New England Home - 2010.07-08

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MICHAEL FEIN

From the Editor

Life Beyond Just Blue and White I DON’T LIKE TO DO THIS VERY OFTEN, BUT FOR A LITTLE

while I’m going to put on my curmudgeon hat. Let’s talk about blue and white. When it comes to summer—and particularly when it comes to summer anywhere near the ocean—there’s simply no escaping blue-and-white interiors. Am I the only one who gets a little, well, tired of them? Now don’t get me wrong: blue and white can be done incredibly beautifully, and I myself have admired many blueand-white rooms over the years. It’s also a formula that’s wildly popular. One indicator of how entrenched in the public imagination the general look is, would be the huge cultural footprint of Erica Barry’s (Diane Keaton’s) house in the 2003 movie Something’s Gotta Give. Many, many rooms have since been modeled on this one exemplar of seaside style. More than one architect and decorator has made a sort of demi-career out of copying the house; at least one set designer from the film itself has recreated versions of the house out in the real world. Multiple companies market knock-offs of

12

New England Home July/August 2010

the dhurrie-style rug from the living room. Multiple postings concerning the house and its avatars appear to this day on blogs and Web sites around the country. All this, mind you, about a set of interiors that in a way never really existed. Although the exterior shots in the film were of an actual house in Southampton, the interiors and backyard were built on a soundstage in Hollywood, fake bluestone countertops and all. (And yes, we’ve ourselves published one house overtly influenced by the film, in our Cape & Islands issue in 2008.) Clearly film director Nancy Meyers plugged into a deep emotional current. Sometimes, though, it begins to feel as if too few people can look beyond the cliché. As a starting point for blue and white we hear a lot about “the colors of sea and sky.” But what, I ask myself, about the colors of the beach? What about cream and tan and gold, or the warm and cool grays of the rocky shelf a house sits on, the pale mustard of lichen? And fresh greens and olives and pinks, the colors of grass and scrub and rosa rugosa? How about using the silvery hue of well-weathered shingles on the inside? Putting curmudgeonliness into practice, our staff has come up with four houses for this July/August issue, all of which depart, sometimes completely, from the blue-and-white standard. Two aren’t even seasonal homes. They display their designers’ talent at creating spaces of a casual elegance that can feel light and cool when the weather is torrid, but also warm and embracing when the days and nights are chillier. Who says rich wood paneling and purple upholstery can’t make a welcome respite from the muggy glare of a July afternoon? So please enjoy these spaces that don’t quite show the party colors. What they do show is lightness, airiness, a feeling of gracious living no matter the season. And, to be honest, if you look carefully you’ll even see a little—just a little— blue and white.

Kyle Hoepner, Editor-in-Chief khoepner@nehomemag.com


inspiring design. www.bostondesign.com/design-inspiration O\ QPHQWDO R LU Y Q H WV HHUHG 3URGXF DQG HQJLQ J H O LE V Q HHSLQ UHVSR Q OLIH . U H LW\ G R P IRU SRQVLELO V H U O D W HQ Q HQYLURQP H RI WKH GHVLJ U R F DW WKH

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Inside this Issue

62

Featured Homes

JULY/AUGUST 2010 • VOLUME 5, NUMBER 6

52 Bashful Beauty A new house on Martha’s Vineyard, built to look as though

it has evolved over time, is quietly flirtatious, revealing its many lovely qualities one by one. ARCHITECTURE: PATRICK AHEARN, AHEARN-SCHOPFER AND ASSOCIATES • INTERIOR DESIGN: MARIGIL WALSH, GIL WALSH INTERIORS • LANDSCAPE DESIGN: MICHAEL DONAROMA • TEXT: MEGAN FULWEILER • PHOTOGRAPHY: MICHAEL PARTENIO • PRODUCED BY STACY KUNSTEL

62 Refresher Course Interior designer Charles Spada improves on perfection

in a coastal Connecticut home. INTERIOR DESIGN AND INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE: CHARLES SPADA • PHOTOGRAPHY: BRUCE BUCK • TEXT: STACY KUNSTEL • PRODUCED BY KYLE HOEPNER

52

74 Waterfront Revival A makeover opening both house and landscape to

spectacular ocean views gives a Rhode Island getaway a whole new outlook. ARCHITECTURE: THOMAS CATALANO • INTERIOR DESIGN: FOTENE DEMOULAS AND JILL DIAMANDIS, FOTENE DESIGN • LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE: JOHN GROVE, REED HILDERBRAND ASSOCIATES • PHOTOGRAPHY: TRIA GIOVAN • TEXT: PAULA M. BODAH

86 Easygoing Elegance Design duo Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake, cele-

Enter to Win! Through the end of August, anyone who visits our Web site can enter to win this stunning crystal-and-brass chandelier from Parc Monceau in Westport, Connecticut. Handpicked by Parc Monceau proprietor Tracy Dwyer, the Italian vintage-style reproduction chandelier, which boasts delicate flower details, is valued at $689 and would look lovely in any setting. Sign up now at www.nehomemag.com! 14 New England Home July/August 2010

brated for their keen eye and sophisticated interiors, eschew formality when it comes to their own petite coastal abode. INTERIOR DESIGN: LEE BIERLY AND CHRISTOPHER DRAKE, BIERLY-DRAKE ASSOCIATES • PHOTOGRAPHY: MICHAEL PARTENIO • TEXT: ERIN MARVIN • PRODUCED BY STACY KUNSTEL

On the cover: Designers Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake’s own Nantucket home adopts an elegantly informal style. Photograph by Michael Partenio. To see more of this home, turn to page 86.

74


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Inside this Issue

36

12 From the Editor

Art, Design, History, Landscape 25 Elements: Alfresco Style Celebrate summer with furniture and accessories

that take outdoor dining to a new level. EDITED BY CHERYL AND JEFFREY KATZ Design Destination: Midnight Farm, Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts 32 36 Past Perfect: The House of Her Dreams It took two tries, but Richard

T. Crane finally built a house his wife could love, a fine brick mansion in the style of a seventeenth-century English manor, on the family’s estate in Ipswich, Massachusetts. BY JACI CONRY • PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF THE TRUSTEES OF RESERVATIONS

46 Made Here: Material World Some of the design world’s most sought-after

46

Special Marketing Section:

GREEN LIVING page 98

fabrics and wallpapers are the ones Peter Fasano designs and creates in his Great Barrington, Massachusetts, workshop. BY REGINA COLE

People, Places, Events, Products 122 Trade Secrets: What’s a Memory Worth? Comings and goings (and a few

surprises) in the lives of New England’s design community. BY LOUIS POSTEL 126 Design Life Our candid camera snaps recent gatherings that celebrate archi-

tecture and design. 130 Calendar Special events for those who are passionate about fine design. Now in the Galleries Upcoming art exhibitions throughout New England 130 134 Perspectives Area designers outfit a child-friendly family room Wish List: West Newton, Massachusetts, designer Susan Shulman’s favorite new home furnishings 140 It’s Personal: Favorite finds from the staff of New England Home 142 144 Resources A guide to the professionals and products in this issue’s featured

For subscriptions call: (800) 765-1225

homes.

Visit our Web site: www.nehomemag.com

158 Advertiser Index

Letters to the Editor: New England Home 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302 Boston, MA 02118 letters@nehomemag.com

160 Sketch Pad Designer Mally Skok looked to Africa for inspiration for her new

16 New England Home July/August 2010

fabric collection.

25


McLaughlin Upholstering 1813 Revere Beach Parkway Everett, MA 02149 www.mclaughlinupholstering.com 617-389-0761

Fine Furniture Since 1889 Interior Design:Frank Roop Photography:Eric Roth


Creating New England’s Finest Landscapes

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Kyle Hoepner khoepner@nehomemag.com HOMES EDITOR

Stacy Kunstel skunstel@nehomemag.com SENIOR EDITOR

Paula M. Bodah pbodah@nehomemag.com MANAGING EDITOR

Erin Marvin emarvin@nehomemag.com ASSISTANT ART DIRECTOR

Jared Ainscough jainscough@nehomemag.com CONTRIBUTING EDITORS

Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz candjkatz@nehomemag.com Louis Postel lpostel@nehomemag.com CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Regina Cole, Deblina Chakraborty, Caroline Cunningham, Megan Fulweiler, Robert Kiener, Kara Lashley, Christine Temin CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS

Robert Benson, Tria Giovan, Sam Gray, John Gruen, Warren Jagger, Richard Mandelkorn, Laura Moss, Michael Partenio, Greg Premru, Nat Rea, Eric Roth, James R. Salomon, Brian Vanden Brink EDITORIAL INTERN

Carling Sturino ••• Editorial and Advertising Office 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302 Boston, MA 02118 (617) 938-3991 (800) 609-5154 Editorial Submissions Designers, architects, builders and homeowners are invited to submit projects for editorial consideration. For information about submitting projects, e-mail emarvin @nehomemag.com. Letters to the Editor We’d love to hear from you! Write to us at the above address, fax us at (617) 663-6377 or e-mail us at letters@nehomemag.com. Subscriptions To subscribe to New England Home ($19.95 for one year) or for customer service, call (800) 765-1225 or visit our Web site, www .nehomemag.com.

21A Trotter Drive | Medway MA02053 800.794.5480 | 508.533.8700 | f: 508.533.3718 www.rpmarzilli.com 18 New England Home July/August 2010

Upcoming Events Are you planning an event that we can feature in our Calendar of Events? E-mail information to calendar@nehome mag.com, or mail to Calendar Editor, New England Home, 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302, Boston, MA 02118. Parties We welcome photographs from designor architecture-related parties. Send highresolution photos with information about the party and the people pictured to pbodah@nehomemag.com.


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PUBLISHER

Betsy Abeles Kravitz bkravitz@nehomemag.com SENIOR ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES

Andrea Kolden akolden@nehomemag.com Roberta Thomas Mancuso rmancuso@nehomemag.com Kim Sansoucy ksansoucy@nehomemag.com Robin Schubel rschubel@nehomemag.com Angela Stevenson astevenson@nehomemag.com MARKETING AND SPECIAL PROJECTS DIRECTOR

Katie W. Dammann kdammann@nehomemag.com PRODUCTION MANAGER

Glenn Sadin gsadin@nehomemag.com SALES COORDINATOR

Janelle Driscoll jdriscoll@nehomemag.com CIRCULATION MANAGER

Kurt Coey NEWSSTAND MANAGER

Bob Moenster MARKETING INTERN

Lannon Eldridge ••• Editorial and Advertising Office 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302 Boston, MA 02118 (617) 938-3991 (800) 609-5154 Advertising Information To receive information about advertising in New England Home, please contact us at (800) 609-5154, ext. 713 or info@nehome mag.com.

••• NCI Corporate Offices 2305 Newpoint Parkway Lawrenceville, GA 30043 (800) 972-0189 Home Design Division PRESIDENT

Adam Japko SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, OPERATIONS

Stuart Christian DIRECTOR OF PUBLISHING OPERATIONS

Rick Higgins

CHAIRMAN/CEO

Daniel R. McCarthy CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

Gerry Parker GENERAL COUNSEL

Susan Deese 20 New England Home July/August 2010


Photography by Sam Gray

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Elements The things that make great spaces

Edited by Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz

Alfresco Style If, at the first hint of warm weather, you troll the streets of the city looking for a cafe that puts out its outdoor seating before anyone else, than you’ll agree that there’s nothing better than dining al fresco. We’re so enthusiastic about it that we’ll trudge up four flights of stairs from our kitchen to our rooftop for the chance to drink a morning cup of coffee or have supper under the stars. To our minds, save for the unexpected downpour or the occasional need for a bit of air conditioning, there’s no reason not to dine outside during the summer months. Whether it’s drinks on the porch or a barbecue on the patio, take your meals outside while you can. It’s the little things that make life a picnic. Rock Solid For every beach stone that Windham, New Hampshire, artists Anne Johnson and Arra David gather, they toss a quarry-bought stone into the sea as a replacement. These oceansmoothed-stone napkin rings are the perfect foil to that sudden gust of wind that can uproot an outdoor party. $42/SET OF FOUR. ABODEON, CAMBRIDGE, MASS., (617) 497-0137, WWW.ABODEON.COM

July/August 2010 New England Home 25


Elements

1

1

Pop Hit It takes 111 recycled plastic Coke bottles to make Emeco’s 111 Navy Chair. Modeled after the company’s classic aluminum version, the 111 Navy Chair is suitable for outdoor use. 34"H × 15.5"W × 19.5"D. $230. DESIGN WITHIN REACH, BOSTON AND CAMBRIDGE, MASS., WESTPORT AND GREENWICH CONN., (800) 944-2233, WWW.DWR.COM

2

Keep it Simple Chill the soda, tote the plates, carry the dirties back inside. The Tub Trug, frost free, UV resistant and made of 100 percent recycled material, makes outdoor dining a breeze. The carryall comes in olive (shown), black, ocean blue, dark green, orange and sky blue. $14. BLACK INK, (617) 723-3883, BOSTON AND CAMBRIDGE, MASS., (617) 497-1221, WWW.BLACKINKBOSTON.COM

3

Think Pink Or any of the twenty-two other colors FermobUSA’s folding table comes in. The fortysix-inch lacquered, anti-rust table collapses easily, making it easy to tote along for a picnic as well as to store back at home. $462. FLORA-STYLE, SOUTH DARTMOUTH, MASS., (508) 996-2332, WWW.FLORASTYLE.COM

2

3

26 New England Home July/August 2010



Elements

1

2

1

Modern Classic Originally designed by Richard Schultz to weather the corrosive salt air at Florence Knoll’s Florida house, the aptly named 1966 Collection has grown to include multiple tables and chairs in a host of fresh colors. The table shown here has a glass top on a frame of cast and extruded aluminum. 60"L × 38"W × 26½"H. ICON GROUP, BOSTON, (617) 449-5506

2

Garden Party Suspend this hand-painted Chinese paper lantern on a backyard branch and transform a casual dinner into a garden party. If you’ve got the power, light it up by putting Christmas lights inside. 12"H. $22. POD, BROOKLINE, MASS., (617) 739-3802, WWW.POD.BIGCARTEL.COM

3

Ooh-La-La Have your hotdog—slathered with mustard and relish of course—while perching on a classic French Bistro chair in lacquered metal. That’s global style. $99. HOMEWARD BOUND, WEST HARTFORD, CONN., (860) 233-9500, WWW.HOMEWARDBOUNDSTYLE.COM

3

28 New England Home July/August 2010


©2010 Marvin Windows and Doors. All rights reserved. ®Registered trademark of Marvin Windows and Doors.

If you could design your dream window, what would it be?

myMarvin by

Create windows and doors uniquely your own. Whether you’re remodeling, replacing or building new. Come in today and be inspired by what is possible with all the latest Marvin has to offer. Find out how we can help build your dream windows and doors.

Log on today at

www. NEHome.mymarvinproject.com to download a FREE Window and Door Replacement Guide and find your local retailer.

Sarah Susanka, FAIA architect/author The Not So Big House series


Elements

1

2

3

1

Curve Appeal From Lyle and Umbach, the boldly graphic lacquered wood Highland Dining Chair comes in teak or mahogany and is available in classic black, shown here, as well as in fifty-nine other colors. 30"W × 23"D × 40"H. $4,680. FURN & CO., BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 342-1500, WWW.FURNCO.US

2

Carry On Rather than trying to juggle a stack of glasses, make things easier—and more efficient—with this woven metal tray. The tray, crafted in India, has room enough for seven glasses. $46. NOMAD, CAMBRIDGE, MASS., (617) 497-6677, WWW.NOMADCAMBRIDGE.COM

3

Knot the Usual Not only are these nautically inspired melamine coasters great for a beach party, they make wonderful house gifts as well. $16. FRONT, BOSTON, (857) 362-7289, WWW.BOBSYOURUNCLE.COM

30 New England Home July/August 2010


Cabinets by Martha Bovelli

cumar, inc. 69 norman street everett, ma p 617.389.7818 f 617.389.1755

Simply Inspiring Sur faces. At Cumar, we’ve sourced, crafted and installed the finest quality natural stone surfaces for seven generations. Today, we offer the area’s largest selection of natural stone surfaces, including granite, limestone, slate and some of the most exotic semi-precious materials you can find. Visit our warehouse today. And let your imagination run wild.

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69 Norman St.

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02149


Elements • Design Destination

Midnight Farm, Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts By Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz

Tamara Weiss was crossing Canal Street in lower Manhattan, pushing her twin sons in their double stroller, when, against a backdrop of honking horns and swirling soot, she made a decision. It was time to leave New York. Remembering the idyllic summers she had spent on Martha’s Vineyard when she was a child, there was no question where Weiss and her family should go. The only question was what should dyed-in-the-wool urbanites do on an island that is accessible only by boat or by plane? That answer was easy. After the birth of her boys, Weiss, a former movie producer, had begun holding impromptu salons in her downtown loft—a fourth-floor walk up—to showcase the work of her friends and family. Anything from a hand-knitted scarf to a woven throw to handmade note cards to furniture and lighting (some designed by her husband, Gary Stuber)—in short, any manner of things that Weiss loved—were put on display. As word grew about this trove of talented artisans, the salon burgeoned, becoming a showroom for yet-undiscovered talent. Based on the success of her underground salon, why not open a store to showcase the things she loved? Aside from the obvious fact that Midnight Farm is a great store, it is not an easy one to describe. It’s part souk, part

best friend’s stylish house, part bastion of boho chic, smack dab in the center of the village of Tisbury. There’s no telling what you might find. On a recent visit, we spotted linen-covered sofas from Cisco Brothers, bedding from John Robshaw, woven plastic baskets from Africa, dresses from Krista Larsen and stacks of books. Midnight Farm attracts yearround and summer residents as well as day-trippers. It goes against the common wisdom usually associated with retail endeavors: it’s based on heart and soul and gut reaction. When we see Weiss we tell her that though the last time we had visited the store (late November) the day had been dreary and drizzly we left with spirits lifted and a shopping bag full of treasures. Weiss smiles, visibly excited. The decision she made fifteen years ago? Exactly the right one. 18 WATER-CROMWELL LANE, VINEYARD HAVEN, MASSACHUSETTS, (508) 693-1997. SUMMER HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M.–8 P.M., SUNDAY TILL 6 P.M.

