Maine Home+Design magazine May 2018

Page 1

MAY 2018

The Kennebunks Issue

May $5.95


Fine home builders, general contractors, and developers

899 Post Road • Wells, ME 04090 • 207.646.6194 • Rmoodyconstruction.com


INTRODUCING THE ALL NEW

2018 LEXUS LS

BERLIN CITY LEXUS OF PORTLAND PORTLAND, MAINE | BERLINCITYLEXUS.COM


Recognized by J.D. Power for “Outstanding Customer Satisfaction with Windows and Patio Doors.” *

Pictured at left: Andersen® Architectural Collection E-Series hinged patio doors, sidelights and transom windows with painted White interiors; Pictured at right (top and bottom): Andersen 400 Series casement, awning and picture windows with prefinished Black interiors and 400 Series casement and transom windows with painted/prefinished Black interiors

Get the Distinctive Home You’ve Always Dreamed of From our best-selling 400 Series to the true luxury of the Architectural Collection, turn every window and door into a design opportunity with dramatic sizes, dynamic shapes, unlimited colors and exotic woods.

Explore the possibilities at andersenwindows.com *Andersen received the second highest numerical score among 16 companies in the J.D. Power 2017 Windows & Patio Doors Satisfaction Study, based on 1,904 total responses, measuring the experiences and perceptions of customers who purchased windows and/or patio doors in the previous 12 months, surveyed February – March 2017. Your experiences may vary. “ENERGY STAR” is a registered trademark of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. “Andersen” and all other marks where denoted are trademarks of Andersen Corporation. ©2018 Andersen Corporation. All rights reserved. MS1803_0205

Visit your Andersen dealer today to see our complete line of energy-efficient windows and doors. HANCOCK LUMBER COMPANY

10 Locations in Maine & New Hampshire 800-559-5564 hancocklumber.com

ELDREDGE LUMBER

York • 207-363-2004 Portland • 207-770-3004 eldredgelumber.com


Begin traditions here.


The Townsend Collection by American Standard.

A design collaboration is a very special relationship. It’s a pleasure when our passion for quality products becomes part of the creative process. As an addition to the wide assortment of brands that homeowners have come to enjoy in our showrooms, we’ve recently curated new collections to help architects and designers distinguish their work when transforming baths and kitchens. Product knowledge, detailed coordination and an accessible, friendly staff are added values we offer to ensure your project goes smoothly. BANGOR 1156 Hammond Street ELLSWORTH 9 Buttermilk Road LEWISTON 60 Lexington Street

OAKLAND 6 Highland Drive SOUTH PORTLAND 150 Postal Service Way

For other showrooms, visit frankwebb.com

Architects & designers are encouraged to visit frankwebb.com/professionals.


Trent Bell


1 0 LOCATI O N S FRO M ROCKL AN D TO CAL AI S 8 0 0 . 6 83 . 337 1 | www.ebsbuild.com

D E S I G N GA L L E RY a complete window and door showroom by Eldredge Lumber

317 MARGI NAL WAY | P O RTL AN D, M E 207. 7 72 . 20 03 |

www.marvinbyeldredge.com

SOAK UP TH E SUN M A RV I N W I N D OW S A N D D O O R S


Grand plans and great lengths.

The Art-Centric Riverside Condo, Kennebunkport, Maine bowleybuilders.com


Built for living.

Toll-Free: (877) 209-8414 (207) 539-9600 schiavicustombuilders.com



Let’s talk about what it means to live your way. DREAM. DESIGN. BUILD. LIVE.

2 0 7. 7 2 5 .7 7 4 9

Senecal Construction.com


Modern

tips & trends

Photo by Trent Bell

When designing a modern space, I strive to balance the clean lined aesthetic with warm textures, organic elements and soft fabrics.

