of MORE HOUSES a community’s SEEM TO HAVE infrastructure is ROOFTOP wiped out [from AMENITIES rising sea levels], LIKE POOLS AND Blaze Makoid how valuable is a TENNIS COURTS. BMA Architects house that’s left? DO YOU SEE THAT What should be AS A TREND? the new planning, zoning, and NICK MARTIN: Yes. Current infrastructure policies overall? code issues with FEMA and wetland setbacks have prompted PAMELA GLAZER: I think it’s people to make such requests. only a matter of time before coastal building will become BLAZE MAKOID: I think this restricted all together. “trend” is mostly developer driven. We almost always WITH A SCARCER SUPPLY HOW WILL THE STYLE OF advise our clients OF LAND COUPLED HOMES CHANGE IN THE against roof decks WITH INCREASING COMING YEARS? because they add DEMAND, DO NICK MARTIN: The modern substantial costs YOU FORESEE barn and the traditional house and rarely get HOUSES with a modern interior are used. CHANGING currently popular, which I think IN SHAPE OR will lead to modern with a DO YOU SIZE? capital “M.” ANTICIPATE NICK MARTIN: NEW We have to be Nick Martin JAMES MERRELL: The LANDSCAPE, thoughtful about how Martin Architects question is, What’s timeless and STRUCTURAL, OR our footprint impacts sustainable? Houses should last SITING TRENDS the environment, and hundreds of years, but 25-yearGIVEN THE INEVITABLE people don’t need as much old homes by Robert A.M. Stern NEED FOR MORE RESILIENT space as they think. are being torn down today. So, COASTAL DWELLINGS IN THE how do we build houses that FUTURE? PAMELA GLAZER: There will will be meaningful for future NICK MARTIN: We are in the always be clients who want generations? process of lifting a client’s large houses. However, people

HOW DO SMART-HOME OR OTHER TECHNOLOGIES FACTOR INTO THE HOMES OF THE FUTURE? JAMES MERRELL: We need to build in flexibility in order to take advantage of new technologies. No one knows what the next technology will be, and the goal is to be able to reprogram quickly as technologies change. PAMELA GLAZER: Just think: Nest thermostats were introduced in 2011, and now all HVAC systems are tied Pamela Glazer to a remote Pamela Glazer Architect monitoring system. ARE INCREASED MATERIALS AND LABOR COSTS AFFECTING YOUR CLIENTS’ CHOICES OR HOW YOU DESIGN? BLAZE MAKOID: It’s certainly a topic at every meeting, but how can you accurately estimate the cost of construction over an 18to 24-month build when material prices are swinging as much as 300 percent? NICK MARTIN: The surge in material and labor costs either has had zero effect or has prevented clients from building altogether. There seems to be an economic line drawn in the sand. —Jean Nayar

For breaking news and real estate coups, subscribe to dailyDeeds.com

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The Hamptons market is hot. RC Atlee and Adrianna Nava answer the big question that every East End buyer and seller is dying to know...

WHEN WILL IT

COOL DOWN?

Our market always shifts going into the Fall ‘hunting season.’ With an increase in inventory and availability for showings as tenants leave, you can expect more trades. But more options make buyers confident negotiators; I’m seeing concessions after inspections for the first time since early 2020 - until recently, buyers were sheepish about anything that could make sellers consider backup offers. Pricing a listing competitively and negotiating with realistic expectations is the best way to take advantage of the market before a major adjustment occurs. RC Atlee, Agent and Luxury Market Specialist Licensed as Robert C. Atlee-Hodgson, Salesperson rc@compass.com | 610.742.4080 The number of days from list to contract signed is at an all time low, as is available inventory. New listings started increasing early in 2021, while contract activity has been in decline. The market is moving toward normal activity levels, but it’s not the case with pricing. Prices are still at historic highs and certain types of properties are still going for 2-6% above the asking price. I collect accurate real-time data about the market climate, and the numbers will continue to tell the story of rising inventory and how it affects buyer behavior. Adrianna Nava, Hamptons Market Data Founder Licensed as Adrianna C. Nava, Associate Broker nava@compass.com | 631.833.4631

Business partners RC Atlee and Adrianna Nava of Compass track Hamptons Market Data and report on luxury housing trends for clients and industry insiders at their website TheHamptons.market

53 Main Street | East Hampton, NY 11937




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AUGUST 15

BATES MASI + ARCHITECTS

COTTAGES & GARDENS

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STONY

HILL For clients Jon and Janice Hummel, architect Paul Masi designs a home that rises from the grasses BY CRAIG KELLOGG | PHOTOGRAPHS BY BATES MASI + ARCHITECTS

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Thatch Made In Heaven Thatch on the exterior of Jon and Janice Hummel’s home in Amagansett can weather decades of salt air, as can the Alaskan yellow cedar shingles on the roof. See Resources.

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All Fired Up (this page) Terracotta shingles cover the surround above the living room’s wood-burning Stûv fireplace. The oak and travertine cocktail table is from Atelier de Troupe. (opposite) Grigio Billiemi marble from Stone Source clads the kitchen’s countertops and backsplash. The range is from Gaggenau. See Resources.

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on Hummel was a kid when he met his wife, Janice, on Long Island, and although they never dated while attending East Hampton High School, they got together after college, when he was working in his father’s Manhattan office and she was living in the city. The couple eventually returned to the Hamptons, where Jon has followed in the footsteps of his generalcontractor father, John Hummel, building custom houses across the East End.