32 New England Home July/August 2010



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Past Perfect

The House of Her Dreams

It took two tries, but Richard T. Crane finally built a house his wife could love, a fine brick mansion in the style of a seventeenth-century English manor, in Ipswich, Massachusetts. TEXT BY JACI CONRY • PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY OF THE TRUSTEES OF RESERVATIONS

I

n 1912, Chicago industrialist Richard T. Crane, Jr. built a lavish Italian Renaissance–style villa for his wife, Florence. The summer retreat sat on the highest hill in Ipswich, Massachusetts, overlooking an exquisite beach, an extensive marsh and Ipswich Bay. The Olmstead Brothers designed a landscape of terraced gardens and ornate plantings. Statuary and urns marched alongside the 160-foot-wide tree-lined “Grande Allee,” which led to the water a half-mile away. At the allee’s midpoint sat an opulent casino—one of

36 New England Home July/August 2010

twenty-one outbuildings on the property—that held a saltwater swimming pool, bathhouse, guest cabanas and a ballroom. • Despite its grandeur, Mrs. Crane didn’t take to the house. It didn’t suit her style (she called it “the Italian fiasco”), and she didn’t think the Mediterranean building with its red-tiled roof fit with the setting. Mr. Crane, who loved the house, persuaded his wife to move in with the promise that if she didn’t like it in ten years, he’d build her another. “A decade later, Mrs. Crane still didn’t like the house,” says


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Past Perfect Susan Hill Dolan, cultural resources manager for the Crane Estate. “And as crazy as it seems, true to his word, Mr. Crane had the massive villa razed in 1924.” In its place the Cranes commissioned Chicago architect David Adler to design a new house based on the formal English country houses of the seventeenth Top and bottom left: century. This time, The half-mile-long Mrs. Crane would Grande Allee and the Rose Garden were have the house of designed by Boston her dreams. landscape architect Arthur Shurcliff. BotThe fifty-ninetom right: Griffins by room brick manPaul Manship. Previous sion—known as page: North view of the Great House— The Great House. was designed as a five-bay, hip-roofed block with a pediment over three central bays. On the northeast side, symmetrical two-story wings jut out to form the north terrace. On the terrace side of each wing sits a one-story porch. Wings and porches are embellished with a series of stone and cast-concrete busts, believed to represent the Caesars, set in sandstone niches. A pair of large Art Deco griffin sculptures by Paul Manship grace the terrace, gifts from Crane’s employees to guard his home on its completion in 1928. “The figures are the only elements of the mansion’s exterior that help date it to its own time,” says Dolan. While the house draws directly on several seventeenth-century English houses, it was built more like an industrial building than a residence. As solid as the outside is, though, the interiors hold an eclectic and elegant mix of styles. “Adler paid attention to every detail of the site plan, interior and furnishings. He was very unique in his ability to combine styles,” Dolan explains. “In the house we see Georgian woodwork, Gothic vaulting, Greek Revival lighting fixtures, Italian Renaissance–style murals and Baroque carving all integrated with elegance and taste.” The first floor of the house is grand in scale, with sixteen-foot ceilings and a gallery that echoes those of English Baroque houses. A floor of eighteenth-century oak in a parquet pattern that mirrors the floors in the Palace of Versailles stretches across the gallery’s sixty-three feet. Sunburst fanlights hang above the double doors at either end of the room. Inlaid on the left wall are a massive wall clock and a wind indicator—one of five the Cranes, who loved sailing, installed throughout the house. 38 New England Home July/August 2010


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Past Perfect

Working with New York City’s posh furniture store, W. and J. Sloan, Adler found a number of wood-paneled rooms that originally sat in a 1732 London townhouse and had them refitted to the Crane’s new house. The early GeorTop: The library’s high-re- gian rooms, lief over-mantel carvings some with magdate back to the late-sevnificently carved enteenth century. Right: One of a series of decora- fireplaces and tive wind indicators. surrounds, cornices and pilasters, were divided up among seven bedrooms, the dining room and the upstairs sitting room. The townhouse’s original staircase didn’t fit the large scale of the Great House, so Adler designed a reproduction that incorporated the same intricate carvings, twisted shafts and Corinthi40 New England Home July/August 2010

an column newels at each landing. The first-floor library displays woodwork bought from Cassiobury House, the English home for generations of Earls of Essex, and boasts seventeenth-century carvings by the renowned Baroque sculptor Grinling Gibbons. The high-relief over-mantel carving with its delicate lime-wood festoons of flowers, leaves and fruit is one of Gibbons’s earliest surviving decorative works, and one of only two known documented sources of his work in the United States. The more intimately scaled second floor of the Great House holds suites of rooms for the Crane family and their guests. The second-floor hallway features Gothic-style vaulted ceilings with Greek Revival lighting fixtures and Adamesque neoclassical

fanlights about the double doors. All of the seven bedrooms have bathrooms outfitted with fixtures in the Art Deco style of the era. At the time the house was built, the


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Past Perfect

ble floor is complemented Crane Company—manufac- Clockwise from top left: by a black marble door surturers of valves, pumps and Parquet de Versailles round. A heated towel rack bathroom fixtures—was mar- flooring in the gallery. completes the luxury. keting “the better bathroom,” A pedimented doorway opens to the stair hall. A Mr. Crane passed away in so naturally the baths are sand-sea-sky color scheme 1931, a mere three years after built with state-of-the-art fix- in one of the bedrooms. the Great House was comtures. Mrs. Crane’s bathroom had a decadent green marble tub area with pleted. When Mrs. Crane, who did, indeed, love the second house her husband a patterned marble floor, matching fauxbuilt for her, passed away in 1949, the marble painted woodwork and silver 2,100-acre estate was donated to the sconces that still hang on the walls. Trustees of Reservations. Though most of Mr. Crane’s elegant bathroom is domithe contents of the house were auctioned nated by a central tub with silver fixtures off by the family to benefit the Art Instiand handrails, with a twelve-nozzled shower and a toilet stall set behind glass at tute of Chicago in 1950, the Trustees have acquired many original furnishings on either side. The sophisticated white mar42 New England Home July/August 2010

loan and through purchase. Wallcoverings, paint colors and damask draperies have been painstakingly restored and replicated, and the gardens and statuary have been meticulously preserved. “You really get a sense of what the house was like when the Cranes lived here,” says Dolan. “You can feel their presence, particularly Mrs. Crane—it was her house after all.” • Editor’s Note The Great House at the Crane Estate is open for tours from late May until midOctober, Wed.–Thurs. 10 a.m.–3 p.m., Fri.–Sat. 10 a.m.–1 p.m. (closed July 4). Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for children (the minimum age is 8 years old). 290 Argilla Road, Ipswich, Mass., (978) 356-4351, www.thetrustees.org.


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with loosely spaced brown paisley motifs. “This linen has the most beautiful hand, with a silky finish,” he says. “It drapes like a dream. It’s blended with rayon.” He picks up another piece of linen/rayon blend. An overall floral pattern curves in off-white tendrils against Wedgwood blue. “The rayon takes dyes differently from the linen, so you get complexity and depth in the colors.” He reaches for a third scrap. “This,” he says, “is microfiber. We’ve been printing it with geometric patterns and love the result.” Fasano knows his stuff: he produces some of the design world’s most sought-after fabrics and wallpapers. From a nondescript building behind an antiques mall in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, his eponymous products travel to showrooms all over the country, as well as to London. They are in the White House, in the homes of Michael Bloomberg, Oprah Winfrey, Tiger Woods,

46 New England Home July/August 2010


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Made Here Kelsey Grammer and a host of lesser-known clients. Some designs are full of quirky charm; others exhibit classic grace. What makes them special is the fact that each yard of fabric and every roll of paper is printed by hand. It all happens at a row of tables, each one thirty-one yards long and six feet wide. Fasano Fabrics shown: Kona Leaf (below left), Kimoni constructed them when he moved here from (below right), String Manhattan in 1986, where he had spent the pre- Theory (previous page) vious decade in a thriving business creating hand-painted fabrics for designers. “There were a few dozen designs,” he recalls. “Throughout the eighties, I turned out up to 10,000 yards a year in a little loft on the Upper East Side. In the early ’90s, after clients asked for it, I added wallpaper.” When he and his wife, Elizabeth, had a son, they decided it was time to leave Manhattan. They followed friends who had settled in the Berkshires, where the owner of a neighborhood silk screening business opened Fasano’s eyes to another way of applying pattern and color. “I knew nothing, but started with small screens, mostly just to do something different,” he says. Printing with silk screens, one for each color, became his method of choice. “We build screens, mix colors from pigments . . . the fact that we do everything here is both the blessing and the burden of this business.” At either side of a table, two employees progress down its length, placing a screen onto fabric and passing a squeegee-like tool back and forth with even, practiced pressure. Guided by metal stops built into the table, they apply a layer of color to every other repeat, which allows the ink to dry before they come back to fill in the alternates. Many wallpaper patterns receive an extra grace note of decoration applied with a paintbrush. Fasano, a 1972 graduate of the Parsons School of Design, looks at his business with the eyes of an artist who followed his heart and Peter Fasano Ltd. found commercial success (413) 528-6872 along the way. “After art www.peterfasano.com school, I found that threedimensional work did not interest me, but I loved creating patterns. This grew up around me like a wonderfully benign fungus,” he says with a laugh. Lincoln, Massachusetts, designer Mally Skok turned to Fasano when she decided to create her own fabric line. “He tried to discourage me by telling me about the difficulty and the expense,” she says. “When I insisted on forging ahead, he became the best resource.” Today Skok’s feminine fabrics are in showrooms in Boston, New York, London, San Francisco, Atlanta and Melbourne, Australia. Since the beginning, Fasano has enabled such design stars as Sister Parish, David Sutherland and Quadrille president John Knott to offer their own textile and wallpaper lines. “To this day, I still get orders from Albert Hadley,” he says. “Custom work represents 25 percent of our business. I love doing it and say no to nothing.” He loves Irish linen. “There is nothing better to print on,” he says. “We don’t use silk any more because it comes from China and India: the quality is inconsistent.” Nor does he work with wool, whose lanolin rejects dyes. Cotton-rayon velvet, like microfiber, is an exciting new venture. Describing himself as “an anarchist at heart,” Fasano never stops experimenting. After three-and-a-half decades of designing fabric, he still expresses delight at products that show evidence of the human hand. “Nothing else looks like that.” • 48 New England Home July/August 2010


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The guest house (left) conveniently links to the main house. The pottery studio sits to the right. Dry-set ďŹ eldstone walls and antique bricks help blur the home’s age.

52 New England Home July/August 2010


A new house on Martha’s Vineyard, built to look as though it has evolved over time, is quietly flirtatious, revealing its many lovely qualities one by one. TEXT BY MEGAN FULWEILER • PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL PARTENIO • ARCHITECTURE: PATRICK AHEARN, AHEARN-SCHOPFER AND ASSOCIATES • INTERIOR DESIGN: MARIGIL WALSH, GIL WALSH INTERIORS • LANDSCAPE DESIGN: MICHAEL DONAROMA • PRODUCED BY STACY KUNSTEL

July/August 2010 New England Home 53


W

ho doesn’t love a surprise? The book that ends with a twist or the gift that arrives on an ordinary day is made better by being unexpected. Savvy designers are mindful of this. That’s why the most memorable garden paths wander, rather than shoot arrow-like from here to there; why the houses we love most are often those that reveal their charms slowly, rather than making a grand statement the minute we pull into the driveway. First-time visitors to this Vineyard Haven retreat have, no doubt, uttered audible sighs of delight. Innovative architect Patrick Ahearn—well-known in these parts for his ability to devise homes that speak to the seaside vernacular—has designed a house that takes its own sweet time to disclose its charms. First, you must park, scoot beneath the pretty arbor and pass between the spacious two-

54 New England Home July/August 2010


White walls reflect the light, while furnishings and accessories add color and personality. The wife’s pottery sets the tone for the family room. Facing page top: Architect Patrick Ahearn leaves nothing to chance. “Even the flagpole site was carefully choreographed,” he says.

bedroom guest house and garage (which is really only masquerading as a garage, but more on that later). “The home’s attributes aren’t visible from the road,” explains Ahearn. “They’re made apparent as you step across the upper terrace, through the fieldstone wall, down the steps onto the grassy lower level.” Only then are you treated to the Natucket-style dormers, the classic dark green shutters and exuberant window boxes. Befitting the architect’s intent, it’s the very picture of a house that appears to have evolved over time. The master suite wing to the left of the front entrance and the smaller wing to the right, which holds the study and screened porch, give the impression of being elements added over time. “Applied history,” says the architect. And there’s plenty more to come. “Open the front door and the house unfolds,” Ahearn says. “It’s sitting on the edge of an embankment. You’re look-

The home’s getawayfor-all-ages-role—pets welcome—dictated a casual decor that reflected the owners’ passions and travels.

July/August 2010 New England Home 55


ing straight through. Right away you see kids from the neighboring yacht club out in their sailboats, and the ferry cruising back and forth. All this activity makes the water feel alive.” For the owners, who’ve had a lengthy love affair with the area, the house and its surroundings epitomize summer. They value their Maryland and Florida homes, but only here do they enjoy bracing sea air and waves of hydrangeas. “We envisioned the quintessential summer cottage for them,” Ahearn says. For the owners, The original cape that once claimed the spectacular (but also somewhat tight) who’ve had site thrilled previous summer people, too. a lengthy love Built in the 1950s, though, the outdated affair with the place was no match for the new owners’ busy lifestyle. With married daughters, area, the house grandchildren and myriad friends expectand its surrounded, twenty-first-century amenities were ings epitomize mandatory. Ahearn used the razed cape’s footprint as a base for his livable design summer. that anchors the new house to the rock outcropping with a skillful use of stone and brick. Interior designer Marigil Walsh was recommended to the owners and it had to be kismet. At the time, Walsh was with Astorino in North Palm Beach, Florida. During the process, however, she launched her own firm—Gil Walsh Interiors—and completed the project. As it turned out, not only has Walsh had a house of her own on the Vineyard for years, her Florida residence is mere blocks from that of the owners. “It was perfect,” says Walsh. “We could meet during the winter and then also be on the Vineyard together. My clients moved in Memorial Day weekend. We spent the summer seeing to their punch list and gathering accessories.” The home’s getaway-for-all-ages role— pets welcome—dictated a casual decor that reflected the owners’ artistic passions and travels. “When you choose simple, functional furnishings with stand-out details it complements the architecture, which is what we wanted to do,” says Walsh. “The unity creates an art form.” From day one, the wife was deeply involved. Prominent displays of her pottery—thrown and fired in her on-site studio (remember the faux garage?)—are the key to the palette. A medley of aqua, beige and raspberry tones against walls washed creamy white conjure summer.

56 New England Home July/August 2010


Windsor chairs and a reproduction chandelier crafted in Vermont keep company with an Asian altar table that acts as a sideboard. Facing page bottom: Hydrangeas and geraniums bring a classic air to the garden.

July/August 2010 New England Home 57


Beadboard and stainless steel are ideal old and new kitchen contrasts. Facing page top: A low-set bedroom window grabs extra light and views. Facing page bottom: The passing ferry is a visual bonus all summer.

58 New England Home July/August 2010


As planned, every setting encourages relaxation. The living room is kitted out with a hunker-down rolled-arm sofa and a rugged coffee table at the correct height for putting your feet up. “It’s actually a copy of a tavern table made to coffee-table size,” says Walsh, who is obviously adept at balancing comfort and style. An heirloom patchwork quilt that had been snoozing in a closet has been reborn as a throw. And an antique stand—once a shoe-polishing box—corrals books and magazines. On the room’s opposite side, a weathered cupboard displays a stash of the wife’s stunning pottery. The dining room exudes a similar flavor with an antique quilt—this one from Missouri—covering the table. Reproduction Windsor-style chairs, crafted by Rhode Island’s Warren Chair Works, stand ready for company. And when the guest list swells, the Asian altar table along the windows becomes a handy serve-yourself buffet. “Asian pieces go as well with American and English furnishings as they do contemporary art,” Walsh says. To further a warm mood for nighttime dining, English candlestick lamps light the corners the chandelier can’t reach. A reproduction American hooked rug adds a ruddy splash of color. “Every room needs a touch of red,” the designer insists. The nearby kitchen slips easily into the theme with its creamy walls, another parade of beautiful utilitarian pottery and a In an upstairs homey cotton runner emblazoning the bedroom, floor. Furniture-like details give the cabinetry character. Dark granite countertops, old-fashioned a counterpoint to the pale walls, add a beadboard note of elegance. High above the cooking paneling traces station, a fish plate—a friend’s gift—references New England’s love of blue and the outline of the white porcelain. dormers, upping All the bedrooms appropriately sport the coziness. four-posters. But an upstairs bedroom— one of two—with a lofty ceiling has earned the most impressive bedframe. Old-fashioned beadboard paneling traces the outline of the dormers, upping the coziness. In fact, the owners like this sweet space so much they sometimes relocate here for a night. Testimony to the appealingly timeless design, every room in this harbor-side house provides a reason to linger. • Resources For more information about this home, see page 144.

July/August 2010 New England Home 59


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Interior designer Charles Spada designed the intricate ďŹ replace and window moldings during his ďŹ rst encounter with this house twenty years ago. The cheerful embroidered pillow and the upholstery are part of the updated decor.

62 New England Home July/August 2010


Refresher Course Interior designer Charles Spada improves on perfection in a coastal Connecticut home. Text by Stacy Kunstel • Photography by Bruce Buck • Interior Design and Interior Architecture: Charles Spada • Produced by Kyle Hoepner

I

nterior designer Charles Spada has never been flash-in-the-pan. Meticulous? Yes. Exacting? Check. A perfectionist? Certainly, ever since his earliest work as a fashion designer in New York. • The proof is on the page. The photos of this residence, designed twenty years ago and recently updated, show the timeless aspect of his work. • Sited at the mouth of the Connecticut River in Essex, Connecticut, and blessed with a wide view of Long Island Sound, the house was purchased in the 1980s by a couple keenly aware they would never want to leave. Nestled into privacy behind a well-groomed hedge, the lovely piece of land is hugged by gardenscapes and bordered by beautiful vistas. • Twenty years ago, Spada took the historic house down to its very roots and then built upon them with stately columns, moldings and trim. Window casings were outfitted with broad-shouldered frames, leaving the views exposed. The fireplace mantel in the living room took on a broken geometry grounded in period Dutch influences. The renovation turned a porch into a library that looked ages old and created a serene master suite in what were probably once maids’ quarters. • Spada reversed the direction of the staircase, expanding the gracious feel of the foyer while adding a hint of intrigue by giving visitors a framed view of the garden outside. Walls were redone in plaster, woodwork painted in white with a perfect sheen. • So when the clients called recently, it wasn’t to talk about major renovations—everything had been done right the first time— they just wanted a little refresher now that two decades had exerted their wear-and-tear on fabrics and finishes. A new stone floor for the porch on the back of the house just off the breakfast area and kitchen might be nice, too, they thought. • “What you see is essentially what was done twenty years ago,” says

July/August 2010 New England Home 63



Elegant simplicity reigns in the living room wth a George Bruestle painting and a host of green-hued fabrics. Spada recovered all the existing furnishings and added a rug from Steven King under the coffee table.


