3 minute read

Possibilities

A BOSTON-AREA COUPLE FINDS SANCTUARY IN THEIR OFF-THE-BEATEN-PATH HOME ON THE OUTER CAPE.

Text by PAULA M. BODAH | P hotography by DAVID MITCHELL

The home, a 2022 PRISM gold award for Best High Performance/ High Energy Home, comprises the main house, foreground, attached guesthouse, and stand-alone garage with a second-floor guest suite. Builder Chris Dio clad the house and guesthouse in whitecedar shingles, then crafted sliding shutters of Alaskan yellow cedar to protect the triple-glazed windows from blowing salt and sand.

The house left something to be desired, but the land, a three-acre-plus strip on an Outer Cape bluff overlooking the ocean, was exactly what the couple had been seeking. “We were looking for something fairly remote,” the wife says. “We wanted to be out in nature.”

Designers Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz, builder Chris Dio of Cape Associates, and the homeowners all agreed the run-down house wasn’t worth saving. Its foundation was sound, however, and became the base for the new home, a two-story dwelling hinting at the local vernacular with cedar shingles and white trim but possessing a more modern sensibility with black-framed shutterless windows and a standing-seam metal roof. A stand-alone garage and a twostory guesthouse that connects to the main house by a glass-enclosed bridge complete the property.

The guesthouse, intended for the couple’s grown children and their future families, maximizes ocean views by putting the living quarters upstairs and the bedrooms downstairs. The passageway leads from a library/study in the main house to the guest home’s sitting room, a spacious, high-ceilinged living area the Katzes filled with furniture in earthy tones with a hint of rusticity.

“It was the clients’ idea to do an upside-down house so that the upstairs sit ting room would be accessible to them when their kids aren’t there,” Cheryl Katz explains. “When the kids are there, they can close the doors in the breezeway to keep the two houses separate.”

BELOW: The atrium stairway leads to a library/study and the couple’s bedroom suite; in the other direction, it leads to the connector breezeway. FACING PAGE: Wood paneling gives the stairway a warm feel and a natural look.

Project manager Dio constructed a super-efficient home by adding an extra layer of Zip-R insulation installed on the outside, under the white-cedar shingles.

“For the next fifty years, the energy use in this house will be minimal,” he says.

The unassuming entrance of the main house, a farmhouse-style door painted a cheerful blue, opens to an atrium that brings an abundance of natural light to the stairway to the second floor and the passageway to the guest quarters.

A left turn leads to the dining and living rooms; the latter opens in turn to the kitchen, creating an L-shaped floor plan with a casual, effortless flow.

The Katzes outfitted the space with luxe but easygoing furniture in a neutral palette. “Our clients didn’t want a stereotypical beach house with white sofas,” Jeffrey Katz says. “They wanted it to be light, but not of that ilk.”

A custom L-shaped sectional sofa of brushed linen in a warm café-au-lait hue from McLaughlin upholsterer sits on a highly textured crewel rug from Steven King. A trio of small roundtopped drink tables stand in for a coffee table. And making a grand statement is a floor-to-ceiling fireplace wall of boardformed concrete with built-in wood storage under the hearth.

BELOW: A highly textured alpaca rug from Rosemary Hallgarten, an upholstered Roman Thomas bed, and sumptuous drapes in Holland & Sherry fabric wrap the couple in cozy warmth. FACING PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: A petrified-wood stool adds an earthy touch to the primary bath. A living room built-in the size of two twin beds end to end stands in as a sleeping spot for visiting children; the quilted mustard and brown pillows were inspired by moving blankets. An old cloth doll the wife owns inspired the colors of the couple’s dressing room cabinetry.

The dining room is simply furnished with midcentury Afra and Tobia Scarpa chairs surrounding a table with a sturdy wood top on a bronze base. A painting by Wolf Kahn, one of the husband’s favorite artists, hangs above an antique sideboard. “They wanted everything to be comfortable, but not precious,” Cheryl says. “It’s relatively spare, but still warm.”

ABOVE: A deck off the guesthouse living room offers views to the ocean. BELOW: The guesthouse living room has a more rustic air with the sturdy Vermont Farm Table coffee table and a sectional sofa in a dark charcoal gray. FACING PAGE: Set back from both the road and bluff, the house blends into surroundings consisting of existing flora that landscape designer Nat Taylor supplemented with native plantings.

Meanwhile, landscape designer Nat Taylor supplemented the land’s natural grasses and shrubs with a host of native plantings, including groundcov- ers, grasses, trees, and perennials, all chosen to attract pollinators and withstand the weather. “My goal was to mimic what was all around the house,” he says, “and to create a lot of movement and habitat.”

On their slender spit of land off the beaten path, the homeowners revel in nature and solitude. “It’s so quiet out there,” says the wife. “It’s really special.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: For details, see Resources.

ARCHITECTURAL AND INTERIOR DESIGN:

C&J Katz Studio

BUILDER: Cape Associates

LANDSCAPE DESIGN: Birdhaven