Meanwhile, Janice became a real estate broker and then pivoted toward interior decorating, after a buyer of a former home of theirs had admired the design work she had done on it and recommended her to a friend. “Our kids are in school full time, and it’s nice to do something creative,” explains Janice, today the principal of JL Hummel Interiors. A spectacular lot in Amagansett inspired them to create their current dream house. A potential client had asked Jon to august 15, 2021

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“As a builder,” Paul Masi says, “Jon was able to understand how everything is put together”

Woodsy Warmth (opposite) In the dining area, a custom Lindsey Adelman chandelier hangs above a table and chairs from Gubi. (this page above) In the office, a Drop chair by Fritz Hansen sits at a custom desk by Bates Masi + Architects. (near left) Pendants from Apparatus hang above an oak staircase. See Resources.

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Slanted Opinion (this page) An Apparatus chandelier hangs above a Design Within Reach bed in the primary bedroom. The bench is upholstered in Dedar’s Karakorum bouclé. (opposite) The primary bath features a custom Bates Masi + Architects vanity and a tub from Cocoon. See Resources.

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Janice describes the A-frame rooflines as “Nordic,” although the design palette leans toward “a moody feel, with no white anywhere”

build on two and a half magnificent acres of raw land, but he grew impatient with the timeline for approvals and construction and opted for a different, finished house instead. Janice and Jon snagged the property, even though it was wildly overgrown. “You definitely had to have imagination,” Janice recalls, but her husband recognized the potential in “such a large, open lot, with enough room for a big lawn.” Peconic Land Trust protects the surrounding pastures and horse paddocks (as well as the farm

views), and the couple even brought in a scissor lift to assess whether they’d be able to see the ocean from the building site. But the sun setting over nearby fields proved more alluring, which led their architect, Paul Masi, to propose grasses in their many forms as an overall design motif. Masi’s scheme called for neatly clipped lawns framed by borders of unclipped grasses nodding in the breeze. Most unusual was his suggestion to use grass architecturally. Jon jumped onboard, having recently august 15, 2021

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Jon recognized the potential in “such a large, open lot, with enough room for a big lawn” thatched the roof on an outbuilding at a traditional estate. “There’s some level of risk in doing thatch, but as a builder, Jon was able to understand how it’s put together,” says Masi, whose firm, Bates Masi + Architects, began collaborating with John Hummel and Associates in the 1980s. The thatch cloaks the walls and the gable ends of the house— not just outside, but indoors as well—and can withstand two or three dozen years’ worth of sea air, just like the Alaskan yellow cedar shingles on the roof. Other textural elements include terra-cotta shingles in a blend of earth tones on the fireplace surround, low garden walls of weathering steel cloaked in a coating of red rust, and ceilings and millwork made from factory-fumed oak planks that still sport bandsaw marks from the mill. The house is organized around a central living, dining, and kitchen pavilion, with a garage wing and a family wing on either side. Janice describes the A-frame rooflines as “Nordic,” although the design palette leans toward “a moody feel, with no white anywhere.” Unpainted gypsum wall plaster is a soothing pale beige, and wallboard appears only in the basement gym and playroom—also painted beige to match. “This isn’t the type of house where you do light marble with veins,” Janice adds, and the kitchen follows suit, sheathed in misty Grigio Billiemi marble, a Sicilian sedimentary stone embedded with fossils. She and her husband are still adding furniture to fill a bare spot here and there, but what’s the rush? “It’s fun to live in a project that you love.” ✹ 70

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En Plein Air The sleep loft above the outdoor dining area is open to the elements. The pared-down landscape design consists of a tightly clipped grass lawn hemmed in by swaths of larger, billowy grasses. See Resources.

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Linear Thinking Birdseye, an architecture firm based in Richmond, Vermont, sheathed virtually the entire house in repurposed corral and snow fencing from Montana. See Resources.

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LATHHOUSE Streamlined and utterly modern, a house in Sagaponack also pays homage to the past INTERVIEW BY WENDY MOONAN PHOTOGRAPHS BY PETER MURDOCK

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Living Arrangements (this page) Custom sofas by J&P Upholstery flank RH coffee tables in the living room. (opposite) A windowpane check from Pindler covers a wing chair in the dining room, which features a custom table made by decorator Brooke Michelsen’s father, Johannes Michelsen. See Resources.

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F

or his first project in the Hamptons, architect Brian Mac considered local barn vernacular and the East End’s low-lying farmland before even lifting a shovel. The principal of Birdseye, a design-build firm based in Richmond, Vermont, he was keen on staying true to the pastoral site—a slightly sloping plot of land in Sagaponack—and traditional agrarian architectural conceits. Lathhouse, the home he built for his London-based clients, now sprawls resplendently across the property, looking thoroughly modern, but wise beyond its years. HC&G: What was the inspiration behind your design? BRIAN MAC: Lathhouse has its roots in the eponymous

lath house, a traditionally gabled farm structure made primarily of wood laths or slats spaced to reduce sunlight while permitting ventilation. Such detailing is typically used in corn cribs, drying barns, and livestock shelters. august 15, 2021

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Rays Of Sunshine The exterior lath cladding creates an ever-changing light show throughout the entire house, including the upstairs hall landing (this page). In the kitchen (opposite), pendants from Rose Uniacke hang above a custom island containing a Wolf range. See Resources.