Spada. “They’re the sort of clients every designer should have at least once in their life. They’re very smart about it,” he says of the well-traveled couple who make this house their primary residence. This was not a house that needed a major facelift. The bones, the plaster walls, the floors of light wood and the antique furnishings had all held up to the highest standards. But with a few changed fabrics, a few cued colors, the house was brought into the twenty-first century. “I’m a very classic decorator,” says Spada, “but it’s clean and updated.” The sunlight streaming through the purposely unadorned windows in the living room had left the upholstery faded. Spada used that fact as an opportunity to scrub the space of its vibrant jewel-toned chintz in favor of a palette of more demure greens. Off came the chocolate linen covering the pair of Louis XVI armchairs and on went cool stried silk chartreuse. An armchair’s large floral pattern was switched out for a more muted woven green fabric, rounding out a range of greens in linens, silks and cottons. It signals the slightest departure from today’s requisite palette of beige to evoke serenity, picking up—subtly—on the colors of the outdoors. A rug from Steven King now sits under the custom glass-topped coffee table Spada had designed on the first go-around. “The rug has all the colors of the 66 New England Home July/August 2010


The library, in its original color from twenty years ago, retains its freshness. Facing page top: Spada left the windows bare to show off the moldings. Facing page bottom: “It makes for a more welcoming entrance,â€? Spada says of his decision to reverse the direction of the staircase in the foyer. A checkerboard-painted oor and sisal runner mix with a rococo demilune.

July/August 2010 New England Home 67


room in it, reduced by a 1,000 percent,” the designer says. “I’m not one for making it look like a patchwork quilt,” he says of the subdued patterns and colors on fabrics throughout the house. Across from the downy sofa an intricate molding design plays out above and surrounding the fireplace. The inviting club chair and ottoman covered in green flecked with a rhubarb-hued dot lies in wait of an eager magazine reader. The fireplace design was the result of Spada’s research on the connection between the American period moldings and Dutch moldings. “After much research I incorporated a Dutch-American facet to it,” he says. On the opposite end of the room, framed intaglios—long a Spada signature—float on wires hanging from picture molding rods behind a grand piano. Two flame-stitch-covered chairs from the Netherlands embrace an eighteenth-century Italian commode with a carefully placed mirror of the same era above it. Many of the home’s antiques were handpicked by Spada on his extensive travels for clients and his Boston Design Center showroom, Antiques on 5, and have only improved with age. “A point I’ve said many times before: you cut corners and it shows in a year or two,” says Spada. “We want quality. We don’t want to be aggravated with having to do over anything. Quality needs to be 68 New England Home July/August 2010


The dining table extends in front of the faux-ďŹ nished console to seat more than a dozen people. Facing page top: The breakfast room sits just off the kitchen and, like the living room, forgoes window treatments. Facing page bottom: The stone oor on the porch was added during the recent updates to the rest of the house.

July/August 2010 New England Home 69


stressed. The amount of money spent on achieving a ‘look’ is just wasted.” That said, the library, painted the color of a ready-to-pick French string bean during the original renovation, retains its vibrant hue. There was no sense in meddling with it. New curtains in Italian silk hang at the windows. The dining room floor, painted to look like period inlay, was repainted in the same fashion, as was the checkerboard-painted floor in the foyer in front of the staircase. The master suite got a striking new rug, again from Steven King, that pulls together all the blues, greens and taupes from the linen-covered headboard and the custom bedding by Muse. “It’s all very carefully selected,” the designer says. “I don’t like beds that aren’t custom made. I like custom upholstery headboards.” Amid the simple elegance of the design, one finds whimsy in the form of a sweet pink room once used by the couple’s children for sleepovers. Twin beds now wear new layers of quilts and linen-covered headboards, sheer curtains hang at the windows, and a grasscloth rug is a fresh new touch for the floor. Spada placed a milking stool in its original paint at the end of each bed. “There’s a playfulness and practicality to them,” he says of the stools, which he envisioned holding wet towels. “I found them in that color. I rarely tamper with things like that. I don’t want it to all look new. I like that they look like they have a relationship with the house.” Like the house, Spada says his own style has evolved. “My work has become more refined, better edited and I am more self-assured in my approach to design,” he says. “I saw the changes as a simple update, a change of fabrics and new colors, something different after twenty years. However, if I could have found the original fabrics I would have used them again.” For Spada—and the couple lucky enough to call this home—when you choose to do it right, the more the things change, the more they stay the same. • Resources For more information about this home, see page 144.

To see more of this home, tune in to NECN’s New England Dream House Sunday, July 18, at 10:30 a.m. Host Jenny Johnson and Stacy Kunstel, homes editor for New England Home, will take viewers on a tour. The show will also air July 18 at 7:30 p.m. and at 3 p.m. on July 19, July 22 and 27 and August 4. You can also see the story on line on www.nedreamhouse.com starting July 18

70 New England Home July/August 2010


Custom bedding is key to the master suite’s comfort. Facing page top: During the home’s original renovation, Spada gutted the warren of upstairs rooms to create an under-the-eaves master bath and bedroom. Facing page bottom: A range of pinks brings a rosy glow to a guest room.

July/August 2010 New England Home 71


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Designer Fotene Demoulas enhanced the gracious foyer by adding a rug and sideboard with mosaic patterns that play off the existing stained glass. Facing page: Landscape architect John Grove’s design includes a pea stone court that extends from the parking area left of the house to the front entrance.


Waterfront Revival A makeover opening both house and landscape to spectacular ocean views gives a Rhode Island getaway a whole new outlook. TEXT BY PAULA M. BODAH • PHOTOGRAPHY BY TRIA GIOVAN • ARCHITECTURE: THOMAS CATALANO • INTERIOR DESIGN: FOTENE DEMOULAS AND JILL DIAMANDIS, FOTENE DESIGN • BUILDER: L.H.S. CONSTRUCTION • LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE: JOHN GROVE, REED HILDERBRAND ASSOCIATES

What’s not to love about a house that stretches languidly across its waterfront lot, its shingles weathering to a soft gray in the salt air, its windows taking in views of a lush lawn that ends in a rocky cliff above the ocean? The family that makes this Middletown, Rhode Island, home their getaway initially planned to do little more than redecorate to suit their tastes. But, as so often happens once a project gets started, one thing led to another. Before long, a whole team—architect, designer and landscape architect—had come together to take the already appealing house to a whole new level of style. Boston-based interior designer Fotene Demoulas puts it succinctly: “The client asked me to help her pick colors. It turned into much more than that.” • With two young children and an extended family that enjoys visiting, the husband and wife aimed for a carefree ambience. “They wanted it to be comfortable, clean and simple,” Demoulas says. • They also wanted to give the house a stronger sense of connection to its spectacular site. As attractive as the property was, it seemed designed for seclusion rather than celebration. Trees lining the property offered plenty of privacy but obscured the views and kept the sun from finding its way inside. • Architect Thomas Catalano reworked the fenestration on the back of the house, putting in taller windows and adding three sets of tall glass doors along the ex-

July/August 2010 New England Home 75


76 New England Home July/August 2010


Clockwise from above: Architect Thomas Catalano designed the outdoor kitchen. The lawn slopes down to a rocky shelf. Grove designed a number of terraces, this one at the head of the steps leading to the beach. The active family loves outdoor games, including bocce. Catalano installed larger windows and taller doors to bring more light into the house.



Designer Fotene Demoulas pulled blues, greens and creams from the living room rug in choosing drapery and upholstery fabrics. She added the coffers to the ceiling and ďŹ eldstone around the ďŹ replace for a less formal look.


In the dining room, a Japanese tansu pairs nicely with the clean-lined Milling Road dining table. Facing page left: A fully outďŹ tted bar tucks into a corner of the big family room that occupies the home’s new addition. Facing page right: The dining area rug came from Yayla Tribal Rugs in Cambridge, Massachusetts.


“I wanted to open the house to the outside and give it the same natural feel that the exterior has.”

terior walls of the dining and living rooms to frame the views. He also put on a new roof of red cedar that does a better job of integrating the house with its site than did the old asphalt-shingle roof. With children and frequent guests, plenty of space for play was in order. Catalano designed an addition with a three-car garage on the first floor and a spacious family/game/media room above. The addition, tucked in behind an existing solarium, is such a perfect match for the shingled, gable-roofed house that it looks like part of the original structure. Inside, cherry-paneled walls and furnishings in jewel tones (including a red-felt-topped game table) bring both energy and intimacy to the large space. A sitting area is anchored by a fireplace with a red-brick firebox and a surround and mantel of local fieldstone. A large flat-screen TV cleverly hides in the ceiling, ready to drop down for viewing. One corner of the room holds a handsome bar area outfitted in cherry cabinetry and a nickelplated countertop and backsplash.

Back in the main part of the house, Demoulas worked to create the kind of casual warmth her clients wanted. The front entry was already gracious, with its door adorned and surrounded by stained-glass windows. To play off the pattern in the glass and bring warmth to the white-painted space, Demoulas chose a rug with a mosaic motif and a sideboard with bone and wood inlays. She redesigned the living room and dining area, removing pillars that had conferred a too-formal feel, adding coffers to the ceiling and surrounding the fireplace with fieldstone. “I wanted to open the house to the outside and give it the same natural feel that the exterior has,” she says. Rugs from Yayla Tribal Rugs in Cambridge, Massachusetts, form the basis for the palette in the living and dining areas, where blues, burgundies, beiges and creams predominate, punched up here and there with bits of burnt orange. “It’s a year-round palette,” the designer notes, “because the family uses the house more than in just the summer.” In the dining room, a Japanese tansu holds the dishes July/August 2010 New England Home 81


The addition is such a perfect match for the house that it looks like part of the original structure.

and linens that go on the clean-lined, transitional Milling Road dining table at mealtimes. Casual dining takes place in the new breakfast room Catalano built off the kitchen. The biggest transformation off all took place outside, where John Grove, an associate with the Watertown, Massachusetts, landscape architecture firm Reed Hilderbrand, oversaw a complete redesign of the site. A driveway that sliced the property up the middle was shifted to one side, where it now ends in a pea stone court. Grove removed the dozens of evergreen and deciduous trees that closed in the yard, replacing them with a series of smaller stands of trees to create areas of sun and shade. “We tried to relax the property a little,” Grove explains. “The dense planting made the site feel very tight. We wanted to bring it back to the more agrarian landscape that was typical of the area.” On the street side, he planted tulip poplar, maples and oaks, while on the water side, honey locust predominates. “The honey locust can tolerate the salt spray,” Grove notes. “There are two microclimates here—the street side and the 82 New England Home July/August 2010

ocean side are very different.” In the expansive backyard, Grove devised a series of bluestone terraces that offer the family and guests all sorts of options for relaxation and play. The large main terrace stretches across the living and dining area, while off the kitchen, another good-sized terrace holds the Catalano-designed outdoor kitchen along with dining and sitting areas. Walkways lead to yet another terrace, this one set up to let people watch the action at the bocce court. “The landscape draws you outside now,” Grove says. “The family is active, they like to entertain, and the design now suits the way they live.” Indeed, with its seamless transition between indoor and outdoor spaces, the redesigned property suits its family to a tee. Every space, inside and out, is imbued with the kind of casual comfort the owners craved. The project may have grown far bigger than the family anticipated, but in the end, they have so much more to love. • Resources For more information about this home, see page 144.


Light, bright and efficient describes the kitchen with its myriad windows and plentiful storage. Facing page left: In the spacious family room, the ceiling hides the flat-screen TV, which drops down for viewing. Facing page right: A downstairs bathroom takes on the feel of a shipboard head with its floor-to-ceiling paneling.


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Easygoing Elegance

Design duo Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake, celebrated for their keen eye and sophisticated interiors, eschew formality when it comes to their own petite coastal abode. Text by Erin Marvin • Photography by Michael Partenio • Interior design: Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake, Bierly-Drake Associates • Builder: John DaSilva, Better Homes & Kitchens • Produced by Stacy Kunstel

86 New England Home July/August 2010

T

he cedar shingles that wrap this small Nantucket house have only just begun their slow fade to silvery gray. A neat white gate sits tucked into a tall straight hedge, behind which dozens of pink and white blooms vie for attention while an American flag flutters lazily in the saltwater-laced breeze. Adirondack chairs recline on the lawn, basking in the warm summer sun. A large back deck offers plenty of seating for impromptu fêtes and visiting friends. • At first glance the house is a vision, the epitome of casual coastal living. But the newly renovated home was not always so picture perfect: the original post-and-beam house had windows too small to capture outdoor views or afternoon light, and the yard was nothing more than untended scrub. It was on the market for years, in need of a vi-


Every piece of furniture, artwork and accessory in the house has been collected and cherished over the years by owners Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake. “The decoration came as second nature,� says Bierly.


The living room—anchored by a black-and-white cotton dhurrie rug—is resplendent in its simplicity with white walls and white-fabric furniture accented by the owners’ collection of books and Americana. “We’re simple, not complicated,” says Drake, “and we have a festive air about us and I think that also describes the house.”



90 New England Home July/August 2010


Part of the kitchen opens to the dining area, letting hosts and guests interact during dining preparations; above the fireplace, six black crow decoys stand at attention in front of framed mixed-media artwork by Mellie Cooper. Facing page: Bierly, Drake and their dog, Speedo, relax in their yard, once filled with scrub but now beautifully landscaped. “It was a two-part adventure, clearing the scrub and creating a series of gardens and varying lawns around the house,” says Bierly.


sionary to coax out its natural charm. Who better than the renowned design team of Bierly-Drake? Though Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake have made a reputation for themselves by creating elegantly refined interiors for many of New England’s elite, they left formality at the door when reimagining this house as their own relaxed island home. The duo bought their first house on Nantucket twenty-five years ago, an intown cottage that, at a mere 430 square feet, was smaller than most local hotel suites. But both wanted to invest in a real home on the island, in a lifestyle. They soon outgrew that first tiny cottage and, over the years, moved several times around Nantucket before they began craving a place to set down more permanent roots. “We wanted to have a little more land in a more rural environment closer to the ocean,” says Drake. Still, they weren’t looking to build a grand house for posterity, full of formal rooms they didn’t need. They knew they wanted something casual, comfortable. “Too many people build a house that’s too big and they never use it,” says Bierly. “We just wanted a house for us—for two guys and a dog.” When Bierly and Drake first stepped inside the small square house, they looked past its imperfections and saw only possibilities. “We walked into the space and closed our eyes and could see it completed,” recalls Drake. “I knew exactly where I wanted everything to go,” adds Bierly. It was a labor of love they gladly undertook. Working with builder John DaSilva, the team tore down interior and exterior walls, moving the kitchen from the north side of the house to the southwest corner and relocating all the rooms on the first floor. They also reworked the facade, adding more expansive windows and a spacious back deck to capture breathtaking vistas of the lawn and ocean beyond. A fourteen-footsquare cupola perches atop the roof and offers 360-degree views of the island and Nantucket Sound. Rather than dividing much of the interior into separate rooms, public spaces on the first floor—the living room, dining area and kitchen—all blend into each other under a high, knocked-out ceiling that gives the house an airy, loft-like feel. “It’s more about enjoying the volume of space and less about the formality of living,” says Bierly. “The fireplace is not in the living room—it backs up to the kitchen island, and so what? We didn’t want to design the house around the fireplace when it wouldn’t suit our use, so now it’s merely a backdrop in one part of the kitchen area.”

They left formality at the door when reimagining this house as their own relaxed island home.

92 New England Home July/August 2010


The eleven-foot-long dining table is headed by antique Orkney chairs and lined with oldfashioned bamboo director’s chairs. Above, a ship’s ladder leads to the rooftop cupola. Facing page top: A white owl decoy and artwork by Jesse Howard accent the kitchen, which is tucked into a far corner. Facing page bottom: Foyer walls are meant to resemble a black-and-white quilt, playing off the redand-white-striped quilt-covered chair.


The second-floor library overlooks the living room. Facing page top: A column-turned-nightstand adds an architectural element to the master bedroom. Facing page bottom: A Pucci mannequin stacked with brightly colored bowties and belts adds a touch of whimsy to the owners’ otherwise informal attire. “You have to have a sense of humor when you live on Nantucket,” says Drake. “You can’t take life too seriously.”


“What we do for a living as designers and architects, we did here for ourselves,” says Drake. “We have this adage that you have to build a body before you can put clothes on it—the house has to function first before you can decorate it.” No buying trips or client approvals were required to furnish this home: they already had everything they needed. Each treasured item of furniture, antique, artwork and accessory that Bierly and Drake have collected over the years has moved as often as its owners. “The pieces in the house have been with us since we’ve been on the island,” says Bierly. “We didn’t add anything; they move with us and get relocated and find new homes and new places.” A column that was used to hold ship models in the dining room of the last house is now positioned next to the master bed, the perfect nightstand. Two antique red French tea caddies have become twin lamps in the upstairs library. A set of five brass garden hose nozzles gets prime placement on a cabinet in the foyer. Throughout the house, everyday objects are elevated to art. White walls don’t feel stark or cold, but become a canvas for the owners’ eclectic collection of colorful Americana—Ozarks folk art, duck decoys, an old-fashioned gameboard, antique quilts, a Nantucket basket that belonged to Drake’s mother, wooden bowling pins, a sign from an old general store—Bierly and Drake know the provenance of every piece. Stacks of books are not just accessories, but beloved art and design tomes that have been read and re-read. For all its quiet sophistication, the house still feels like a “shoes off ” kind of place; nothing feels untouchable. And though they did build this house just “for two guys and a dog,” the couple loves to entertain and the small forty-by-forty-foot house can still hold a crowd; during one summer party, rain drove all 200 guests inside and everyone fit comfortably. An eleven-foot-long trestle dining table can accommodate an intimate dinner for two or seating up to fourteen. Outside, the landscape is resplendent with rosa rugosa, hydrangeas, peonies, dogwoods and ornamental cherry trees. A rolling green lawn dusted with fragrant lavender offers plenty of open space for the owners’ beloved golden retriever, Speedo, to roam and run. For most people, it would be hard to envision a time when the grounds were nothing but scrub—“There wasn’t a blade of grass on the two acres!” says Drake—but visionaries like Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake could see it all along, and can see themselves living happily here for many years to come. •

For all its quiet sophistication, the house still feels like a “shoes off ” kind of place.