I find this results in a striking and inviting gathering space. Nicki Bongiorno - Spaces Kennebunkport ▼ Antique Smoke (2019-6) ▲ 1950’s Teak & Walnut Chairs with contemporary lamps and teak sideboard from Motive Furniture in Portland.

▲ Lunada Bay Agate in Lucca

▼ Coastal Fog (1001-6)

VISIT OUR SHOWROOMS

KENNEBUNK

♦ PORTLAND ♦ YARMOUTH ♦ ROCKLAND

GET THE LOOK AND MORE INFORMATION @ DISTINCTIVETILEANDDESIGN.COM


Leonora™ Vessel Sink

B E S T. D E C I S I O N . E V E R . Ferguson knows the toughest part of your job is helping your clients make the tough decisions. Let our product experts make it easier by introducing you to our extensive collection of products from the most sought after brands in a variety of styles designed to bring their vision — and your plan — to life.

PORTLAND, ME | LEWISTON, ME | MANCHESTER, NH | PORTSMOUTH, NH F E RGUSON S H OWROOM S .COM

©2018 Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. 0318 766790

Learn more at fergusonshowrooms.com


Get the

BEST of outdoor living! When you consult with the hardscape experts at Gagne & Son on your next spring project.

Masonry

Landscape

Construction Supplies


No matter the space, no matter the style, we have you covered.

capozzaflooring.com

oldporttile.com

capozza-cs.com


DESIGNS for COLORFUL LIVINGâ„¢

EXPERIENCE OUR EXCLUSIVE RUGS, FURNITURE, BEDDING, PILLOWS & HOME ACCENTS

complimentary design services available 123 Commercial Street Portland, ME

888.780.1232

102 Old Turnpike Road Concord, NH

800.818.8288 x5016

companyc.com


BEAUTIFUL. ENERGY EFFICIENT. AND YES, IT’S A LOG HOME.

A surprising look that fits into virtually any neighborhood. And built with the superior energy efficiency of traditional log homes using Arborwall’s proprietary construction process. Your sustainably built Arborwall home can be custom designed to suit the way you want to live. And where.

this is your kind of log home living. contact us, let’s start building. 800.261.7254 | ARBORWALL.COM | OAKFIELD, MAINE


The difference between DIY and our help? Basically, everything!

Budget Blinds of Southern Maine 30 York Street Kennebunk, ME 207 363 4900

Budget Blinds of Portland 47 Gray Rd Falmouth, ME 207 797 7651

Schedule your free in-home consultation and experience the Budget Blinds difference. We’re your local neighborhood experts and we’re backed by North America’s #1 provider of custom window coverings. We do it all for you — design, measure and install. High style, expert service, and the best peace-of-mind warranty. Only Budget Blinds delivers this combination of Stress Free Services.

Each franchise independently owned and operated.

budgetblinds.com


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the business of

impeccable millwork.

our perspective comes from a very unique place. be in touch to know more.

yficustomhomes.com | 207.363.8053


®

Natural Stone Large Selection of Natural Stone • Our Own Maine-Made Paving Stones & Retaining Wall • Landscape Supplies

Stone Center & Masonry Supply Store since 1927 • Lifetime Warranty • Widest Selection of Styles, Sizes & Colors Biddeford / Sanford / Windham • genestconcrete.com • 1-800-649-4773