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“LATHHOUSE HAS ITS ROOTS IN THE EPONYMOUS LATH HOUSE, A FARM STRUCTURE TRADITIONALLY MADE OF WOOD SLATS”

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Soft Touches (this page top left and right) The main bedroom includes a Papa Bear chair covered in a Larsen wool bouclé and a bed upholstered in a C&C Milano

linen. (bottom) The tub in the main bath is from Victoria + Albert. (opposite) Twin beds in the kids’ room are upholstered in a Christopher Farr Cloth fabric. See Resources.

In this modern iteration, how is lath employed?

The slats are both contextual and purposeful, reimagined as siding that functions to provide privacy screening and limit interior light emittance. The slatting extends over windows and skylights and wraps around the bedrooms’ windows, delineating Juliet balconies off each. On the south elevation, on the cantilevered pergola, it also functions as a solar shading scrim. Where did you source the material? It certainly doesn’t look brand-new.

It’s repurposed Douglas fir from corrals and snow fencing that we found in Big Sky, Montana. It has a patina reminiscent of barns and outbuildings in rural landscapes. It not only gives the house a captivating sheath, but also a seamless look.

The entirety of the house is a purposeful, regimented composition of repetitive details that physically and emotionally connect the form to the place. There are no chimneys, no gutters, and no downspouts.

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Stretching Out A sitting area at one end of the pool house (opposite) overlooks the tennis court. The structure mimics the cantilevered pergola of the main house’s outdoor dining porch (this page). See Resources.

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“THE ENTIRETY OF THE HOUSE IS A PURPOSEFUL, REGIMENTED COMPOSITION OF REPETITIVE DETAILS THAT PHYSICALLY AND EMOTIONALLY CONNECT THE FORM TO THE PLACE”

to hide things that would otherwise pop out and distract from the purity of the form. How did you accomplish this?

A gutter and downspout system is concealed under the roof. Water is collected and evenly dispersed to mitigate erosion on the property. Your employee-owned firm, with 65 people, is organized like a co-op, with architects, builders, excavators, woodworkers, and metal and glass craftsmen. What a novel concept.

It’s a great advantage because all my ideas can get executed in-house—it’s like a family business. Speaking of, your wife, Brooke Michelsen, was responsible for the luminous, airy interiors, which are fascinating to behold as the sun creates ever-changing shadows through the slatted skylights.

Yes, that’s true. The sun keeps the architecture and design alive because the light is always moving. ✹ 82

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Boxed Goods Retractable glass doors and screens open up the pool house to both the swimming pool and the tennis court beyond. The chaise longues are from RH. See Resources.

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Putting Up A Good Front Vertical planks of mahogany sheathe the façade, providing a buffer against nearby street traffic and lending an aura of mystery. See Resources.

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On a busy Hamptons thoroughfare, architect Nilay Oza creates an unexpectedly pristine family sanctuary BY CRAIG KELLOGG PRINCIPAL PHOTOGRAPHY BY KAY MEDIA

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Taking In The View Sofas from CB2 and Article delineate the living room, which is framed by huge plateglass windows. See Resources.

ike many architects, Bridgehampton-based Nilay Oza never dreamed that he could live in his own design, since “building a new house,” as he well knows, “is no small thing.” Not to mention the often larger challenge of finding the perfect plot of buildable land in the competitive East End market. But Oza, who was born in India and earned a master’s degree from MIT, refused to abandon his search for an affordable waterside lot. “My wife says I’m a Pisces who has to live on the water,” he explains, “and I just couldn’t give that up.” While cruising down the Bridgehampton–Sag Harbor Turnpike a number of years ago, Oza happened upon a for sale sign in the snow, near the edge of little-known Lily Pond. The listing’s developer-owner, it turns out, was eager to pass the torch, so Oza and his wife took over the property, after selling their apartment in Harlem. The lot was “dumpy” and difficult, according to Oza, who remembers it as one of the most challenging he has ever encountered, buffeted by noise from 45-miles-per-hour traffic and awash with road runoff that inches toward the pond. During construction, he reports, his crew found themselves “dancing around big piles of sand in order to build.” The developer’s approved plan called for a façade that would essentially be level with the road, but Oza was on his own from there, obtaining permits to dig down six feet below for a sunken outdoor entry forecourt and main level. One level deeper, he also swapped out what would have been a windowless foundation for a basement with guest quarters, a bathroom, and walk-out access to a backyard swimming pool and hot tub. The home’s provocative, windowless façade—it’s lined in vertical planks of solid mahogany—acts as a buffer against the street traffic. These planks in turn angle up to the roof ridge and back down, in lieu of shingles. Underneath each mahogany plank lies a black rubber membrane that waterproofs the plywood shell, although in some areas, Oza has left it exposed because he likes its high-tech look. 86

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PHOTOGRAPHS, THIS SPREAD: MATT KISIDAY

Oza’s crew was “dancing around big piles of sand in order to build”

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Rising To New Heights (this page) In the dining area, Peking A chairs from Organic Modernism surround a custom table made from repurposed oak flooring. (opposite) A work by Oza’s business partner, Peter Sabbeth, hangs in the family room. A Cloud Softlight Mobile pendant from Molo Design floats above the stairwell, which is painted Benjamin Moore’s Gargoyle. See Resources.