Resources For more information about this home, see page 144. July/August 2010 New England Home 95


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How’s Your Head for Savings? An Ipsos Reid survey recently found that more than 90% of U.S. homeowners agree that it’s important to reduce their impact on the environment and to reduce energy use in their home to save money. As a homeowner you might care about the environment and saving money, but do you have the right stuff to make it happen? Taking this little quiz from InsulationSmart.com can help you tell: 1. True or false: Increasing insulation R-value from R-13 to R-21 delivers significant energy savings? 2. The largest source of energy waste in a home is: a) inefficient electrical appliances; b) windows; c) air leakage; d) an inefficient water heater. 3. What percent of moisture entering a building through the walls is typically carried through the air: a) 5%; b) 25%; c) 75%; d) up to 99%? 4. Which of the following is most likely to make your indoor air healthier: a) minimizing air leaks and using mechanical ventilation; b) airing out your home frequently; c) cleaning your ducts regularly; d) using air fresheners? 5. True or false: Products labeled as green must meet tough standards?

Answers

1. False: R-13 insulation al ready stops 93% of conductive heat flow (what R-value measures), so significant increases in R-value won’t necessarily deliver significant savings; 2. c) Air leakage. By controlling random air leakage with an insulation/air barrier like Icynene, you can help stop up to 40 % of a home’s energy loss according to the U.S. Department of Energy) and save up to 50% in energy costs; 3. d) Up to 99% of moisture entering a building through the walls is carried by air, so controlling air leaks can help address a major cause of moisture and mold problems; 4. a) Minimizing air leakage along with mechanical ventilation will provide fresh/filtered air, reduce allergens and pollutants and minimize airborne moisture; 5. False: A green or eco label doesn’t necessarily mean the product meets any particular standards. An Ipsos Reid poll found that more than 90% of homeowners want more universal standards for products making environmental claims. Fortunately, homeowners can get on track to a more energy-efficient and greener home by visiting www.InsulationSmart.com.

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Anderson Insulation Anderson Insulation is New England’s leader in green insulation techniques and materials. Using high R-value and air sealing products such as spray foam insulations, or recycled materials such as cellulose and denim (yes, blue jeans), Anderson has the products and knowledge to help you save money while helping the environment at the same time. Have an older home that is cold and drafty? Let Anderson help you make your home warmer and more energy efficient. Using state-of-theart infrared thermal imaging technology, Anderson can pinpoint the leaks in your home and explain the best way to solve the problem. www.anderson-insul.com

Boston Architectural College The Boston Architectural Program (BAC) Sustainable Design Program offers the most comprehensive sustainable design curriculum in the U.S. This faculty-led, interactive, graduate-level instruction is a fully online format. It offers the opportunity to learn about the many ways in which buildings interact with the natural environment and the choices available to make that interaction positive. Courses can be taken individually or as part of the Sustainable Design Certificate programs, which include the Certificate in Sustainable Residential Design. Please consult the sustainable design Web site for schedules, detailed course descriptions, prerequisites, tuition information, faculty bios and registration information. www.the-bac.edu/green

Chip Webster & Associates Architecture must respond to the human needs for comfort, functionality and security while fostering a sense of well-being. Chip Webster & Associates ensures that physical, social and budgetary needs are met while creating spaces that surprise, delight and inspire. Chip Webster & Associates actively pursues green design projects and encourages clients to consider sustainable design options. They have LEED-accredited associates on their team to support these goals. They believe that every project is unique and requires a fresh perspective that will reflect the needs and desires of the client. Utilizing an underlying design philosophy rather than a preconceived architectural style, they help bring their clients’ visions to life. www.cwa-arch.com

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How popular are green homes? That depends on what shade of green you’re looking at, say Realtors, architects and builders. Green products, such as low-VOC paints and efficient appliances, are easily recognizable and sought-after features. More involved ideas, such as air sealing for energy efficiency, take a bit of education before buyers sign on. And the greenest—net zero homes, wind turbines, solar panels— while popular ideas, remain the milieu of the super-committed.

Green nSelling A certified EcoBroker who specializes in high-performance homes, Leland DiMeco of Boston Green Realtors says in his experience green homes sell faster and for more money. A perfect example is a 1925 home in Andover that he sold in six days. “We greened it as much as we could before putting it on the market: spray cellulose insulation in the attic, new windows, new efficient heating system, asbestos remediation, lowVOC finishes, CFL bulbs throughout. We even did a home energy audit and blower door test to find air leaks and seal them to improve the envelope of the house. It was as energy efficient as a 1925 home can be, and that absolutely increased its marketability,” DiMeco says. The icing on the cake: it sold for $50,000 more than its closest comparable. Lack of inventory is DiMeco’s biggest obstacle, and he has overcome it by using his construction background to green up older homes, upgrading building materials where he can. He greened up a Cambridge condo of 1920s vintage in need of renovation, improving air quality with all low VOC finishes and using eco-friendly materials. The result? “We sold it at a premium and sold it in thirty days. People


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The ultimate custom storage design not only keeps you organized, it helps keep your environment healthy. Closet Factory uses low- or no-VOC finishes, which means no toxic offgassing and a better home air quality for you. And since they customdesign each storage solution, they can use the materials you desire, from classic white to dramatic wood grains. Using Forest Stewardship Council-certified woods means their lumber is harvested in an environmentally responsible manner. Precision craftsmanship and their trademark attention to detail enhance the look of your Closet Factory system, whether for a closet, home office, garage, laundry room, pantry, entertainment center, mudroom or wall bed. Contact them for your free in-home consultation at (978) 253-4636. www.closetfactory.com

Creative Art Furniture Stephen Staples and his artisans handcraft creative art furniture made from reclaimed materials salvaged from many sources. “The past comes alive in our furniture as we breathe new life into the boards, presenting the old patina, rich with color and texture, displaying a character unmatched by any artificial means,” says Staples. “Clients also love our pieces because of the stories the wood tells. Every imperfection in the wood is celebrated rather than discarded.” Since the early 1980s, Staples’s creations have been branded, paper labeled, signed and dated and then Staples adds his subtle signet mark. For more information, check out his “Farm Table Buying Guide” on his Web site under Information/Tips and Tricks. www.creativeartfurniture.com

Crown Point Cabinetry Crown Point Cabinetry handcrafts the finest quality custom cabinetry for the entire home. Period styles include Shaker, Arts & Crafts, early American, Victorian, transitional and contemporary. Finishes include the eco-friendly Estate Eggshell paints from Farrow & Ball as well as Genuine OldFashioned Milk Paint. Your cabinetry can be designed and built from FSC-certified lumber or any of our vintage or reclaimed wood species. All custom, available direct, nationwide. www.crown-point.com

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are beginning to understand that you may pay more per square foot but the payback is significantly lower operating costs.” Marketing a green home is different, too, requiring more consumer education. Log on to You Tube to see a video DiMeco made showing the re-greening process. “People have really responded to this kind of marketing, because you see the home while it’s still in studs and can understand how it was done. Once the walls are in, you can’t see the air sealing process.” The energy efficiency trend and a desire to be more earth friendly are motivating factors in Connecticut, too. “People are concerned about the environment and energy costs and they love it when I point out those details, such as thermal windows, multi zones, glass that will absorb and release heat, all those things,” says Allison Lundie of William Raveis Real Estate, Mortgage & Insurance in Washington Depot, Connecticut. “So now I put those buzzwords, like Energy Star appliances, in the marketing copy, because it does attract interest.” She has a listing for a passive solar home in Roxbury that has drawn interest from both greenies and traditional home buyers. It has solar panels for hot water and was built with passive solar techniques, positioned on the lot to take advantage of the sun’s energy. On the inside, moveable water columns gather the sun’s heat by day and dissipate it through the slate floor by night to balance the home’s temperature in the winter. In the summer when the sun is higher in the sky, roof overhangs shield the windows from its stronger rays. “Some prospects come specifically because of its green elements. Others come because they like the area and are completely confused by the passive solar idea and the water columns, but once I explain it all


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RUGS


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GREENGOODS Ferguson

Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery is a mecca for homeowners with appetites for the new and unusual. Well-versed in the hottest trends, knowledgeable showroom consultants will walk you through functional displays of the latest plumbing fixtures, faucets, accessories, appliances and lighting from today’s quality manufacturers. Multi-functional kitchens come to life with multiple food preparation stations, ovens and refrigeration units—frequently hidden behind cabinetry. Kitchen sinks and faucets have new twists, functions and finishes, while appliances carry efficiency to a sleek new level. The Kohler Cimarron toilet, shown here, carries the WaterSense label, which means these toilets use at least 20 percent less water than standard 1.6-gallon toilets while still meeting strict flushing performance guidelines. Ferguson was awarded the 2008 WaterSense Wholesale Partner of the Year. www.ferguson.com

First Rugs It doesn’t get much more “green” than natural, undyed wool right off the sheep! Of course, if you really want to see green—or red, or blue or gold, for that matter—First Rugs can add in some natural, vegetal dyes to give you all of the green or any other color your heart desires! Thick, plush or sleek, finer weave, natural or vibrant, you’ll love snuggling up in the comfort of nature the way it should be. Thousands of hand-knotted wool and silk rugs are available at First Rugs in Acton and Danvers and at www.firstrugs.com.

LaBarge Homes LaBarge Homes, a general contracting business specializing in custom homes, has been providing high-quality green building, hurricane-resistant construction and Energy Star-rated homes since 1996. LaBarge, an NAHB Certified Green Professional, uses Insulated Concrete Forms (ICF) to create beautiful homes that honor all architectural styles while providing an energy-efficient environment, with greater design flexibility, comfort and aesthetic advantages than conventional construction. Insulated Concrete Form construction provides structural stability and a healthier living environment while reducing energy consumption by approximately 40 percent. While ideal for high-wind oceanfront home sites, ICF can be used for all energy-efficient homes, additions and pools. www.labargehomes.com

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and the energy savings something clicks and they find it very interesting,” she reports. Lundie is also on the Litchfield County Board of Realtors Green Committee, which recently held a Living Green Home Show focused on green products and technologies. “People are looking for ways to incorporate green elements into their homes; there are a lot of new products out there to accomplish that and incentives to offset cost. I think all of those factors have sparked interest.” Rebates and tax credits are available for energy-efficient building elements throughout the home, from top (roofs that resist heat gain) to bottom (geothermal heat pumps) and everywhere in between (insulation systems). You can find a comprehensive list of tax credits on www.nahb.org. The trend extends to New Hampshire, where Judi Farr is a Certified EcoBroker and NAR Certified Green Professional in Bedford. “Green building is not mainstream in New Hampshire yet— builders and remodelers are being pushed into it by those consumers who are doing their research and looking for green products. The main reason is more energy efficiency; 70 percent of people I see asking about green are concerned with energy cost first, then sustainability. They’re worried about how they can have an affordable home and not hurt the environment,” she says. There are other reasons to buy green, Farr says, and the National Association of Realtors (NAR) has outlined six different shades of green to describe buyers and their motivation. From Economizers (those interested in saving on home operating costs) to the Eco-Chic (those interested in the status and prestige of green living) and Idealists (those who feel living green is a social responsibility), it’s the Realtor’s job to know what differ-


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GREENGOODS

Maverick Integration Maverick Integration, an award-winning New England residential integration company, has been focusing on the relationship between technology and saving energy since 2003. More than 20 percent of the electricity you’ll use in your home this year will be dedicated to lighting. Maverick can introduce you to lighting control systems that go beyond dimmers into the realm of learning your lighting habits, balancing the energy efficient with an invigorating aesthetic. Add to that the heating and cooling benefits of motorized shade control and you have a technology tandem designed to maximize the efficiency of your home environment. Maverick Integration will examine your relationship with today’s technology and help you stay friends. www.maverickintegration.com

Pellettieri Associates, Inc. Protecting water quality is essential to sustaining the health of our environment. From shoreline restoration to capturing parking lot runoff, Pellettieri Associates has been a leader in implementing sustainable/green technologies that capture, filter and infiltrate runoff on all of their projects. With extensive knowledge of Best Management Practices (BMPs), LEED Certified design, rain gardens and pervious paving technologies, Pellettieri Associates takes great pride in providing innovative design solutions that exceed industry standards. www.pellettieriassoc.com

RiverBend & Company RiverBend & Company focuses on all types of high-quality appliances including Miele dishwashers, which are exceptionally quiet, durable and environmentally friendly—using as little as 1.2 gallons of water per cycle. “Miele products are high quality and very green,” says Donna Spanos, co-owner. “We feel good about selling these appliances because they are good for the environment. Their energy savings, longer lifespan and their higher level of performance ultimately result in fewer replacement costs for either the appliance itself or the items you put in it.” RiverBend offers qualitative consultations to define the right products for the lifestyle needs of its clients. www.riverbendandcompany.com

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ent green standards mean and match clients with the right home. That could get easier in New Hampshire soon. “The stricter 2009 International Energy Compliance Code was adopted by New Hampshire and went into effect April 1. That will play heavily into future construction—there are all sorts of specs for new homes that are considerably different than a home built just last year,” says Farr.

& Building Green nDesigning Building codes are playing a large part in giving green homes a higher profile, says builder Dean Chongris, owner of Ecologics Construction in Andover, Massachusetts. That town just passed a building code more stringent than the state’s that will push builders to update their practices. “When you get into a town like Andover, they want to be one of the leading green towns in the area, and we get a lot more help and support on the municipal level in terms of zoning and incentives. I’ve built green homes in other towns, but we didn’t get as much support as we would have liked,” he says. “The way I explain it is, we’re not driving around in 1960s cars, so why are we cutting up land and building houses with the same practices we had in 1960?” Conforming to existing zoning has led to inefficient land use, Chongris says. Instead of three large homes on three one-acre lots with big lawns, better to build smaller units with five homes on five onethird-acre lots, leaving the remaining land around it left undisturbed as a buffer. As a specialist in Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) homes, Chongris finds those who are already committed to green principles are the ones Continued on page 114


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GREEN LIVING Creating the Green Home in New England

CASE STUDY: A NEW HAMPSHIRE FARMHOUSE BY DIANE M. STERRETT

Lead Architect: Shannon Alther, TMS Architects • Green Consultant: Steven Strong, Solar Design Associates • Builders: Bill Grady, Grady Built and Ben Bullard, HB Bullard and Company • Location: White Mountains, New Hampshire

Green Solution: Reuse as many pieces of the old building as possible, use locally sourced materials, integrate both solar thermal and solar photovoltaics, incorporate energy-efficient design elements such as a tight building envelope, and site the home to take advantage of passive solar. The Buildings: Unfortunately, the original farmhouse that had occupied the site since 1788 had deteriorated significantly and the structure could not be saved. It was carefully deconstructed in order to reuse as many of the old materials as possible. A 6,000square-foot, three-bedroom, threebath home with an attached barn was designed to replace it. “The homeowners came to us because they wanted to do the project as green as possible, but also wanted to maintain architectural quality, which some green homes tend to lose a little bit,” says lead architect Shannon Alther. “For instance, when 112

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you add solar panels on a roof it can be tricky, you can tell they were added. So for the panels on the barn roof, we adjusted the trim and how the panels sat on the roof so from the ground it looked like the panels were actually the plane of the roof.” Sustainable Design and Materials : A high-efficiency solar photovoltaic array was installed on an animal shed to provide all the home’s electricity needs. The solar thermal panels on the entire south-facing portion of the barn roof supply domestic hot water and heat. The solar-heated water is stored in tanks in the basement, ready to be circulated throughout the home in a radiant heat flooring system. The key design element was an extremely efficient building with a double-stud wall system and foam insulation. Triple-pane windows on the north and south sides of the building reduced thermal loss, the house was oriented due south to take advantage of passive solar options. The flooring, bathtubs, soapstone sinks, backsplashes, hardware, doorknobs and granite from the original

Dan Gair, Blind Dog Photography (3)

Green Challenge: Replace an old farmstead with a more environmentally friendly home in the same footprint.

farmhouse all played a significant role in the new residence. The beams were reused in the kitchen, adding to the New England farmhouse aesthetic. New materials were locally sourced from within 100 miles. To reduce off-gassing and unhealthy air quality, paints and finishes were low VOC (volatile organic compounds). The Result: The home successfully pays homage to the original farmhouse, synthesizing old-world values and modern technology to show that sustainability can be beautiful.