MAINE COASTAL PROTECTION MAINE MAINECOASTAL COASTAL PROTECTION PROTECTION

Seawalls, Erosion Control and Bank Stabilization Solutions Seawalls, Seawalls, Erosion Erosion Control Control and and Bank Bank Stabilization Stabilization Solutions Solutions Maine Coastal Protection, LLC provides homeowners solutions to help protect their valuable Maine Maine Coastal Coastal Protection, Protection, LLC LLC provides provides homeowners homeowners solutions solutions to help to help protect protect theirtheir valuable valuable shoreline properties. We work with engineers and landscape architects to determine the best shoreline shoreline properties. properties. We We work work withwith engineers engineers andand landscape landscape architects architects to determine to determine the the bestbest strategies to prevent erosion and to stabilize banks. Building seawalls, shoring up banks strategies strategies to prevent to prevent erosion erosion andand to stabilize to stabilize banks. banks. Building Building seawalls, seawalls, shoring shoring up up banks banks with native plants, or a combination of both, are some of the strategies we employ . We withwith native native plants, plants, or aor combination a combination of both, of both, are are some some of the of the strategies strategies we employ we employ . We . We areare are well versed navigating shoreland zoning and permitting. well well versed versed ininnavigating in navigating shoreland shoreland zoning zoning and and permitting. permitting.

construction plant plant installation installation engineering permitting permitting construction design design engineering construction plant installation engineering permitting design info@MaineCoastalProtection.com info@MaineCoastalProtection.com

info@MaineCoastalProtection.com 207-415-3919 207-415-3919 207-415-3919


Wintry days are perfect for baking w d fired pi a

Superior Clay has developed components and a set of plans & instructions for the construction of these traditional ovens. Superior Clay Wood Fired Ovens can be built alongside a Rumford Fireplace or as a stand alone unit in your kitchen or backyard. The exterior of the oven can be finished with variety of masonry materials including brick, stone, stucco or tile.

740.922.4122 | 800.848.6166 PO Box 352 Uhrichsville, Ohio 44683 www.superiorclay.com


SHOP · DESIGN · LIVE 53 Western Avenue | Kennebunk, ME | (207) 967-4110 | HURLBUTTDESIGNS.COM


Visit Us Online For A

FREE LOOK BOOK www.KennebecCompany.com

207.443.2131

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One Front Street Bath, Maine

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254 Kings Highway, Goose Rocks Beach, Kennebunkport

Oceanfront dining on Goose Rocks Beach Vibrant dining room, bar and social scene Re-Opening May 11th

207.967.3757 www.tidesbeachclubmaine.com

Returns May 4 Serving dinner nightly, 5:30–10pm 354 Goose Rocks Road Kennebunkport, ME 207.967.6550

www.earthathiddenpond.com


SPRING DINING SPECIALS Until May 23, 2018

SUNDAY SUPPER — Three Course Dinner, $30/person. Select bottles of wine, $25, 5–9pm ALL NIGHT HAPPY HOUR — Mondays, 3–9pm BURGER NIGHT — Wednesdays, 5-9pm. Chef’s Specialty Burger, $10; Classic Burger, $10; 50% off all draft beers LIVE MUSIC — Thursday–Saturday, 7–10pm • Open 7 nights a week • Happy Hour, 3–5pm • Dinner, 5–9pm The Kennebunkport Inn, One Dock Square, Kennebunkport (207) 967-2621 www.kennebunkportinn.com

Inspired Cuisine Beautiful Ocean Views Serving Dinner Wednesday–Sunday The Cape Arundel Inn & Resort 208 Ocean Avenue, Kennebunkport 207.967.4015 www.capearundelinn.com/dining


Your favorite bra in the latest color.


C O NTENTS

May 2018 82 A Twenty-FirstCentury Saltwater Farmhouse A sophisticated, spare home for overnight guests to gather and retreat by Debra Spark Photography by Irvin Serrano Styling by Krista Stokes

104 Neighbors, Friends & Friends of Friends Word of mouth helps a budgetconscious couple build an ecofriendly, modern home by Debra Spark Photography by Jeff Roberts Styling by Janice Dunwoody

120 12 Ways of Looking at a Tent Last summer, 12 interior designers and artists created a series of glamping tents at Sandy Pines Campground in Kennebunkport by Katy Kelleher Photography by Jeff Roberts

ON THE COVER: The exterior of a home designed by Winkelman Architecture and built by Trademark. Cover photography Jeff Roberts Neighbors, Friends & Friends of Friends, page 104