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“I’m a Pisces who has to live on the water, and I just couldn’t give that up”

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To passing cars, the bold structure reads like a pair of oversize Monopoly houses made from popsicle sticks. Peter Sabbeth, Oza’s partner at Oza Sabbeth Architects, deems it “a sculpture” and praises its aura of mystery and anticipation. “Everyone asks what’s happening on the other side,” he says. “Most gorgeous modern houses are tucked away, but this one is very much a public work of art.” Visitors approach through a garden gate and proceed down a flight of steps to the sunken forecourt, where the house continues to retain its mysterious allure, save for a lone window in the entry. It’s recessed, so “you can’t see headlights from the turnpike,” Oza notes. The payoff is the main level’s compact, yet spectacular living room, with huge plate-glass windows running the length of the structure and looking out over the pool. If the wind is whipping during a storm, Oza says, the feeling is similar to standing on the edge of a cliff. “Attraction to a little bit of danger,” he muses, “is hard-wired into our lizard brain.” The interior expresses an elemental architectural vibe, with floors of self-leveling concrete and countertops finished during the same pour. Oza painted gypsum-board interior walls a very light gray and followed Sabbeth’s suggestion for natural-finished plywood trim throughout. The kitchen’s mottled paint-grade maple plywood­is also left unpainted, just like the wall paneling upstairs. “We wanted to get away from using Sheetrock,” notes Sabbeth, who also cops jokingly to offering “tons of unsolicited advice” during the home’s construction. Now that the structure is complete, it inadvertently serves as a billboard of sorts, attracting untold inquiries from customers dining at the Mexican-American restaurant located just across the road. The house Oza once only dreamed of building has become his calling card as well. ✹ august 15, 2021

Peaking Interest (opposite clockwise from top left) DoDo Mini Pendants from Seed Design line the vestibule. Self-leveling concrete and maple plywood are used throughout the house, including in the primary bedroom. A wall of Ciot’s Unica Bon Ton tile and floor of recycled plastic decking from Lumberock punctuate the primary bath. (this page) The rear of the house is oriented toward views of the pool and a pond beyond. See Resources.

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Just Peeking Through A cube-shaped “cutout” within the cedar-clad structure suggests the beautiful vista that lies beyond. See Resources.


SHARP FOCUS In Hampton Bays, architect Jonathan Marvel designs a home with a distinct point of view BY MICHAEL LASSELL PHOTOGRAPHS BY ISABEL PARRA

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he house that architect Jonathan Marvel designed for clients along a lesser-known stretch of Great Peconic Bay is the essence of modernism, boasting sleek lines, a copper roof, and idiosyncratic fenestration. Yet the structure pays subtle homage to more traditional vernacular design in details such as cedar siding, which will weather to the same gray as the shingles that clad untold Hamptons beach houses. And like all the best beach getaways, it invites the outside in. Marvel, who has offices in New York and his native Puerto Rico, was thrilled by the site: 3.64 wooded acres perched high above the bay. Because his clients wanted to be “as close to the water as possible,” he recounts, “we put the pool at the setback limit and then pushed the house as close to the pool as possible. No matter what the architectural style, a family home should speak to the family, and be energized and nourished by a close relationship with nature. That notion is the philosophical underpinning of this project.” The 4,500-square-foot four-bedroom structure, designed in the shape of a slightly distorted V, comprises a straightforward volume containing the garage, an office, and 94

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Luminous Beauty The living room (opposite top and this page) features a sofa and chaise from B&B Italia, a pair of vintage Finn Juhl armchairs, and a Jeff Zimmerman chandelier. (opposite bottom) Custom cabinetry in the kitchen is by Pazera Cabinetry; the statuary marble on the kitchen island is from Stone Source. See Resources.

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Welcoming Gestures (opposite) Falco chairs from Craig Van Den Brulle, covered in Scalamandré’s Cachou in violet, surround a custom table by David Gaynor Design in the dining room. The rug is from ABC Carpet & Home. (this page) A teak hand chair from Homenature greets visitors in the entry. See Resources.

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private rooms and, as its counterpart, a showstopping two-story glass pavilion that seems to reach for the sky and stretch toward the beach. The entry to the house lies where the two legs of the V meet: a beautifully proportioned breezeway that frames the view and instantly transports visitors from the woodland to the shore. The design brief from the clients dictated a great room occupying the main floor of the pavilion: The kitchen opens onto the dining area and a soaring two-story living room, a space broken only by a massive two-sided concrete fireplace that was board-formed to echo the 98

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Heavenly Views (opposite top and bottom right) Looming above the living room, the primary bedroom features a Luigi Gentile bed from Bespoke and a Hans Wegner Circle chair from Wyeth. (opposite bottom left) The primary bath’s custom vanity and mirror are by DHD Architecture and Interior Design. (this page) The outdoor dining chairs are from Kettal. See Resources.

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Bay Watch Royal Botania sun chaises line the infinity pool, which overlooks Great Peconic Bay. The armchairs are from Kettal. See Resources.