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Runtal North America For years, Runtal has been the favorite among architects and designers, but today those in the green movement appreciate the other aspects of Runtal more than ever: durability, energy efficiency and cleanliness. Runtal’s unique flattened tube design, combined with a rugged all-welded steel construction, allows for significantly increased heat transfer. In addition, a well-designed Runtal system allows for a smaller boiler and pump, and usually less piping. All this adds up to a green, comfortable, attractive and efficient heating system for surprisingly little more than the old-fashioned kind. www.runtalnorthamerica.com

S+H Construction S+H Construction offers sustainable remodeling backed by a full-service, award-winning general contracting company with more than thirty years of experience. Their Green Building Program partners with designers and clients on a range of projects, from kitchens inspired by sustainability to LEED-certified new or renovated homes. The team integrates green practices with years of professional experience in high-end comfort, high-end durability, historic restoration and cutting-edge building technology. The Renewable Energy Division designs and installs solar and geothermal systems and offers energy management consulting. The Landscape and Sitework division offers sustainable elements such as permeable pavement, shade tree installation and rainwater harvesting systems. The first LEED-certified hospice in Massachusetts is shown here. www.shconstruction.com

TMS Architects TMS Architects is proud of their decades-long commitment to sustainable design and can guide you through the process of incorporating green practices into your renovation, addition or new construction. TMS is committed to conserving resources, preserving natural habitats and utilizing building practices that have an immediate positive result on a building’s performance. They focus on energy conservation, site selection and indigenous plant materials, waste recycling and water conservation. They will work with you to choose building materials that add to the overall sustainability of the project and improve indoor air quality by using low volatile organic chemicals (VOC) in paint, adhesives and carpeting. www.tmsarchitects.com

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Continued from page 110

who seek him out. But he gets an even bigger kick when someone who wasn’t looking for green buys one of his homes because they just like the design and quality. “I feel it’s a huge win whenever I sell one of my houses to someone who would not have typically built or bought green, because they don’t realize that forever and ever that house will use less energy than if it was built with conventional methods. But once they live in it and get their first miniscule gas bill, their eyes are opened to sustainable practices.” Architects Peter Feinmann and Kert Heinecke of Feinmann Inc. in Lexington, Massachusetts, agree that the green movement is still in its nascent stage, but that adopting stricter building codes will help. Some towns’ codes require a rigorous independent energy audit and a blower door test to identify air leaks and certify the home’s energy performance according to Energy Star’s Home Energy Rating System (HERS). A 70 on the HERS scale indicates that a home is approximately 30 percent more energy efficient than a typical new home built to code. The ultimate goal is to get to 0—a netzero energy home. “I think the stricter codes and government mandate will force us to start integrating energy efficiency into everything we build, from homes to rental units, raising the bar and asking for performance-based results. It’s a big shift in the industry,” Feinmann says. Sustainability has been a part of Feinmann’s approach for years, particularly working with foam insulation such as Icynene to air seal homes. Not only does it provide superior insulating to keep conditioned air in, it also keeps dust, allergens and pollutants out, creating


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GREENGOODS Triad Associates

When deciding on a hardscape project, choose the design and installation professionals who can not only ensure the job is done right for lasting results, but who also incorporate Earthfriendly principles in their designs. Permeable surfaces that help with storm water management, reduced heat island effects, conservation of natural resources: all these factors can help your project earn points from the USGBC’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program. Triad hires the most experienced, talented craftsmen in the industry and work side-by-side with landscape designers to ensure your project is as green as you’d like. Contact them for a free estimate. www.triadassociatesinc.com

Vermont Verde Antique Vermont Verde Antique is the world’s finest serpentine and has been quarried in Vermont for more than 100 years. Serpentine is an extremely durable stone with the look of marble yet is harder and less porous than many types of granite. It will not fade, stain or etch like other green marbles and can be used for any project inside or outside the home. Locally quarried in an environmentally sensitive manner, Vermont Verde Antique can assist in gaining LEED points. Having a long building life cycle and being able to be recycled into other products are all major considerations for LEED and other green certifications. www.vtverde.com

Woodmeister Master Builders Woodmeister’s mission and passion for a sustainable world extends throughout the company—from the shop floor to their clients’ homes. The company is strongly committed to incorporating state-of-the-art green technologies and strategies in order to build clean, safe, efficient and ecologically conscientious homes. As part of the company’s commitment to rational sustainability, Woodmeister pledges to preserve one square foot of timberland for every square foot of new buildings they construct or remodel. Woodmeister is leading the way into a future of responsible environmental stewardship. They invite you to experience the Woodmeister difference. www.woodmeister.com

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a healthier indoor environment. “It’s part of our process to look at a remodel project as a whole, see where a house is as a baseline and then integrate energy efficiency into the approach. There are certain things we can do as a matter of course without impacting the budget,” Heinecke adds. They have a three-step process they hope will catch on to help their clients understand what’s most important for the biggest payback: air seal, insulate, then upgrade things like windows and heating systems. It’s an education process. Cutting down consumption first by not wasting energy has a bigger payback than installing a solar panel on the roof of a traditionally built house, Heinecke says. As an example, Feinmann points out a 700-square-foot addition they built last year. By installing Icynene insulation just in the addition, they reduced air flow in the entire house by 40 percent.

Future nA InGreen the future, Farr hopes all homes for sale will use the HERS performance rating, much like radon tests, which are now automatic. “If you’re looking at a 1903 Victorian home that has been energy retrofitted versus a 1970s era home that has not, which is the better buy? The consumer needs to know how to fairly compare homes, and the performance rating is a good benchmark. It’s good for the buyer to understand why paying a premium price is worth it and for the seller to help market their home,” Farr explains. “That’s already standard practice in Europe,” Chongris says. “There, the very first line on the listing sheet—before the address and price—is the energy performance rating. It’s a trend we hope will cross the pond.” •



GREEN LIVING Creating the Green Home in New England

n

THINKING GREEN HOW GREEN IS YOUR BROKER?

PHOTO COURTESY OF BOSTON GREEN REALTY

The NAR GREEN and the Certified EcoBroker designations can identify a broker who can help you take advantage of energy efficiency and environmentally sensitive designs. Founded in 2002, EcoBroker was the first and is now the largest green real estate training program in the world. In order to earn the EcoBroker Designation, licensed real estate agents must complete an energy, environmental and marketing training program. NAR’s Green designation, launched in January 2009, also provides advanced training in green building and sustainable business practices.

HOW GREEN IS YOUR PROJECT? If you’re looking to incorporate green technologies into your home to help it sell (or just to save money), there’s an easy way to estimate the project’s return on investment (ROI): www.greenand save.com. For example, you might think installing energy-efficient windows is your best investment. But their calculator shows windows are a 2.5 year payback with a 42.9 percent ten-year ROI. On the other hand, adding programmable thermostats is only a six month payback, with a ten-year ROI of 156 percent.

An Insulated Concrete Form (ICF) home under construction: ICFs are rigid foam forms that hold concrete in place during curing and remain in place as thermal insulation for concrete walls. The result is ultra energy-efficient, durable construction with high wind resistance.

Artifacts, inspired creativity, passion and craftsmanship: consistently spectacular results from Creative Art Furniture.

Our Creative Art Furniture is made from Reclaimed Lumber and Artifacts of New England. Floor boards, walls, beams and other artifacts from Homes, Barns and Factories which are salvaged and made into Unique Furniture. Visit our Showroom or our new Website, Creative Art Furniture.com to see our latest creations.

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Renewable Energy Renewable Energy and Conservation S+H Construction offers renewable energy, conservation services, advanced HVAC systems, and energy management that can reduce your energy demand. Our solutions work for homes and businesses. Not sure where to begin? S+H offers energy conservation consultations and advice. This includes review of energy use, condition of insulation, windows and doors, lights, appliances, and HVAC systems. We offer suggestions that can immediately reduce utility bills and save money on energy use throughout the home for years to come. As general contractors we can implement improvements on the spot and also leverage our team of suppliers and specialists to build long-term solutions. Renewable energy and conservation reduces operating costs, pays back quickly, reduces carbon footprint, and delivers increased comfort to your home.

Do you know... • Significant state and federal tax incentives plus rebate programs are available to make renewable energy systems affordable for both homes and businesses. • We stay on top of the evolving incentives to help you get the most benefit from government and utility company programs. Our proposals include detailed financial models to help you evaluate the options.

Green Building Let S+H’s Green Building Program apply a sustainable building perspective to your project. Whether your priority is indoor air quality, super-insulation, lower carbon footprint, durability, efficiency, or your special mix, we can help align your new home or renovation project with your values. In addition, S+H’s Sitework Division also offers complete hardscape including sustainable elements such as permeable pavement, shade tree installation, and rainwater harvesting systems in addition to overall site improvements, plantings, gardening, water management and drainage.

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GREEN LIVING Creating the Green Home in New England

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RUNTAL NORTH AMERICA

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Franklin, Massachusetts (508) 528-0006 www.ferguson.com

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BOSTON ARCHITECTURAL COLLEGE

FIRST RUGS

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Acton, Massachusetts, (978) 263-0100 Danvers, Massachusetts, (978) 739-9033 www.firstrugs.com

Cambridge, Massachusetts (617) 876-8286 www.shconstruction.com

LABARGE HOMES

TMS ARCHITECTS

West Harwich, Massachusetts (508) 432-6360 www.labargerealestate.com

Portsmouth, New Hampshire (603) 436-4274 www.tmsarchitects.com

MAVERICK INTEGRATION

TRIAD ASSOCIATES

Bedford, New Hampshire, (603) 490-1177 Waltham, Massachusetts, (781) 890-1177 www.maverickintegration.com

Haverhill, Massachusetts (978) 373-4223 www.triadassociatesinc.com

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Boston (617) 585-0101 www.the-bac.edu/green

CHIP WEBSTER & ASSOCIATES Nantucket, Massachusetts, (888) 218-7200 Boston, (617) 357-0136 www.cwa-arch.com

CLOSET FACTORY Wilmington, Massachusetts (978) 253-4636 www.closetfactory.com

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Trade Secrets Who’s doing what, when, where and how in the New England design business

MICHAEL FEIN

BY LOUIS POSTEL

What’s a Memory Worth? THE HEADY MIX OF SUMMER RAIN AND SEA AIR ON A PROVI-

dence street. A trellis of concord grapes behind a suburban Boston Victorian. A battered trunk in an island cottage off Portland, Maine. Certain things can trigger memories so powerful they bring water to the eyes of grown men. These are the scents, sounds and spaces that transport us to childhood like the freshly baked madeleines in Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past. What will happen to these memory triggers in this new post-recessionary economy? Now that we’ve been duly chastened for our faith in upward-spiraling real estate values, will all these whimsies fall by the wayside? Much has changed forever. Priorities need to be set and budgets met. As history has shown, designers and architects have acted as the first line of defense in this regard. Even in the most prosperous times they have proven to be critical partners in setting priorities and hierarchies, presenting options and trade-offs. Right now, the design community is redoubling its efforts to add value. Still, we forecast the reemergence of the design equivalent of Proust’s madeleines—triggers that satisfy the emotions—without necessarily requiring an application for a second mortgage. • • • The French-Italian designer Nathalie Ducrest, now of 122 New England Home July/August 2010

Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, has retained the Paris-born perfumer Marc Henri, who now lives in Lexington, Massachusetts, to compose a custom home scent for a client. “In France a woman feels totally undressed without perfume. In general, women and men wear a lot more perfume than here in the States. It leaves a trace throughout their homes,” Ducrest says. A Glade Plug-In won’t quite suit the kind of luxurious home Ducrest is becoming known Nathalie Ducrest for. Henri will start the custom design process with a questionnaire before reaching for his blue bottles of bergamot, sandalwood and lavender. What scents from childhood do you remember? Summer rain on Providence pavement’s got to be a big seller. • • • Childhood wouldn’t be complete without lying on the rug some summer afternoon watching the rosettes in a chandelier catch fire as the sun makes its way west. “But the chandelier’s really got to fit the space,” says designer William Hodgins. “When it’s too small it really doesn’t work.” Hodgins and his assistant, Penny Matteson, were heading to New York to find just the right one for a client. “Our favorite is an original from H.M. Luther, but it may just be too small—and for $150,000 it’s got to be right.” • • • Few architects are as agile at balancing dreams and dollars as John DaSilva of Polhemus Savery DaSilva in Chatham on the Cape. A project in Chatham’s historic district was on hold for ten years, “but finally the family just found their original house bursting at the seams,” he says. “Our first schematic for the new house showed only a terrace with no porch to help conform to the budget. They lived with those drawings for a while, but in the end came to the conclusion that outdoor living and a covered John DaSilva porch was really, really important. And, of course, something like that is significantly more money, but well worth it.” Doubtless, freshly baked madeleines will find their way to this porch a summer or two from now. • • • Designers at the rosy dawn of their careers wisely seek out mentors such as Jody Trail of Sudbury, Massachusetts. But only so many make the grade. “I knew Sarah McGuire was the real thing when we were doing a shoot for a house on the Cape,” Trail says. “Sarah just chased the people off the beach so we could do the house. ‘Shoo, shoo, shoo’ she said, and it worked!” Boston-based McGuire and Trail and have since teamed up on Decor Kit, an online program that lets budgetminded clients get help decorating their houses. Fill out a questionnaire, send in pictures of the room you want to re-do, and Trail and McGuire send you a design plan. “Now that


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Domino magazine is gone, young people are desperate. They know their spaces aren’t coming together and feel stuck,” says Trail. • • • The intoxicating fragrance of summer rain on city pavement is hardly exclusive to Providence. And it’s drawing emptynesters in droves to high-end projects such as Boston’s Intercontinental, the Mandarin and Four Seasons, as well as to townhouses in the South End, Back Bay and Beacon Hill. To describe the ins and outs, designer Leslie Fine of Boston teamed up with architect Douglas Dick of LDa Architects in Cambridge and builder Allison Perry Iantosca of FH Perry in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, on a panel at this year’s BSA Residential Show. Dick summed up working Allison Perry Iantosca in these tight urban spaces as a “mad shuffle.” Just try moving a sprinkler situated in the center of a foyer awaiting the arrival of a chandelier. Get plans approved. Shut off all water on floor. Alert neighbors. Get inspectors over same day as installation. • • • Wallpaper is making a comeback, triggering many a childhood memory: for one homeowner it was how the peacock and pagoda patterns were lit by passing cars as she fell asleep, almost like a dream. “Bold wallpapers on the ceiling are hot,” says designer Susan Shulman of West Newton, Massachusetts. Designer Penny Daborn of Portland, Maine, agrees about the wallpaper comeback, noting the post-recessionary exuberance of citrus green and peacock blue on her latest color boards. • • • Don’t all oak floors look the same? There are only a certain number of finishes. If there’s a childhood memory attached it’s usually about splinters or spilt milk. But not anymore, according to Medfield architect David Sharff, who is in the midst of fusing two chopped-up Back Bay condos into a streamlined big one for a growing family. “The floors are a new product from Italy we found at Paris Ceramics in the Boston Design Center, manufactured by Itlas,” he says. “It’s a thickly veneered oak over plywood, a completely engineered product so we knew the finish would look just like the sample.” Sharff is part of a team that includes interior designer Amy McFadden and one of


Back Bay’s preferred builders, Rick Cantelli of C-Concept. • • • Surely, for some toddler a madeleine will prove mighty tasty eaten right off those imported boards. Hard-headed, dollars and cents advisers may wince and harrumph while unfurling their spreadsheets. But, fortunately, homeowners have equally sagacious voices in their corner. If anything, their architects and designers have become even more skilled at resolving the perplexities of future investment value with the fondest remembrances of things past. •

Patti Watson 401 . 423 . 3639 tastedesigninc.com

What makes an interior sexy? Some of us might envision a four-poster bed with cupid finials and goosedown everything. But sexy can be something else, at least to one of the jurors of the BSA/AIA New York 2010 Housing Design Awards. Of Ruhl Walker’s winning Boston loft, the jurors’ Citation for Interior Design read: “This dwelling makes good use of previously undeveloped industrial space, and at least one of us found it nothing short of sexy . . .”

renovation planning interior design decoration

Congratulations to Jack Parquette, who just became the new president of GerrityStone Design Center in Woburn, Massachusetts. GerrityStone’s granite reaches well beyond the common variety stuff: there you find hangars of fantastically patterned stone (not just granite) from all over the planet; stone that brings you back to the most violent beginnings of Earth, when boulders the size of Hummers sailed routinely through the air. Four hundred millennia later, the stone meets GerrityStone’s many technical innovations and stone cutting techniques. This year marks three decades in business for Laura and John Meyer, the designer and architect duo at the helm of Boston’s Meyer and Meyer Architecture and Interiors. TS sends warm wishes for a happy anniversary to the team, which has won numerous PRISM awards and a 2009 Best of Boston Architecture award. Studio Dunn, a woodworking shop in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, headed up by two RISD grads, is just getting started but recognition is already coming its way. The company was honored in May at the International Contemporary Furniture Fair in New York City, winning an Editors Award as the year’s Best New Designer.

PHOTOS BY ROBYN IVY PHOTOGRAPHY

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Design Life Out and about in celebration of design and architecture in New England

THERE’S NO BETTER WAY TO KICK OFF SUMMER THAN WITH

DIANE C. PONTIOUS, DCPHOTO PRO

a party by the ocean. Some 700 people turned out to celebrate the opening of the OCEAN HOUSE in Watch Hill, Rhode Island, where the only thing that rivaled the beauty of the newly renovated hotel and condominiums was the spectacular view as afternoon turned to twilight. Among the guests was a surprise visitor—MSNBC personality and former Florida congressman Joe Scarborough, who just happened to have chosen the spot for a weekend away with his wife and children. We had such a good time, we went back to help kick off the SHOW YOUR CAUSE designer show house, where five suites were decorated by area designers to raise money for more than two dozen charities. Designer John Derian paid a visit to his home state to celebrate the launch of his furniture collection at a party at LEKKER HOME’s flagship Boston store. Derian’s new Should furniture line is not only stylish, it’s also your party be eco-friendly, made with soy-based here? Send photographs foam and domestic maple certified by or high-resolution images, with information about the the Forest Stewardship Council. event and the people in the This year’s AD 20/21, the Boston photos, to New England Home, art and design show that celebrates 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302, Boston, MA 02118, or e-mail modern and contemporary work, images and information to also had a special guest: internationalpbodah@nehome ly renowned furniture designer Dakota mag.com. Jackson, who was presented with the AD 20/21 Lifetime Achievement Award for 2010. Rugs aren’t the only art form the folks at FIRST RUGS like to promote. The Acton, Massachusetts, store and gallery recently hosted Girls and Graffiti, an exhibit of frescoes by Kayo Burmon and vessels by Nancy Arkuss. The opening party featured blue cocktails inspired by one of Burmon’s pieces. The cocktails weren’t blue, but the atmosphere was festive all the same for the BOSTON SHADE COMPANY’s party to celebrate the opening of its spacious new showroom in the Boston Design Center.

LEKKER HOME From left to right: John Derian • Jeffrey Katz and Natalie van Dijk Carpenter

OCEAN HOUSE From top to bottom: Jordan Stone, Mark Banfield and Colin Kane • Ocean House’s Daniel Hostettler, Debra and Charles M. Royce with Suzanne Carcieri and Rhode Island Governor Donald Carcieri • Maureen Brennan and Jordan Stone • David Glaski, New England Home’s Robin Schubel and Paula Bodah, Mona Downey 126 New England Home July/August 2010


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architect: maryann thompson architects

architect: hope strode

paquette associates Inc. 78 main street westford, ma 01886 phone 978-840-1500 paquetteassociates.com

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Design Life

BOSTON SHADE COMPANY From left to right: Betsy Sweat, Sara Smarr and Boston Shade’s Alex Morales • Bob Ernst, Leslie MacKinnon, New England Home’s Angie Stevenson • Boston Shade Company president Jared Layton and Eileen Patterson

FIRST RUGS From top to bottom: Mary Donovan and Karen Nascembeni of First Rugs with Carol Krauss • Debbie MacKenzie of First Rugs and Carol Friedman • Katrina Iserman, Deb Mitchell, Steven Richard and Kathy Bautze

AD 20/21 From left to right: Ted Landsmark and Dakota Jackson • Dakota Jackson and New England Home’s Kyle Hoepner

SHOW YOUR CAUSE

128 New England Home July/August 2010

STEVEN RICHARD PHOTOGRAPHY

JEREMIAH ADAMETZ

From top, left to right: Cindy Rinfret and Ocean House owner Charles Royce • Lisa Ballou and Susan Loney • Peter Niemitz and Meg Lyons • Grant Simmons and Deni Catullo


M V F O O DA N D W I N E . C O M Purchase tickets at mvol.com In partnership with Sponsored by:

A portion of the proceeds benefit the Martha’s Vineyard Boys & Girls Club, the Martha’s Vineyard Museum, and the YMCA of Martha’s Vineyard.


Calendar Special events for people who are passionate about design

Now in the Galleries

JULY 1

Tour of Oak Bluffs Cottages Learn more about one of the Vineyard’s distinctive architectural landmarks, the diminutive Victorian cottages at the Camp Meeting Association grounds, a National Historic Landmark. The ninety-minute tours, offered on Tuesdays and Thursdays beginning at 10 a.m. during the season, include a visit to the Cottage Museum. Oak Bluffs, Mass.; (508) 693-0525; www.mvcma.org; $10

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and a wine tasting. Nursery specials. Also September 4–5. Churchill’s Gardens, 12 Hampton Rd., Exeter, N.H.; (603) 502-7992; www.churchillsgardens .com; Sat. 10 a.m.–7 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; free

Through August 28

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Seaside Gardens Through July 10

Tour some of Rockport’s diverse private seaside gardens, many open to the public for the first time. The tour consists of ten stops and features fifteen gardens, each offering unique plantings and gardening styles. Perennials, refreshments and original art will be offered for sale at designated tour sites. Rockport, Mass., (978) 546-2250; www.rockportgarden club.org; 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $25

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Provincetown Art Association and Museum’s 13th Annual Secret Garden Tour A walking tour of ten fragrant and visually stunning private gardens in Provincetown. Guests are led through hidden stone paths and crooked wooden walkways into borders and beds of specimen plants, common and exotic flowers and lush greenery. Free parking, shuttle service and tour book. Proceeds benefit PAAM exhibitions and educational programs. Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, Mass.; (508) 487-1750; www.paam.org; 10 a.m.–3 p.m.; $30 Brimfield Antiques Show

10 Art in the Garden Through July 11

The Seacoast Fine Art & Gift Market brings their luxury handcrafted event to the exquisite grounds of Churchill’s Gardens; shop amongst New Englandbased craftsmen and artists as they exhibit fine crafts, custom furniture, original art, garden decor and more. On Saturday evening, enjoy music, food

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Nantucket Summer Kitchens Tour Sponsored by the Nantucket Preservation Trust, the tour features historic homes and kitchens on Union Street in Nantucket. The tour will focus on how homes can be sensitively updated and historic kitchens incorporated into everyday life. Nantucket, Mass.; (508) 228-1387; www.nantucketpreservation .org; 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $45 Lakeside Living Expo Through July 18

The Lakeside Living Expo invites you to a celebration of lake homes, Adirondack

Send notice of events and gallery shows to Calendar Editor, New England Home, 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302, Boston, MA 02118, or by e-mail to calendar@nehomemag.com. Photos and slides are welcome. Please submit information at least three months in advance of your event. 130 New England Home July/August 2010

Boston (617) 859-7222 www.chasegallery.com Summer Show July 1–31 Select new work by a number of gallery artists

Quidley & Company Nantucket (508) 228-4300 www.quidleyandco.com Anthony Panzera July 9–21 A series of works examines the sea and coastline of Nantucket, a subject that has inspired and captivated Anthony Panzera since 1978 Sean Beavers August 20–31 Sean Beavers is rapidly gaining a national reputation for his take on contemporary realism

Through July 18

The largest antiques show in the country is actually a smorgasbord of about twenty privately run shows featuring more than 6,000 dealers spread out over a mile in this quaint Massachusetts town. Route 20, Brimfield, Mass.; www .brimfieldshow.com; starts at daybreak; check Web site for show admission prices

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Chase Gallery

Charlestown Gallery Charlestown, Rhode Island (401) 364-0120 www.charlestowngalleryri.com Antonia Tyz Peeples: Recent Paintings July 10–28 Recent work by Connecticut native Antonia Tyz Peeples, best known for her seascape paintings Man vs. Nature July 31–August 18 Paintings by Mark Freedman and Paula Martiesian

Greenhut Galleries Portland, Maine (888) 772-2693 www.greenhutgalleries.com John Whalley August 5–28 Hailed by critics as “an artist of painstaking precision whether working in oils, egg tempera, or graphite”

The Schoolhouse Gallery Provincetown (508) 487-4800 www.schoolhouseprovincetown.com Adam Davies August 6–25 Photographer Adam Davies explores urban and rural landscapes


Fine Renovations • Custom Cabinetry • Unique Stone Surfaces

508.829.5004 • www.beacondevelopers.com


Calendar furniture and decor, boats and outdoor water sports adventure and more. More than 250 companies featuring 300 exhibits from around the Lakes Region, across the United States and Canada will feature their products and services. Gunstock Mountain Resort, Gilford, N.H.; (518) 479-3976; www.lakeside livingexpo.com; Fri. 11 a.m.–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $9

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settings. Union Arena Community Center, Woodstock, Vt., (802) 885-3705, www.vada.com; check Web site for times and ticket pricing

AUGUST 1

Rock River Artists Open Studio Tour Through July 18

This annual self-guided tour explores the breathtaking scenery and artwork surrounding Newfane, Vermont. All within a twelve-mile radius, twenty world-class artists open up their homes, gardens and studios to the public for the weekend. Newfane, Vt., (802) 2589082; www.rockriverartists.com

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Old York Historical Society’s 21st Annual Designer Show House

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New England Dream House/New England Home Episode Join New England Dream House host Jenny Johnson and New England Home’s Stacy Kunstel for a tour of the Essex, Connecticut, home featured in this issue. The initial airing will be at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. It will also air at 3 p.m. on July 19, 22, 27 and August 4. You can see the story online at www .nedreamhouse.com starting July 18.

25th Annual Pops by the Sea Under the baton of maestro Keith Lockhart and a celebrity guest conductor, this fundraising concert usually draws a live audience of more than 15,000—the Cape’s largest single audience. Sit at VIP tables, festival seating or on the lawn to enjoy this magical afternoon event. Gates open at 1 p.m. with pre-show entertainment. Hyannis Village Green, Hyannis, Mass.; (508) 362-0066; www.artsfoundation.org; 5–7 p.m.; check Web site for pricing

This annual antiques show benefiting the island’s historical association is managed by the Antiques Council and draws high-end vendors from around the country. Bartlett’s Farm, 33 Bartlett Farm Rd., Nantucket, Mass.; (508) 2281894 ext. 130; www.nha.org; preview party Thurs. 6–9 p.m.; Fri.–Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $125 for preview, $15 for show

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The Annual League of NH Craftsmen’s Fair Through August 15

More than 200 members of the League of New Hampshire will display their work at this popular fair. Almost every type of craft medium will be represented—furniture, jewelry, glass, pottery, prints, woodcarvings—along with daily demonstrations and workshops for all ages. Mount Sunapee Resort, Newbury, N.H.; www.nhcrafts.org; (603)224-3375; 10 a.m.–5 p.m. daily; $10

Through August 1

132 New England Home July/August 2010

8th Annual Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Show Through August 15

The only in-the-water event of its kind in the state, the show gathers some of the finest examples of Maine-built boats from rowing craft to sailboats and power yachts, as well as marine supplies, fine furnishings and home wares, art and jewelry, and a new area dedicated to sustainable living and design. Rockland, Maine, (207) 236-8622; www.maineboats .com/boatshow; Fri.–Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $12

Nantucket Historical Association’s August Antiques Show

36th Annual VADA Antiques Show This year the Vermont Antiques Dealers’ Association has joined forces with the Green Mountain Antiques Show to present “The Best Antiques Vermont has to Offer,” with more than fifty-eight dealers exhibiting in room

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Through August 8

Through August 14

Join the Old York Historical Society as they visit Twin Cottage in York Harbor, chosen as this year’s show house. Interior designers have restored and decorated dozens of spaces throughout the house— making it a great place to discover new ideas. An opening night celebration will take place at the show house on Friday, July 16 (6–9 p.m.; $50 per ticket). 6 Starboard Lane, York Harbor, Maine; (207) 363-4974; www.oldyork.org; Mon., Wed.–Sat. 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Thurs. until 7 p.m., Sun. 1 p.m.–4 p.m.; $20

The fifty-third edition features sixtyeight dealers of high quality antiques— from folk art to fine porcelain, country and formal furniture to paintings and prints—who have set aside “new to market” merchandise in anticipation of this summer’s big event. The Center of New Hampshire Radisson Hotel, Manchester, N.H., (603) 585-9199; www .nhada.org; Thurs.–Fri. 10 a.m.–7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; $10-$15, visitors under 30 free

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Fourth Annual Newport Antiques Show Through August 15

Newport Antiques Show celebrates its fourth year with and exhibit of scrimshaw and ivory pieces from the collections of the Newport Historical Society. More than forty of the industry’s finest dealers will showcase the best the antiques world has to offer to more than 2,500 visitors. Proceeds benefit both the Newport Historical Society and the Boys & Girls Club of Newport. Gala Preview on Friday, August 13 (6–9 p.m.; $100– $500 per ticket). Stephen P. Cabot and Archer Harman Ice Center, St. George’s School, Middletown, R.I., (401) 846-2669; www.newportantiquesshow.com; Sat. 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; $12

28 40th Annual Falmouth

Antiques Show and Sale Browse a wide variety of furniture and artwork at this annual antiques show, held on the museum grounds. Falmouth Museums on the Green, 55 Palmer Ave., Falmouth, Mass.; (508) 548-4857; www.falmouthhistoricalsociety.org; 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; check Web site for pricing •

See more @ nehomemag.com

12 53rd Annual New Hampshire Antiques Show

Through August 14

Find additional and expanded listings of events and gallery shows. Click on “The Design Life” and then “Calendar of Events.”



Perspectives Fresh outlooks on design and resources

The Family Room: Sectional Sofas

• The perfect family room, envisioned by three area designers • Wish List: Susan Shulman shares some of her favorite resources • It’s Personal: Finds from the staff of New England Home

DUNCAN HUGHES

DellaRobbia USA Sofa “A fantastic sofa for a big family. It’s modular, with a circular shape that lends itself to TV time, playing games or lively conversations. The extra-deep seats are perfect for curling up with Mom and Dad for story time. Add a durable, stain-resistant fabric and it’ll take anything a busy family can dish out!” FROM ITALIAN DESIGN, BROOKLINE, MASS., (617) 731-4222, WWW.ITALIAN-DESIGN.NET

ANA DONOHUE

B&B Italia Charles Sectional “The super-contemporary Charles Sectional is so sleek and so unexpected for a media room, but the bigger surprise is that it’s oh-so-comfy. Once you’ve settled in for a movie you will never want to leave.” FROM MONTAGE, BOSTON, (617) 451-9400, WWW.MONTAGEWEB.COM

LINDA BANKS

Edie Sectional from Lee Industries “This is my favorite playroom/family room sectional because it is actually made up of two twin-size mattresses, making it perfect for lounging or sleepovers. I especially like the French mattress styling detail for the cushions.” FROM SIMPLY HOME, FALMOUTH, MAINE, (207) 781-5651, WWW.SIMPLYHOMEPAGE.COM

134 New England Home July/August 2010

Designer Linda Banks, who also owns the Simply Home retail shop, loves creating happy, livable and light-hearted family homes where children are welcome in every part of the house. Falmouth, Maine, (207) 781-5651, www.banksdesignassociates.com


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Y E A R S

creating

h e i r l o o m s ...

h u t k e r

a r c h i t e c t s

Martha’s Vineyard • Nantucket 508-693-3344 Cape Cod 508-540-0048

H

www.hutkerarchitects.com A R C H I T E C T U R E :: I N T E R I O R D E S I G N


Perspectives

Media Systems

DUNCAN HUGHES

Lewis Mittman Media Unit “Who says media units have to be utilitarian looking? Add a bit of fun and glamour to your family room with this stunner. Your flat-screen TV and other equipment can go in the top, and games and toys can be stored in the bottom cabinets.” FROM THE MARTIN GROUP, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 951-2526, WWW.MARTINGROUPINC.COM

ANA DONOHUE

Oscar de la Renta Credenza “I never like to use a media cabinet that actually looks like a media cabinet. This Chinese-style credenza is so much more fun. The detail on the latches is like jewelry and can make a media room a bit more interesting. It’s available in a number of custom finishes and colors.” FROM CENTURY FURNITURE, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 737-0501, WWW.CENTURYFURNITURE.COM

Ana Donohue’s selections for the family room reflect her own penchant for creating spaces with a unique, unexpected style. Melrose, Mass., (617) 331-2663, www.anadonohueinteriors.com 136 New England Home July/August 2010

LINDA BANKS

Sarreid Wall Unit “This ultraflexible display and storage cabinet has a subtle weathered finish and an air of industrial chic. Suitable to display a TV, books or collections, or great for office use. I love the open, airy feel.” FROM SIMPLY HOME


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Perspectives

Rugs

ANA DONOHUE

Qashqai Persian Rug “I love a beautiful Persian rug, and this one-of-a-kind piece is spectacular. The pattern is busy enough to disguise little messes, and the rug is made to last for generations. A rug like this is a great complement to any contemporary piece of furniture.” FROM LANDRY & ARCARI, BOSTON, (617) 399-6500, AND SALEM, MASS., (800) 649-5909, WWW.LANDRYANDACARI.COM

LINDA BANKS

Hooked Rug from the New England Collection “One of my favorite patterns in a vintage reproduction hooked rug! I love the simple repetition and the gentle colors. It’s also practical—hides spills and is washable.” FROM SIMPLY HOME

Duncan Hughes recognizes that, just because your kids may run wild throughout your home, it doesn’t mean you can’t have sophisticated interior design. Good design, he believes, meets a client’s needs both functionally and aesthetically. Duncan Hughes Interiors, Boston, (617) 426-1440, www.duncanhughes.com 138 New England Home July/August 2010

DUNCAN HUGHES

Dabbieri Patchwork Cowhide Rug “Topping the list for durability, natural cowhide is well-equipped to handle the traffic of a family room. It wears well and is easy to care for. Regular vacuuming and a bit of soap and water for spills is all you need to maintain this classic and nearly indestructible floor covering.” FROM LANDRY & ARCARI


Custom Homes Additions Renovations Architecture and photography by Marcus Gleysteen, AIA

310 Washington Street Wellesley Hills, MA 02481

Boston Home

T E W

781 416 7007 sanfordcustom@aol.com sanfordcustom.com

2009 Best of Boston Builder, West

Antique Pool Table Sales and Restorations 343 MEDFORD STREET, SOMERVILLE, MA 02145 800-479-1661 www.bostonbilliards.net


Perspectives • Wish List

LARA TOMLIN

What are some things you’d love to use in a project?

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Susan Shulman, West Newton, Massachusetts Susan Shulman’s design degree from the University of Maryland took her first into graphic design and advertising and then into the fashion industry as a buyer. During her frequent trips to New York City’s Seventh Avenue, she found herself immersed in the world of fabrics. “I learned all about them, their different properties, how different content behaves under different conditions,” she says. It wasn’t long before she began to think about fabric in terms of interior design, rather than fashion. “The field of interior design is so closely related to fashion, it was a logical extension of my education in the field to move into interiors,” she says. For nearly twenty years now, she has been working with clients to help them create homes that are sophisticated but practical, unique to each homeowner but enduring in style. Her description of a beautifully designed room is “one that functions well, looks harmonious and will feel as timeless and comfortable tomorrow as it does today.” The products she highlights here reflect her concern for marrying beauty with practicality.

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1 Keith Fritz Chatham Dining Table “If you have a large family or lots of company, look no further for the rightsized table. I love the graceful curves and the sunburst veneer top of this table made with natural coromandel ebony.” FROM M-GEOUGH, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 451-1412, WWW.M-GEOUGH.COM

2 Kravetsmart Middlebury Chair “I love the way this modern-day wing chair’s leg detail continues up through its updated curved arm.” FROM KRAVET, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 449-5506, WWW.KRAVET.COM

5

6

3 Ikat Fabric “I’d use this fabric to cover the Middlebury Chair. It’s also from the Kravetsmart Collection, and is free when it’s selected as upholstery for any of their furniture from the same collection.” FROM KRAVET 4 Voile Wallpaper from Elitis France “This organic-looking non-woven wallcovering is washable and fire-resistant. Reminiscent of a sheer fabric, it adds height and dimension as well as shimmery glamour.” FROM DONGHIA, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 574-9292, WWW.DONGHIA.COM

5 JAB Metropolitan Hardware “With today’s wide-spanned windows, I like this hardware that features a 1 1⁄16" rod with an integral system that allows it to span up to nine feet without a center bracket. It comes in polished or brushed brass or nickel as well as in white.” FROM JAB USA AT STROHEIM AND ROMANN, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 449-5506, WWW.STROHEIM.COM

6 Talea Table by Evan Lewis “The concept of an occasional table that tucks into the sides or front of a sofa is so useful for tight spaces and does away with the old-fashioned tray table. This clean-lined bronze-finish table of steel has half-inch starfire glass for an extra clear look.” FROM THE BRIGHT GROUP, BOSTON DESIGN CENTER, (617) 345-8017, WWW.THEBRIGHTGROUP.COM

140 New England Home July/August 2010


Models on Display

Fine POST & BEAM Carriage Houses, Garden Sheds & Country Barns, Shipped Nationwide 326 Gilead St. Hebron, CT 06248 www.countrycarpenters.com 860.228.2276

Comfor tably sumptuous home furnishings for your exceptional coastal home.

www.CottageandBungalow.com


Perspectives • It’s Personal Favorite finds from the staff of New England Home

Kyle Hoepner, Editor-in-Chief It fascinated me at once. Tailored yet voluptuous. Vibrant yet subdued. Perched insouciantly on a chair of impeccably modern street cred in the chaste surroundings of Boston's D Scale furniture boutique. My heart leapt; my fingers itched to caress the taut, textured skin. Was I wrong to feel all this . . . just for a pillow? Fiber artist Katherine MacColl probably wouldn't think so. After all, she gave up a career in mental health to consummate, full-time, her lifelong affair with pillows. Working in her Conway, Massachusetts, studio, MacColl hand-dyes tightly woven cotton fabrics to acheve deep and not-too-uniform hues, cuts them into strips of varying widths, then folds, presses and weaves them together into subtle grids. An exacting art that results in a sort of Albers-like (Anni or Josef, take your pick) effect of harmonized color blocks, in miniature, on your sofa or chair. Seductive. $175. D SCALE, BOSTON, (617) 426-1055, WWW.DSCALEMODERN.COM, WWW.KMDESIGNSPILLOWS.COM

Stacy Kunstel, Homes Editor

Paula M. Bodah, Senior Editor I’m a fan of just about anything old and Asian, so if I had one more square inch of space in my house it would go to this circa-1840s Chinese writing chair. Chester E. Chandronnet, owner of the new Wickford Antique Estate Liquidators (conveniently located right around the corner from me), actually specializes in mid-1800s American furniture. Lately, though, he’s been lucky enough to find a trove of Chinese pieces, including this sweet chair. Remnants of its red lacquer finish and mother-ofpearl inlays still show—especially around the hand-carved flowers, birds and Chinese figures on its back. Chandronnet has two of them, so even if I decide to indulge myself, there’s still one left for you. $2,200. WICKFORD ANTIQUE ESTATE LIQUIDATORS, NORTH KINGSTOWN, R.I., (401) 294-9707

142 New England Home July/August 2010

All the beauty I’ve been finding lately comes from nature, including this Indian Lake Console Table created by artist and craftsman Danny Oates. Oates smooths the walnut slabs to the softness of a freshly shorn lamb, leaving edges uneven and finishing the piece with tung oil and beeswax. The custom-made table’s only embellishments are its own burls and grain, making mother nature the star. While the obviously perfect spot to show it off might be in an entryway or as a sofa table, I’d love to see it as a console in a dining room, holding an elegant tray of cordials and cut crystal. Oates, a sculptor based in Sharon, Connecticut, is part of DBO Home, which also sells a nature-inspired line of pottery and lighting. His table, shown here in claro walnut, is also available in myrtle or English elm. SHOWN, 6’L X 20”X 28”H. $4,500. (860) 3646008, WWW.DBOHOME.COM


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Resources A guide to the products and professionals in this issue’s featured homes

Discover the Latest Trends in Flooring

REFRESHER COURSE PAGES 62–71 BASHFUL BEAUTY PAGES 52–59 Architect: Patrick Ahearn, Ahearn-Schopfer and Associates, Boston, (617) 266-1710, www.ahearnschopfer.com Interior designer: Marigil M. Walsh, Gil Walsh Interiors LLC, Riviera Beach, Fla., (561) 932-0631

WWW.NEHOMEMAG.COM

Our online videos, brought to you by leading design correspondents (our editors!), showcase emerging trends in kitchens, bath, furniture, home technology and more.