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“No matter the architectural style, a home should be energized by a close relationship with nature” horizontal cedar cladding outside. Accessed by a sculptural staircase, the primary bedroom suite occupies the space above the kitchen and dining room and features the same staggering views, as well as a fireplace of its own. The glass pavilion was designed for both economy and aesthetics. Marvel incorporated the weight-bearing structural support of the wing in the mullions between expanses of glass, and these mullions support the ceiling beams in turn. Rift-cut white oak—on the floors, some walls, and the ceiling between the beams—plays a unifying role. “I wanted to limit the number of materials for a coherent look,” the architect says. “The neutral palette really brings out the highlights of the water and the sky and the greenery.” The interiors take a similarly respectful approach to nature. Decorator Steffani Aarons of New York–based DHD Architecture and Interior Design kept her focus on the clients’ wish for “accommodating family gatherings and taking in the view as much as possible, while embracing the modernism of the house,” she says. A blown-glass light fixture by artist Jeff Zimmerman, stools covered in a perky purple polka-dot fabric by Madeline Weinrib, and vibrantly colored Bisazza mosaic tile in a guest bath are just a few examples of how she steered the house away from becoming too stern—a common shortcoming of modern abodes. “It’s playful and fun. This is a beach house, after all.” Because “the eye just wants to go to the view” in the living room, the designer continues, “we went for organic pieces like a natural wood cocktail table and a few mid-20thcentury classics, including a pair of leather lounge chairs by Finn Juhl. Jonathan made a house that’s not overly formal, so everything is intentionally a little loose and relaxed. Even the driveway that winds through the trees toward the house isn’t paved—it’s just stones and gravel. It feels like you’re going to a beach hideaway—just as it should.” ✹ august 15, 2021

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WINE & DINE

What to Drink? For late-summer get-togethers, these local reds are right on WHEN YOU WANT TO IMPRESS YOUR GUESTS

Serve high-scoring wines with a special backstory to tell. Paumanok 2015 Assemblage ($55), a Cabernet Sauvignon– dominant blend aged in French oak, is crafted only during exceptional years and recently took “Best Red Wine” in the 2021 New York Wine Classic. Macari Vineyards 2015 Alexandra ($95), mostly a Merlot–Cabernet Sauvignon blend, explodes with rich aromas of blackberry, black cherry, and plum, along with polished tannins and savory notes of balsam on the finish. And Wölffer Estate 2017 Christian’s Cuvée Merlot ($100), named for winery founder Christian Wölffer, is made only in the great-vintage years from the estate’s oldest Merlot block. With velvety tannins, it’s rich and round, with concentrated black currant fruit.

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WHEN YOU’RE HAVING THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE OVER FOR THE FIRST TIME These wines will elevate your meal while adding a conversational spark to the evening. Consider the spicy Channing Daughters 2017 Blaufrankisch ($28), an Austrian varietal that has brambly black raspberry, plum, and peppery notes, ideal with Long Island duck. Barrelaged in French oak, McCall 2015 Pinot Noir ($30) features earthy and spicy flavors that beautifully complement pork, whereas filet mignon calls for a sensuous bottle, such as the full-bodied Lenz 2015 Estate Selection Merlot ($35), which is redolent of luscious black cherry and dark fruit flavors and traces of Cabernet Franc and Petit Verdot.

WHEN YOU’RE CHILLING OUT AT THE BEACH

Easy-drinking, un-oaked fruity reds—particularly those from sustainably farmed North Fork vines—are perfect complements to beach barbecues. Boasting violet aromas and blueberry and plum flavors, the wild-fermented Anthony Nappa 2018 La Strega Malbec ($29) is deliciously rustic, whereas the exuberant Bedell Cellars 2020 First Crush Red ($20) is a young-vine blend that’s aged in stainless steel and juicy with bright berry fruit. Hand-harvested, wild-fermented, and unfiltered, Raphael Estate 2018 Merlot ($20) possesses soft tannins and aromas of blackberry and black olive. —Baroness Sheri de Borchgrave


A SPECIAL SECTION

MEET SOME OF THE MOST TALENTED AND SUCCESSFUL ARCHITECTS IN THE AREA, EXPERTS WHO UNDERSTAND THE IMPORTANCE OF A WELL-DESIGNED HOME.

BATES MASI + ARCHITECTS For 55+ years, the firm has been a leader in responding to each project with extensive research in related architectural fields, material, craft and environment for unique solutions as varied as the individuals or groups for whom they are designed. The recipient of 200+ design awards since 2003, including the 2018 and 2019 AIA National Housing Awards.

MICHAEL MORAN/OTTO

631.725.0229 BATESMASI.COM @BATESMASI


BIRDSEYE Established in 1996, Birdseye is an awardwinning, internationally recognized architecture studio located in a historic 19th century timber frame barn in Vermont. Their custom residential designs are predominately represented throughout New England and New York. Birdseye’s bespoke, sustainable architecture reflects their commitment to art, craft, environment, and collaborative client relationships. Birdseye is an employee-owned company comprised of architects and builders. Birdseye received the 2020 AIA Peconic Honor award for “LATHHOUSE” located in Sagaponack.

802.318.3897 BIRDSEYEVT.COM @BIRDSEYEVT

BMA ARCHITECTS Since its inception in 2001, BMA Architects has created sophisticated, luxury residential architecture in the most sought-after locations in the world. Their recently opened Miami office is currently working on multiple commissions in South Florida as well as five mountainside homes in Monterrey, Mexico. Recognized with numerous national/ international design awards and by Architectural Digest, The New York Times, Architect Magazine for designs that acknowledge the lifestyle of their clients’ desires on beautiful yet demanding sites.