Now Live!

Flooring Sponsored by

144 New England Home July/August 2010

Interior designer: Charles Spada, Charles Spada Interiors, Boston, (617) 204-9270, www .antiqueson5.com Upholstery throughout: Partners in Design, Newton, Mass., (617) 965-1950 Curtain construction throughout: Eliot Wright Workroom, Boston, (617) 542-3605

Project managers: Holly Stephan and Kalna

Page 62: Embroidered pillow on armchair

Miller, Gil Walsh Interiors

from Webster & Co., Boston Design Center,

Builder: Rosbeck Builders Corporation, Edgar-

(617) 266-4121, www.webstercompany.com;

town, Mass., (508) 693-6300, www.rosbeck

throw from Muse Group through Webster &

builders.com

Co.; painting on mantel by George Bruestle

Landscape designer: Michael Donaroma,

through the Cooley Gallery, Old Lyme, Conn.,

Donaroma’s Nursery & Landscape Services,

(860) 434-8807, www.cooleygallery.com.

Edgartown, Mass., (508) 627-3036, www

Pages 64–66: Painting behind sofa by George

.donaromas.com

Bruestle through the Cooley Gallery; sofa fab-

Pages 54–55: Sofa and plaid armchair from

ric from Clarence House through Webster &

Charles Stewart Company, Hickory, N.C.,

Co.; coffee table through Charles Spada Inte-

(828) 322-9464, www.charlesstewart

riors; armchair and ottoman fabric from

company.com; floral wing chair from Brun-

Clarence House through Webster & Co.; Louis

schwig et Fils, Boston Design Center, (617)

XVI chair fabric from Clarence House through

348-2855, www.brunschwig.com; coffee

Webster & Co.; rug from Steven King, Boston

table from Antique Designs, Inglewood,

Design Center, (617) 426-3303,

Calif., (310) 671-54000, www.antiquedesigns

www.stevenkinginc.com; foyer lantern from

.net; end tables from Wright Table Company,

Vaughn Lighting through Webster & Co.

Morganton, N.C., (828) 437-2766, www

Page 67: Curtain fabric from Scalamandré,

.wrighttable.com; Asian shoe shine box from

Boston Design Center, (617) 574-9261, www

Lotus Arts, High Point, N.C., (336) 889-2817,

.scalamandre.com; chair fabric from Brun-

www.lotusarts.net; painted Avignon Blue

schwig et Fils.

balustrade table lamp from The Natural

Page 68: Breakfast area chair fabric by Marvic

Light, Panama City, Fla., (800) 331-3898,

Textiles through Charles Spada Interiors; stay

www.thenaturallight.com; rug from Stark

rail by Grayson Reinwald, Deep River, Conn.,

Carpet, Boston Design Center, (617) 357-552,

(860) 395-7707; sconces from The Martin

www.starkcarpet.com.

Group, Boston Design Center, (617) 951-2526,

Page 57: Dining table from Fauld Town and

www.martingroupinc.com; porch cafe chairs

Country Furniture, High Point, N.C., (336) 431-

from Antiques on 5, Boston Design Center,

4355, www.fauld.com; sideboard from Antique

(617) 951-0008, www.antiqueson5.com; stone

Designs; Windsor dining chairs from Warren

floor by Todd Vose Masonry, Chester, Conn.,

Chair Works, Warren, R.I., (401) 247-0426,

(860) 399-9124.

www.warrenchairworks.com; chandelier from

Page 69: Chair fabric from Brunschwig et Fils.

Authentic Designs, West Rupert, Vt., (802) 394-

Page 70: Bathroom rug from Steven King;

7713, www.authenticdesigns.com; candlestick

guest room quilts from Ralph Lauren, www

lamps from Dash and Albert, Pittsfield, Mass.,

.ralphlaurenhome; headboard fabric from Mar-

(800) 658-5035, www.dashandalbert.com;

vic Textiles through Charles Spada Interiors;

woven blinds from Hunter Douglas, Broomfield,

milking stools from Antiques on 5; curtain

Colo., (800) 789-0331, www.hunterdouglas.com.

fabric from Webster & Co.; botantical prints

Page 59: Four-poster bed from Wright Table

from Roger Lussier, Boston, (617) 536-0069;

Company; club chair by Lee Industries, New-

all furniture from Antiques on 5.

ton, N.C., (800) 892-7150, www.leeindustries

Page 71: Bed linens from Pratesi, www.pratesi

.com; pedestal side table from Antique De-

.com; throw from Muse Group through Web-

signs; alabaster lamp from the Antiquarian

ster & Co.; rug from Steven King; demilune

Shop, Sewickley, Penn., (312) 741-1969, www

from Antiques on 5; headboard and bed skirt

.antiquarianshop.com; linens by Peacock Alley,

fabrics from Marvic Textiles through Charles

Dallas, Texas, (214) 744-0399, www.peacock

Spada Interiors; chair fabric from F. Schu-

alley.com; area rugs from Stark Carpet; blinds

macher, Boston Design Center, (617) 482-

by Hunter Douglas.

9165, www.fschumacher.com.


island inspired c furniture textiles accessories c architecture & interior design 12 candle street, nantucket, ma 02554 c 508.228.0677 c www.belongings.com relaxed sophistication Âś simple, beautiful, beach luxury


Resources

Wall Coverings Fabrics Lighting Fireplaces

BOSTON and EASTON BOSTON

www.EcoModernDesign.com

Floors

617.261.0300

146 New England Home July/August 2010

WATERFRONT REVIVAL PAGES 74–83 Architect: Thomas Catalano, Catalano Architects, Boston, (617) 338-7447, www.catalanoinc.com Interior designers: Fotene Demoulas and Jill Diamandis, Fotene Design, Boston, (617) 4370029, www.fotenedesign.com Landscape architect: John Grove, Reed Hilderbrand Associates, Watertown, Mass., (617) 923-2422, www.reedhilderbrand.com Builder: L.H.S. Construction, Pocasset, Mass., (508) 564-7877 Art throughout: Through Schiff Fine Art, New York City, (646) 478-8561, www .schifffineart.com Page 74: Rug from Steven King, Boston Design Center, (617) 426-3303, www.stevenkinginc.com; sideboard from FDO Group, Boston Design Center, (617) 737-2800, www.fdogroup.com. Pages 76–77: Outdoor furniture from David Sutherland through Webster & Co., Boston Design Center, (617) 261-9660, www.webster company.com, www.sutherlandfurniture.com, with Sunbrella fabric through Webster & Co. Pages 78–79: Carpet from Yayla Tribal Rugs, Cambridge, Mass., (617) 576-3249, www.yayla .com; millwork by Charles Fagan, Fagan Woodworking Company, Scituate, Mass., (781) 545-0558. Pages 80–81: Milling Road dining table and chairs from Baker, Knapp and Tubbs, Boston Design Center, (617) 449-5506, www.baker furniture.com; rug from Steven King.

EASYGOING ELEGANCE PAGES 86–95 Interior design: Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake, Bierly-Drake Associates, Boston, (617) 247-0081, www.bierly-drake.com Builder: John DaSilva, Better Homes & Kitchens, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 221-1475 Landscaping: Mark Norris, Nantucket Lawn & Garden, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 566-2013, www.nantucketlawnandgarden.com Page 86: Swedish chest from Wilson Antiques, West Palm Beach, Fla., (561) 802-3881; Check Paperweave wallcovering in charcoal and white from F. Schumacher & Co., Boston Design Center, (617) 482-9165, www .fschumacher.com. Pages 88–89: All upholstery from McLaughlin Upholstering, Everett, Mass., (617) 389-0761, www.mclaughlinupholstering.com; Nantucket sofa and twin Nantucket lounge chairs designed by Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake with McLaughlin Upholstering; black-and-linen Zebra toss pillows from Scalamandré, Boston

Design Center, (617) 574-9261, www .scalamandre.com; twin raffia-covered Hannah chairs from Oly Studio, New York City, (212) 219-8969, www.olystudio.com; Treillage side tables from John Rosselli Antiques, (212) 7500060, www.johnrosselliantiques.com; table lamps from Wicker Works through Webster & Co., Boston Design Center, (617) 261-9660, www.webstercompany.com, with shade and wiring from Blanche P. Field, Boston Design Center, (617) 423-0715, www.blanchefield.com; Christine cocktail table with antique mirrored top from Oly Studio; black-and-white cotton dhurrie rug from Stark Carpet, Boston Design Center, (617) 357-5525, www.starkcarpet.com; wall color throughout is White Dove from Benjamin Moore, www.benjaminmoore.com. Page 90: Adirondack chairs designed by Lee Bierly and Christopher Drake, fabricated by John DaSilva, Better Homes & Kitchens; Nantucket Collection porch furniture from Restoration Hardware, www.restorationhardware.com. Page 91: Mixed-media artwork above fireplace by Mellie Cooper through Janice Aldridge, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 228-6673; Gooseneck faucet from Chicago Faucets, www.chicago faucets.com. Page 92: Sub-Zero and Wolf appliances from Clarke Distributors through Marine Home Center, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 228-0900, www.marinehomecenter.com; wall-mounted polished nickel Map lights from Urban Archaeology, Boston Design Center, (617) 7374646, www.urbanarchaeology.com; artwork by Jesse Howard through Harvey Art & Antiques, Evanston, Ill., (847) 866-6766, www .harveyantiques.com; carpet runner from Stark Carpet; cabinet hardware from Period Hardware, Boston, (617) 227-0758, www.pfh co.com; Queen Anne Love Chair from McLaughlin Upholstering, covered in a quilt from Nantucket Country Antiques, (508) 2288868, www.nantucketcountryantiques.com; artwork above chair also from Nantucket Country Antiques. Page 93: Bamboo chairs through www .directorschairs.com; antique English hunt dining table from The Elephant’s Foot, West Palm Beach, Fla., (828) 526-5451, www.the elephantsfoot.com; pair of Swedish candle sconces from John Rugge Antiques Shop, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 325-7920. Page 94: Lockport sofa from Crate & Barrel, www.crateandbarrel.com; black-and-white Eisenhower wing chair and tufted ottoman from FDO Group, Boston Design Center, (617) 737-2800, www.fdogroup.com; wiring and shades for antique Hediard tea caddies from Blanche P. Field; black-and-natural sisal Joshua carpet from Stark Carpet. Page 95: Barley twist four-poster bed from Dessin Fournir through the Martin Group, Boston Design Center, (617) 951-2526, www .martingroupinc.com; bedside pedestal from Grandview Mercantile Exchange, Columbus, Ohio, (614) 421-7000, www.grandview mercantile.com; lamp and shade from Blanche P. Field; woven seagrass carpet from Stark Carpet; velvet slippers from Stubbs & Wootton, www.stubbsandwootton.com. •


Come celebrate the ^[T]T_ ZQ _SP XLVP] at the The 77th Annual

League of NH Craftsmen’s Fair August 7-15, 2010 Mount Sunapee Resort, Newbury, NH

^[T]T_ Self expression, vision, and quality craftsmanship Pottery: Steve and Sue Russell

are the elements of Steve and Sue Russell’s handcrafted creations.

ZQ _SP

Meet Steve, Sue, and 350 other craftsmen at the 77th Annual League of NH Craftsmen’s Fair.

XLVP]

Tickets available online at nhcrafts.org center sandwich concord hanover littleton meredith north conway wolfeboro

492 King Street • On the Common • Littleton, MA 01460 • (978) 486-8500 Hours: Tue-Sat 10-5 Sun 12:30-5 • www.encoresantiques.com


WITH HOST

JENNY JOHNSON

TOUR NEW ENGLAND HOMES GET DESIGN IDEAS DISCOVER UNIQUE GOODS & SERVICES IMPROVE YOUR HOME

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MONDAY-THURSDAY 3:00PM


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Dutch Colonial Colonial featuring featuring Greenwich, CT Timeless Dutch 13,000sf, 10 bdrms, 6.3 bths, 5 fpl‘s, fpl’s, gourmet kitchen, 2.5+ acres, in-ground pool. Price Upon Request

mid-country capecape on tranGreenwich, CT CT Magnificent Magnificent mid-country on quil 2.2 acre lot.lot. 5 bdrms, tranquil 2.2 acre 5 bdrms,3.1 3.1bths, bths,3,400+sf, 3,400+sf, serene pool, flagstone patio & fish pond. $4,200,000

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Manchester, MA

Exquisite Shingle style residence with breathtaking YLHZV RI WKH (VVH[ 5LYHU DQG PDUVKODQGV 6LWHG RQ ODQGVFDSHG DFUHV ZLWK LQ JURXQG SRRO DQG FDEDQD WKLV home offers state-of-the-art systems and features high FHLOLQJV DQG RYHUVL]HG ZLQGRZV D ¿UHSODFHG IDPLO\ URRP EHGURRPV DQG EDWKV LQFOXGLQJ D ¿UHSODFHG PDVWHU EHGURRP

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raveis.com

“ T h e B e s t We b s i t e i n R e a l E s ta t e ” Visit raveis.com & type in MLS# for multiple photos/detailed descriptions on these homes

Greenwich, CT $5,800,000 MLS# 98462216, Hannelore Kaplan, 914.450.3880

Washington, CT $3,950,000 MLS# 98450154, Stacey Matthews, 860.868.9066

Duxbury, MA $3,250,000 MLS# 71052023, Michael Gill, 781.831.0341

New Canaan, CT $2,650,000 MLS# 98461842, Kristen Harrow, 203.858.4823

New Canaan, CT $2,395,000 MLS# 98438790,Wendy Brainard, 203.253.7790

Glastonbury, CT $2,300,000 MLS# G560188, Jeffrey Bodeau, 860.463.9296

Newton Centre, MA $2,200,000 MLS# 71079397, Sarina Steinmetz, 617.762.4071

Medfield, MA $1,900,000 MLS# 71072928, Brace-Kirk Team, 781.856.2219

Hingham, MA $1,894,000 MLS# 71073526, Denise Marshall, 617.875.7774

Duxbury, MA $1,869,000 MLS# 71072416, Marybeth Davidson, 781.934.2104

Plymouth, MA $1,299,900 MLS# 71066734, Marybeth Davidson, 781.934.2104

Glastonbury, CT $1,200,000 MLS# G557659, Jackie Lovett, 860.543.0756

West Norwalk, CT $1,100,000 MLS# 98461908, Anne Papastathis, 203.856.6285

Framingham, MA $1,068,000 MLS# 71051248, Christine Norcross, 781.929.4994

Cape Cod/East Falmouth, MA $899,000 MLS# 71040219, Rich Generazio, 508.733.7553

For more information on these and other luxury homes or to speak to an Exceptional Properties Specialist, call 877.298.2780.

Connecticut • Massachusetts • New York • Rhode Island


COLDWELL BANKER

I N T E R N A T I O N A L®

The Luxury Div ision of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS

DOVER, MASSACHUSETTS

$3,450,000. 1930’s Colonial-style residence sited on 2 acres on the historic former Baker Estate with views and water frontage on Sabrina Lake. The unique setting offers manicured lawns, stone walls, specimen plantings a pool and spa. Jill Boudreau, (781) 237-9090

$7,499,000. Renovated country-style manor, 26 acres with open fields, two scenic ponds and woodland. Included is a guest cottage, carriage house, recreation lodge, greenhouse, tractor barn, pool, tennis court and buildable lot. Jonathan P. Radford, (617) 335-1010

BOXFORD, MASSACHUSETTS

EAST GREENWICH, RHODE ISLAND

$2,700,000. Accessed by a gated drive is this Cape-style residence on 11 acres. The home features a media room, gourmet kitchen, indoor pool, dog kennel, exercise room, a racquetball/squash court, pistol range and guest suite. Gwen Washburn, (978) 887-6536

$1,000,000. Skillfully conceived Colonial-style residence features a formal living room, banquet-sized dining room, and an extraordinary kitchen. Privately located on a cul-de-sac close to schools, shopping, and commuting routes. Stephanie Corrente, (401) 884-8050

NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS

ROCKPORT, MASSACHUSETTS

$2,850,000. On 1.25 private acres, this residence offers 9,400+ square feet of living space with a banquet-sized dining room, dramatic family room and a commercially-equipped kitchen. Lynn Petrini/ Lisa Petrini Bell, (781) 444-7400

$1,699,000. Direct oceanfront home with views of Thacher’s Island and the historic Twin Lights. The four-bedroom home is located on one of Rockport’s most coveted streets. Features an oceanfront deck and screen porch. Scott Smith, (978) 281-8808

VISIT NEWENGLANDMOVES.COM TO VIEW OUR LUXURY COLLECTION ©2010 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker® is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT LLC. We are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity throughout the Nation. We encourage and support an affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin.


kinlingrover.com Cape Cod’s best address

Hyannis Port

Harwich Port

79 ISLAND AVENUE

$8,900,000

23 SNOW INN ROAD

FROM $1,975,000

Magnificent Squaw Island beachfront. 1.13 acres on a gen-

Wychmere Shores. An exclusive oceanfront resort community.

tle bluff. Sweeping & dramatic views. 6 bedroom distinctive

11 luxury residences each averaging 5,400 square feet offer-

home, re-built in 1995. Gunite pool & sandy beach. For the

ing the finest craftsmanship, architechural details, unsurpassed

discerning vacation home buyer.

views and membership in the Wychmere Harbor Beach Club.

Osterville Office

508.420.1130

Harwich Port Office

Quissett

508.432.8800

Wellfleet

115 OYSTER POND ROAD

$1,900,000

164 CLIFF ROAD

$1,099,000

Casual living in this custom, shingle-style Contemporary. Top of

Renovated oceanfront retreat awaits your arrival! Panoramic views

the line equipment plus the highest quality finish work. Architect

of the ocean, beach and dunes of the National Seashore out every

designed it has a great flow; open yet defined living areas.

window....breathtaking! Great space for friends and family and

Waterviews of both the Sound and coastal ponds.

direct access to the dunes outside. Excellent rental history.

Falmouth Office

Wellfleet Office

508.548.6611

508.349.9800

Serving the most buyers and sellers on Cape Cod, Massachusetts BARNSTABLE BOURNE BREWSTER CHATHAM FALMOUTH HARWICH ORLEANS OSTERVILLE PROVINCETOWN SANDWICH WELLFLEET YARMOUTH


MARY CRANE 617.413.2879

FROM TOWN TO COUNTRY... SERVING BOSTON AND METRO WEST MARYCRANEPROPERTIES.COM PROUDLY PRESENTS THE

DOVER Exceptional 6BR 1999 custom residence on 4 acres, gym, sauna, wine cellar, tennis court, lap pool. $7,800,000

FOLLOWING PROPERTIES FOR SALE

DOVER Beautiful 2008 5BR farmhouse style regally set in the heart of Dover’s horse country. $3,295,000

+$5':,&. 0DJQLĂ€FHQW DFUH FRXQWU\ estate set amidst the rolling countryside of central MA. $899,000

DOVER Stunning 2005 6BR Colonial with expansive master suite, detail and light abound, cul de sac $2,850,000

WELLESLEY Renovated 1930s 4BR &RORQLDO Ă DW IHQFHG \DUG ZDON WR school, convenient location. $1,780,000

N. SMITHFIELD, RI Private 27-acre equestrian property with 2004 state of the art home, pool, barn, outdoor & indoor ring. $2,950,000

BERLIN Elegant & bright custom 1997 4BR Colonial offering privacy and serenity, open yard, 2-stall barn. $739,000

Mary@MaryCraneProperties.com


THOMAS HILL FARM

GRACEMERE

26 THE GREEN

Woodstock, Vermont

Woodstock, Vermont

Woodstock Village, Vermont

Thomas Hill Farm offers a fully renovated, spacious 1872 farmhouse on 2.61+/- beautifully landscaped acres with barn converted to a spectacular guest house set on rolling lawns with ancient maples, mature apple trees, stone walls and terraces. All abutting 158 acres of conserved property and just 1 mile to village center. $1,150,000

Gracemere on 163.9+/- acres of professionally managed forest provides recreational opportunities, abundant wildlife, views and property tax abatement. This architect-designed 10,000 square foot stone house, overlooking a beautiful spring-fed pond, affords gracious comfort and conveys a sense of quiet elegance. A superb investment for the future. $3,800,000 More land available.

The historic DAR Mansion, originally built in 1807 to house Vermont’s traveling legislature, and for many years the museum/home of the local DAR chapter. In 1995 the property was completely restored by master preservationists into a stylish and beautifully crafted home retaining the materials and patina of an historic past. $998,000 5 Central St./Box 630 Woodstock, VT 05091 802/457-2244 877/227-0242

Photograhy by Brian Vandern Brink

www.robertwallacerealestate.com

Exquisite Waterfront Estate on Narragansett Bay Watch the America’s Cup Yachts sail into Mackerel Cove from this classic shingle style home sited on 19 private waterfront acres. This spectacular home offers the best in the Jamestown seaside lifestyle on Narragansett Bay. Designed by Bernard Wharton of Shope, Reno, and Wharton in 2000, this exceptional home captures the timeless design of a shingle style cottage, while offering the highest standard of up to date, year round living. $ 8,795,000.

Island Realty 4 Ferry Wharf, Jamestown, RI www.islandrealtyri.com

401.423.2200


Marion Waterfront

Cape Cod style home situated on a sprawling 1.4 acre rear lot with private beach and spectacular views of Buzzards Bay. With over 4,100 square feet, this wonderful first or second home lends itself to entertaining large or small groups. The first floor has two large living rooms with fireplaces, one opening up to a gourmet kitchen with dining area, as well as a cozy den/library, wet bar and half bath. Also included is a bedroom with attached full bath. The second floor boasts a roomy master suite with balcony to enjoy the sweeping water views, two additional bedrooms and another full bath. Beautiful landscaping with two private terraces. Air conditioning, town water.

Exclusively priced at $1,600,000.00

y p listed at $1,600,000 $ , , Exclusively

Tel: 508-748-0020 Fax: 508-748-2337

BEACON HILL – BOSTON, MA $6,850,000 This c. 1830 townhouse, located on Beacon Hill’s premier Chestnut St., may be the finest example of a renovation executed to perfection. The home’s historic architectural integrity was preserved and elements to enhance modern family living incorporated. Formal reception rooms, chefs’ kitchen and family room open to a magnificent walled garden with lawn, media room, 6 bedrooms (inc. master suite), roof deck, state-of-the-art systems, Crestron smart-house and audio visual technology. Brimmer St. garage parking available for separate purchase. Jonathan P. Radford, VP Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 137 Newbury Street, Boston MA 02116 USA Tel: 1-617-335-1010 Jonathan@JonathanRadford.com www.JonathanRadford.com


prudentialCT.com

123 Cliff Road, Wellesley

Rowayton, CT – Seaside Lifestyle with European FlairZDON WR DVVRF EHDFK IURP WKLV FXVWRP KRPH ¿QHO\ FUDIWHG LQ 2005 w/quality & detail. 3,840 sf, 4BR, 3.5 ba. gourmet kit Z EXWOHUœV SDQWU\ YHQHWLDQ SODVWHU ZDOOV FKHUU\ ÀUV ZDWHU views. $2,350,000 www.7SunwichRoad.com Abigail Van Slyck • 203-856-9278

Spectacular custom stone Colonial in the heart of the Cliff Estates offers exquisite craftmanship and stunning architectural GHWDLO WKURXJKRXW LQ D PDJQLÂżFHQW SDUN OLNH VHWWLQJ ZLWK SDVWRUDO YLHZV RI 5RFNULGJH 3RQG Offered at $4,590,000

DEBI BENOIT Vice President Wellesley’s #1 Broker*

',5(&7 GHELEHQRLW#DRO FRP www.DebiBenoit.com COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL BROKERAGE

Š2010 Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and operated by NRT, LLC. *2006, 2007, 2008 & :HOOHVOH\ 6DOHV DV UHSRUWHG WKURXJK + 0/6 2I¿FH H[W GHEL EHQRLW#QHPRYHV FRP

www.NewEnglandMoves.com

Southington, CT - Famed “Stony Pastureâ€? estate on 6.4 picturesque DFUHV Z SRQG %% FRXUW ,* SRRO 0DJQLÂżFHQW VI KRPH boasts stunning detail & exquisite craftsmanship. Grand foyer w/ barrel-ceiling, chef’s kit, custom millwork, 5 room master suite and 4fpl. $1,299,000 www.375DeFashionStreet.com Cheryl Britton-Madden • 860-378-3227

Wilton CT - Premier cul-de-sac location, an exceptional home RQ ÀDW DFUHV ZLWK H[TXLVLWH IRUPDO JDUGHQV VWRQH WHUUDFHV hot tub and outdoor kitchen. 5 bedrooms, 5full & 2half baths, 4 ¿UHSODFHV $ UHDO JHP www.1BrandonCricle.com Mary Susan Muirhead • 203-762-4250

NEWPORT {{ĂŽĂŠ iÂ?Â?iÛÕiĂŠ Ă›iÂ˜Ă•iĂŠUĂŠfx]Ă“ää]äää Historic Swanhurst Manor built in ÂŁnxÂŁ]ĂŠÂœÂ˜iĂŠÂœvĂŠĂŒÂ…iĂŠÂœĂ€Âˆ}ˆ˜>Â?Ê£Óʓ>Â˜ĂƒÂˆÂœÂ˜ĂƒĂŠ ÂœÂ˜ĂŠ iĂœÂŤÂœĂ€ĂŒ½ĂƒĂŠ v>“i`ĂŠ iÂ?Â?iÛÕiĂŠ Ă›i°ĂŠ

ÂœÂ“ÂŤÂ?iĂŒiÂ?ÞÊ Ă€iĂƒĂŒÂœĂ€i`ĂŠ ĂœÂˆĂŒÂ…ĂŠ ĂƒĂŒĂ•Â˜Â˜ÂˆÂ˜}ĂŠ `iĂŒ>ˆÂ?ĂƒĂŠ ÂœÂ˜ĂŠ £°xĂŠ >VĂ€iĂƒĂŠ ÂœvĂŠ ĂƒÂŤiVĂŒ>VĂ•Â?>ÀÊ “>ĂŒĂ•Ă€iĂŠÂ?>˜`ĂƒV>ÂŤi`ĂŠ}>Ă€`iÂ˜Ăƒ°ĂŠ Lynn Creighton 401.345.6886

William Raveis CHAPMAN ENSTONE REAL ESTATE t MORTGAGE t RENTALS

RAVEIS.COM {™Ê iÂ?Â?iÛÕiĂŠ Ă›iĂŠUĂŠ iĂœÂŤÂœĂ€ĂŒ]ĂŠ, ĂŠUĂŠ{䣰n{Ăˆ°ĂŽnää

Pomfret, CT- Meander down the serpentine drive, cross your own bridge to Gladywn Estate built in 1890 on 18 private acres. 5,388 SF home, 5 bdrms, completely updated w/an extraordinary FKHIœV NLWFKHQ DQG ¿UHSODFHV )HDWXULQJ PDQLFXUHG ODZQV specimen trees, stone terraces and a carriage house. $895,000. www.E236955.prudentialct.com Stephanie Gosselin 860-428-5960 & Bob Leonard 860-428-0026. E XC LU S I V E . E X AC T I N G. E XC E P T I O N A L . Š 2009, An independently owned and operated member of The Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. Prudential is a service mark of the Prudential Insurance Company of America. Equal Housing Opportunity.


Advertiser Index A helpful resource for finding the advertisers featured in this issue

A.J. Rose Carpets

45

Ahearn-Schopfer and Associates

147

Engel & Völkers Greenwich

149

F.H. Perry Builder

135

19

FBN Construction Co.

Ambrosia Events & Catering

148

Portico Fine Tile & Design

97

Prospect Hill Antiques

37

Prudential Connecticut Realty

157

Ferguson

4–5

First Rugs

105

Quidley & Company

20

Fortunato

121

The Quilted Gallery

49

The Granite Group

34

R.P. Marzilli & Company

18

159 100–101

Andover Landscape Construction

73

Ardente Supply Company

137

Atlantic Design Center

2–3

B & G Cabinet

Hutker Architects

135

Instone

44

85

Back Bay Shutter Co.

Island Realty

155

J Barrett & Company Real Estate

150

6

Battle Associates

123

J. Todd Galleries Beacon Companies

131

Bear Path

60

Belgard

84

Jay Schadler Design Gallery Katherine Field and Associates Kinlin Grover Corporate

Bellini Baby & Teen Designer Furniture Belongings Bensonwood Homes

Peterson Party Center

Inside back cover

129

American Society of Interior Designers Anderson Insulation

Encores

49 133 1 153

143

LaBarge Custom Home Building

Back cover

Billie Brenner Ltd.

125

Boston Architectural College

115

Boston Billiard Emporium

139

Boston Design Center

13

Brassworks Fine Home Details

124

Chip Webster & Associates

113

Chobee Hoy Associates Real Estate

33

Closet Factory

115

Coldwell Banker Previews International 152, 156

Colony Rug Company The Converse Company Realtors

35 156

Cottage and Bungalow

141

Country Carpenters

141

Creative Art Furniture

118

Crown Point Cabinetry

108

Cumar

31

Debi Benoit, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage 157 Dover Rug Eco Modern Design Edgartown Residence Club, Martha’s Vineyard 15 158 New England Home July/August 2010

24 146

League of N.H. Craftsmen

147

Machine Age Mar Silver Design

155

Rosbeck Builders Corp.

27

Runtal North America

50

S + H Construction

119

Sanford Custom Homes

139

Scandia Kitchens Snow and Jones

61

Lynn Creighton Realtor

Robert Wallace Real Estate

47 9

7

LDa Architects & Interiors

Leslie Fine Interiors

103

111

145

Landry & Arcari

RiverBend & Company

21 157 43

South Shore Millwork

124

Stone Technologies

41

Sudbury Design Group

22

Taste Design

125

Terrafirma Landscape Architecture

145

TMS Architects

109

Triad Associates

117

11

Martha’s Vineyard Food and Wine Festival 129 Marvin Windows

29

Mary Crane—Century 21 Properties

154

Vermont Verde Antique Marble Co.

121

Maverick Integration Corp.

120

William Raveis Real Estate HQ

151

McIntosh & Tuttle Cabinetmakers

143

Woodmeister Master Builders

99

Xtreme Audio & Video

72

Zen Associates

39

McLaughlin Upholstering Company

17

Meredith Bay on Lake Winnipesaukee Inside front cover

Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams Morehouse MacDonald & Associates New England Dream House

8 23 148

Northern Lights Landscape

51

Ocean Properties

10

Overhead Door Company

96

Paquette & Associates

127

Paul F. Weber Architect

137

Pellettieri Associates

107

New England Home, July/August 2010, Volume 5, Number 6 © 2010 by Network Communications, Inc. All rights reserved. Permission to reprint or quote excerpts granted by written request only. New England Home (USPS 024-096) is published 6 times a year (JAN, MAR, MAY, JULY, SEP, NOV) by Network Communications, Inc. 2305 Newpoint Parkway, Lawrenceville, GA 30043 (770) 9627220. Periodical postage paid at Lawrenceville, GA, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to New England Home, PO Box 9002, Maple Shade, NJ 08052-9652. For change of address include old address as well as new address with both zip codes. Allow four to six weeks for change of address to become effective. Please include current mailing label when writing about your subscription.


Find the Qualified, Professional Interior Designer to Make Your House a Home. www.asidne.org/findadesigner

NEW ENGLAND CHAPTER The A merican Societ y of Interior Designers One Design Center Place, Suite 544 Boston, MA 02210 Phone: 617.261.3995 Fa x: 617.261.7591


Sketch Pad Design ideas in the making

WHEN MY SISTER AND I decided to go to on a trip to India a couple of years ago, a thought crossed my mind:

“It might be nice to do a fabric collection when I get back.” I came home with a newly formed love of India and some interesting pieces of fabric I picked up in the markets, sat down one miserable February day and drew a few pencil sketches of Indian shapes I liked. Then I took out my paint box and painted over the sketches. I just mixed the colors I enjoy seeing together. And the India Collection was born. Later, at the Boston launch of my line, a designer asked me, “Why no green? Don’t you like green?” Actually, I love decorating with green! It was a strange omission that had to be remedied! So my upcoming Africa Collection has been cooking at the back of my brain for a while. I started with some sketches of a bush that grows by the side of the wooden walkway to the beach at our house on Plettenberg Bay in South Africa. The way the tiny leaves are formed on each sprig has always fascinated me. Fynbos Sprig became my first pattern in the new line. And after that the rest just started to flow—including a version in white on green! When I design it is an encapsulation of a moment in time. I never second-guess myself. I don’t know why. It’s not arrogance; its just that if the design is authentically me, I don’t feel it can be wrong. It might not be commercial, but it can’t be wrong. See “Made Here” on page 46 for more about Mally Skok’s and other fabric collections produced by Peter Fasano at his studio in Great Barrington, Mass. MALLY SKOK, MALLY SKOK DESIGN, LINCOLN, MASS., (781) 259-4090, WWW.MALLYSKOKDESIGN.COM

160

New England Home July/August 2010


Eric Roth Photography

Architect - Campbell/Smith Architects, Photographer - Shelly Harrison

WE DON’T BUILD THEM LIKE YOU’RE USED TO Dear Wonderful FBN, I want to thank you for being an AMAZING company! Bob, you held our hand the whole way & have always been there to protect our interests. Bob Murray, you always support, advise and offer tons of reassurance. God bless Andy - I am having separation anxiety. Kevin, what a craftsman and a gentleman. Scott, never a door unopened, garage uncleaned or extra heavy items unloaded. AND ALL THE OTHERS, completely wonderful and easy to be around. Do you only hire competent, polite and fabulous people? Thank you from the bottom of our hearts. - Krista A. Needham, MA

617.333.6800 | www.fbnconstruction.com


Go to the ends of the Earth Come home to your Bensonwood ou have an active lifestyle. You love adventure, travel, and the natural world. And when it comes to building your family homestead, your entrepreneurial spirit demands nothing but the best. “Good enough,” simply isn’t good enough.

Y

At Bensonwood we bring the outside inside, and the inside outside — by building highly sustainable houses of uncommon beauty.

Moreover, Bensonwood’s high performance homes have the power to shape our lives even while adapting to our changing needs. To learn more about the homes that dwell in you, call one of our professionals at 877.203.3562 or visit us online at Bensonwood.com. Your Bensonwood experience is closer than you think.

www.bensonwood.com


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