631.537.7277 BMAARCHITECTS.COM @BMA.ARCHITECTS

BRUCE NAGEL + PARTNERS ARCHITECTS With offices in the Hamptons, New York City, and Chicago, the office of Bruce Nagel + Partners Architects has the ability to design and produce projects of all sizes throughout the United States. For more than four decades, Bruce Nagel and his partner Dave Walker have been selected to create important works in both the public and private spectrums. The office aspires to thoughtful, elegant contemporary architecture that responds to their clients’ expectations.

631.283.8855 BRUCENAGEL.COM @BRUCE_NAGEL_AND_PARTNERS_ARCH

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CASS CALDER SMITH ARCHITECTURE + INTERIORS Cass Calder Smith Architecture + Interiors is an award-winning studio that has designed numerous homes in the Hamptons and beyond over the past 15 years. Each of the houses are site specific, contemporary, and driven by the aspirations of their owners. Collaborating with clients has been a key to successful results and is based on careful listening. With a staff of 10, the office is located in New York City and is known for unique solutions and professional execution. Shown here is their most recentlycompleted Southampton Residence.

212.274.1121 CASSCALDERSMITH.COM @CASSCALDERSMITH_AI

HGOLDSTEINARCHITECT | HGX HGX engages in a continuous dialogue with their clients, seeking emotional as well as practical solutions that are both site-specific and stirring in their counterplay of form, texture, light and space. HGX is guided by a modernist ethos, a belief in the elegance of clean lines, the aura of free-flowing spaces. They bring these principles and practices to each of their projects— creating spaces that inspire human connection and fulfillment.

646.300.8747 HGXDESIGN.COM @HGXDESIGN

LAURA KAEHLER ARCHITECTS

RENDERING BY CGSKETCH

Laura Kaehler Architects is an award-winning architectural and interiors firm located in Greenwich, Connecticut. They design new homes, renovations and additions along with apartment renovations. They have won many local and regional awards including several AIA awards. They believe in being responsible stewards of the environment providing a “big look” using an open, flexible floor plan, luxurious craftsmanship detailing and rich materials in what they call “Responsible Luxury”. This is a key element of their design philosophy.

203.629.4646 KAEHLERARCHITECTS.COM @LAURAKAEHLERARCHITECTS

FOLLOW US @COTTAGESGARDENS


MOJO STUMER ASSOCIATES Mojo Stumer Associates, from its inception, has been structured to be a unique design practice, combining quality architecture and interiors with complete project management systems. At the forefront of modern design on Long Island for more than 40 years, Mojo Stumer Associates, led by Principal Mark Stumer AIA, has received more than 100 architectural and interior design awards and has been widely published in national and international publications. Mojo Stumer Associates’ constant search for creative solutions has enabled the firm to stay on the cutting edge of design.

516.625.3344 MOJOSTUMER.COM @MOJOSTUMER

OZA SABBETH ARCHITECTS

BUILT EXPERIENCE RENDERED EXPERIENCE

At Oza Sabbeth, they believe that a good design possesses an essence that is more than the sum of its parts. They feel this essence is the ‘experience’ it provides you, the inhabitant. Capturing this experience is important to them. They capture this experience by creating vivid, immersive digital environments. The fidelity in creating such environments is something Oza Sabbeth works hard at achieving to bring life to a design before it is fully realized.

631.808.3036 OZASABBETH.COM @OZASABBETH

PAMELA GLAZER ARCHITECT Pamela Glazer has risen to prominence as one of the East End’s most soughtafter architects, known for her impeccable aesthetic with a focus on environmentally thoughtful designs. Her innovative approach to architecture combines elements of both modern and traditional design. Glazer and her team tailor spaces to the lifestyle of those who will live and work there, offering service at a level above and beyond a client’s expectations. Dynamic designs for both residential and commercial spaces offer a better way of life.

631.283.8898 PAMELAGLAZER.COM @PAMGLAZER AA RR CC HH II TT EE CC TT SS YY OO UU SS HH OO UU LL DD KK NN OO WW || SS PP EE CC II AA LL PP RR OO MM OO TT II OO NN


ROBERT A. CARDELLO ARCHITECTS For RAC, designing custom homes is both a privilege and a pleasure. The buildings they create are mostly residential, which makes the experience even more personal. Their team listens carefully to ensure that every project is tailored specifically to the lifestyle of their clients. Cardello Architects is committed to making the design process an enjoyable collaboration which celebrates the union of form and function. They want their clients to have as much fun as they do.

203.853.2524 CARDELLOARCHITECTS.COM @CARDELLOARCHITECTS

SKOLNICK ARCHITECTURE + DESIGN PARTNERSHIP Every project tells a story. At SKOLNICK, they unearth each project’s compelling narrative and interpret it through the language of design to enrich the lives of their clients. SKOLNICK Architecture + Design Partnership is an award-winning, fullservice, multidisciplinary firm. With offices in New York and Sag Harbor, the studio’s extensive residential portfolio includes single family homes, renovations, multifamily projects, as well as hotels and resorts.

631.500.1130 SKOLNICK.COM @SKOLNICK_ADP

WEST CHIN ARCHITECTS & INTERIOR DESIGNERS

MARCO PETRINI

WCA is a full-service, high-end architecture, interior design, and decorating firm with locations in East Hampton, New York City, and Westport, Connecticut. Architect West Chin, the principal behind WCA, is known for his warm, modern residential and commercial design. The WCA team is also the creative force behind the curation of home décor showrooms, West | Out East, which specialize in furniture, closets, storage systems, kitchen, bath, lighting, rugs, and accessories.

631.267.3066 WCARCHITECT.COM @WCA_NYC

FOLLOW US @COTTAGESGARDENS


RESOURCES Want to know where and how to get it? Look no further!

GARDENING Pages 42–44: Gardeneering, 631726-4498, gardeneering.net.

John Hummel and Associates Custom Builders, 631-324-5644, johnhummel.com. Interior design, JL Hummel Interiors, 631-680-5992, jlhummelinteriors.com.

MADE IN THE HAMPTONS Pages 46–48: Pierpont’s Blossom Farm, 917-560-4421, pierpontblossomfarm.com.

Additional credits not on page:

STONY HILL Pages 62–71: Architecture, Bates Masi + Architects, 631-7250229, batesmasi.com. Builder, Items pictured but not listed here are from private collections or have no additional details.

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Page 64: Candles, Illume. Rug, Armadillo. Log holders, CB2. Page 65: Cabinetry (custom), Bates Masi + Architects. Barstools, &Tradition. Fittings, Cocoon. Page 68: Bed covering, Parachute. Throw, &Tradition. Draperies (custom), Kravet. Side table and lamp, Menu. Page 69: Mirror (custom), Bates Masi + Architects. Light fixture (above tub, custom), Michael Anastassiades.

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LATHHOUSE Pages 72–83: Architecture, Birdseye, 802-434-3106, birdseyevt.com. Contractor, Wright & Company Construction Inc., 631-537-2555, wrightand.com. Interior design, Brooke Michelsen Design, 917-3921007. Landscape design, Wagner Hodgson Landscape Architects, 802864-0010, wagnerhodgson.com. Additional credits not on page:

Page 74: Sofa fabric, M-Geough. Rug (custom), Steven King Decorative Carpets. Page 75: Dining chairs, Craft Associates Furniture. Rug, Vanderhurd. Light fixture, The Urban Electric Company. Page 76: Chair fabric, Walter G. Page 77: Island

and cabinetry (custom), Brooke Michelsen Design. Countertops, ABC Stone. Page 78: Primary bedroom: Artwork (above chair and next to bed), Palecek. Bed, Century Furniture. Throw, Treko. Night table, Currey & Company. Lamp, Circa Lighting. Rug, Steven King Decorative Carpets. Primary bath: Tub filler, Sigma. Tile (shower wall and floor), Clé. Sconces, Aerin. Fittings, Samuel Heath. Vanity (custom), Brooke Michelsen Design. Page 79: Beds, The Beautiful Bed Company. Lamp, Circa Lighting. Rug (custom), Steven King Decorative Carpets. Page 80: Seating pieces, RH. Page 81: Table and chairs, RH. Page 83: Chaise longues, RH.

PETER MURDOCK

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RESOURCES PIKE & POND Pages 84–91: Architecture and interior design, Oza Sabbeth Architects, 631-808-3036, oza sabbeth.com. Builder, Modern Green Home, 631-899-4225, moderngreenhome.com. Additional credits not on page:

Pages 86–87: Rug, Blu Dot. Bench upholstery, France & Son. Floor lamp, Umage. Page 88: Sofa, Article. Page 89: Chandelier, Avenue Lighting. Curtains, Loft Curtains. Page 90: Primary bedroom: Curtains, Loft Curtains. Primary bath: Shower hardware, California Faucets. Page 91: Chairs, Organic Modernism. SHARP FOCUS Pages 92–101: Architecture, Marvel, 212-616-0420, marveldesigns.com. Contractor, Brian McGuinness Contracting, 631-430-5670, bmcbuilders.com. Interior design, Steffani Aarons, DHD Architecture and Interior Design, 917-744-7720, dhd.nyc.

Additional credits not on page:

Pages 94–95: Living room: Cocktail table, Homenature. Sofa fabric, B&B Italia. Throw (blush), ABC Carpet & Home. Kitchen: Countertops, Caesarstone. Fittings, Dornbracht. Page 96: Artwork, Andrew Schoultz. Page 98: Primary bedroom: Bed covering, Frette. Side tables, Made Goods. Lamps, Homenature. Stools, Comerford Collection. Primary bath: Fittings, Dornbracht. Tile (shower wall and floor), Stone Source. Page 99: Ceramics (on ledge), Homenature. Pages 100–101: Lanterns, Casamidy.

Andrew Schoultz, andrewschoultz. com, and at Fabien Castanier Gallery, castaniergallery.com Apparatus, apparatusstudio.com Armadillo, usa.armadillo-co.com Article, article.com Atelier de Troupe, atelierdetroupe. com Avenue Lighting, avenuelighting.com B&B Italia, bebitalia.com Blue Dot, bludot.com C&C Milano, cec-milano.us Caesarstone, caesarstoneus.com California Faucets, calfaucets.com Casamidy, casamidy.com CB2, cb2.com Century Furniture, centuryfurniture. com Christopher Farr Cloth, christopher farrcloth.com (see also Studio 534) Ciot, ciot.com (see also Stone Source) Circa Lighting, circalighting.com Clé, cletile.com Close to Home, closetohomevt.com Cocoon, bycocoon.com Comerford Collection, store. comerfordcollection.com Craft Associates Furniture, craft associatesfurniture.com Craig Van Den Brulle, craigvanden brulle.com Currey & Company (T), NYDC, curreyandcompany.com David Gaynor Design, davidgaynor design.com Dedar, dedar.com Design Within Reach, dwr.com

DHD Architecture and Interior Design, dhd.nyc Dornbracht, dornbracht.com Finn Juhl, finnjuhl.com, and at Converso, conversomod.com France & Son, franceandson.com Frette, frette.com Fritz Hansen, fritzhansen.com, and at Suite NY, suiteny.com Gubi, gubi.com, and at Danish Design Store, danishdesignstore.com (see also The Future Perfect) Homenature, homenature.com Illume, illumecandles.com J&P Custom Upholstery, jpcustom upholstery.com Jeff Zimmerman, r-and-company. com Johannes Michelsen, hannestool. com Kettal (T), D&D, kettal.com Kravet (T), D&D, kravet.com Larsen, cowtan.com Loft Curtains, loftcurtains.com Luigi Gentile (T), D&D, bespokebylg. com Lumberock, lumberock.com M-Geough, m-geough.com Made Goods, madegoods.com Menu, store.menudesignshop.com, and at West | Out East, westouteast. com, and Horne, shophorne.com Michael Anastassiades, michael anastassiades.com (see also The Future Perfect) Modernica, modernica.net Molo Design, molodesign.com (see also ABC Carpet & Home)

Organic Modernism, organic modernism.com Palecek, palecek.com Parachute, parachutehome.com Pazera Cabinetry, pazeracabinetry.com Pindler, pindler.com (see also Studio 534) RH, rh.com Rose Uniacke, roseuniacke.com Royal Botania, royalbotania.com, and at Ernest, ernestny.com Samuel Heath, samuel-heath.com (see also Close to Home) Scalamandré (T), D&D, scalamandre. com Seed Design, seeddesignusa.com Sigma, sigmafaucet.com (see also Close to Home) Steven King Decorative Carpets, skcarpets.com, and at Boston Design Center, bostondesign.com Stone Source, stonesource.com Studio 534, s5boston.com Stûv, stuvamerica.com The Beautiful Bed Company, beautifulbedco.com The Future Perfect, thefutureperfect. com The Urban Electric Company, urban electric.com Treko, trekochile.com Umage, umage.us Vanderhurd, vanderhurd.com Victoria + Albert, vandabaths.com (see also Close to Home) Walter G, walter-g.com (see also Studio 534) Wolf, subzero-wolf.com

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HOME FRONT Page 112: Kathrine McCoy Architect, 631-537-7588, kmccoyarchitect.com.

SOURCE LIST

ISABEL PARA

Architects & Designers Building (A&D), 150 E. 58th St., NYC, 212644-2766, adbuilding.com Decoration & Design Building (D&D), 979 Third Ave., NYC, 212759-5408, ddbuilding.com Fine Arts Building (FAB), 232 E. 59th St., NYC Interior Design Building (IDB), 306 E. 61st St., NYC, theinteriordesign building.com New York Design Center (NYDC), 200 Lexington Ave., NYC, 212-6799500, nydc.com &Tradition, andtradition.com ABC Carpet & Home, abchome.com ABC Stone, abcworldwidestone.com Aerin, aerin.com (see also Circa Lighting)

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2 02 1 IN N OVATO R

LEE H. S KO L N I C K

T I C K E T S A R E N OW AVA I L A B L E F O R T H E H A M P TO N S I DA S ! Join us on September 30 at The Church in Sag Harbor to honor Lee Skolnick, as this year’s Innovator Award Recipient, along with the 2021 Winners and Finalists!

T IT L E SP O N SO R

TROPHY SP O N SO R

Tim o

thy

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Q U O TA B L E Q U O T E S

Home Front

House Rules Architect Kathrine McCoy, who grew up in Bridgehampton and still resides there today, on-site at a new build in East Hampton. See Resources.

KITTY McCOY

“Life in Bridgehampton was much simpler when I was a child. Not only were we free of the technology that pervades our lives today, but also the community was much smaller, and we had tremendous independence. My bicycle was my ticket anywhere: meeting friends at the beach, ice-skating on farm ponds, riding my horse. “I thought I wanted to go to law school until I worked as a paralegal in New York City. As an undergrad, I had taken a few architecture classes, and I ultimately received my master’s degree in architecture from Columbia. Architecture is both left brain and right brain, allowing me to be creative while also being meticulous and quantitative. I have always loved puzzles, and architecture is a three-dimensional one, where you have to solve simultaneous equations. What does it look like, how does it relate to the site, how does it function, what is it made of, how does it stand up? My work as a classical architect is very much informed by historic precedents on the East End and elsewhere, but also balanced with a clear understanding of how people want to live today. It’s exciting to watch what had once existed only on paper come to fruition piece by piece, layer by layer.”

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JAMES SALOMON

A native daughter helps build the East End’s future


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