82


May 2018

CONT ENT S

48 TURNOUT

Going out, giving back: Supporting nonprofits and local businesses in the vital work they do year-round Cinq a Sept and Design; The 2018 Contemporaries Winter Bash; Bowdoin International Music Festival

60 STYLE ROOM

A room that is perfectly imperfect

62 AIA DESIGN THEORY

Architect David Douglass on envelope architecture

66 SPACES

Decorative painter Hope Angier designs artful paneling for a Penobscot Bay home

70 PROFILE

For custom homebuilder Kevin Lord, success happens the old-fashioned way

76 PORTRAIT OF PLACE Kennebunks: A Designer’s Tour

137 ART SPOTLIGHT

A preview of Deborah Randall

70 76

146 SHOP TALK

From April to December, Farm Plus Table in Cape Porpoise sells small-batch gifts, locally made home goods, and thoughtful kitchenware

153 SHOWCASE

Maine College of Art’s 2018 Thesis Exhibition highlights the next generation of contemporary artists

EDITOR’S NOTE 36 STAFF NOTES 38 CONTRIBUTORS 42 DESIGN WIRE 47 EVENTS 56 RESOURCES 158 REAL ESTATE 165 THE DRAWING BOARD 192


DEBOR AH R ANDALL M AY 3 - 31, 2 018 O P E N I N G R E C E P T I O N , T H U R S DAY, M AY 3 , 5 - 7

D E B O R A H R A N DA L L | V I S TA | 3 6” X 3 6” | O I L O N C A N VA S

154 M I D D L E S T R E E T , P O R T L A N D , M A I N E 0 4 101 A R TC O L L E C TO R M A I N E . C O M

TO REQUEST A PRIVATE VIEWING PLEASE CONTACT EMMA WILSON AT 207.956.7105 OR EWILSON@ARTCOLLECTORMAINE.COM


JUNE 4-9

B

EST 1984

KENNEBUNKPORTFESTIVAL.COM #KPTfest

Produced by Maine Media Collective


JUNE 4-9 MONDAY JUNE 4

GRATITUDE

A party to thank all the people who make Kennebunkport Festival possible. At Stripers Waterside Restaurant, sponsored by Gagne & Sons.

TUESDAY JUNE 5

WEDNESDAY JUNE 6

COCKTAILS AT THE BURLEIGH

COCKTAILS AT THE COLONY

THE ART OF DINING DINNERS

THE ART OF DINING DINNERS

A cocktail party in the lounge and spilling onto the patio in the heart of Dock Square. At the Kennebunkport Inn, sponsored by Pack Maynard and Associates Real Estate, Effen, Hornitos, and Sipsmith.

A series of intimate dinners prepared by top chefs in private homes in the Kennebunkport area. Each dinner showcases work by an Art Collector Maine artist. Sponsored by Maker’s Mark. Hurlbutt Residence Chef Pierre Gignac of Ocean. Sponsored by Lane Press

Manetti Residence Chef Rian Wylie of Little Giant.

KPT Historical Society Chef German Lucarelli of Ports of Italy. Kuehnle Residence Chef John Shaw of The Boathouse Restaurant. Molloy Residence Chef Romann Dumorne of Northern Union.

THURSDAY JUNE 7 HINCKLEY RECEPTION

An open air cocktail party on the deck and docks. At Chicks Marina, sponsored by the Hinckley Company, Effen, Hornitos, and Sipsmith.

PUTTING ON THE GLITZ

A rock ’n roll evening of fine food and good spirits. Hosted by David’s Restaurants and Wallace Events under the tent at the Pilot House Boatyard. Sponsored by Wallace Events, Terrapin Landscapes and The Pilot House Restaurant.

THE AFTER PARTY

The night continues in this bustling pub overlooking the riverfront with live music. At Federal Jack’s Restaurant & Brew Pub.

Old Vines Wine Bar Chef Joel Souza of Old Vines Wine Bar. Pear Tree Farm Chef Peggy Liversidge of Kitchen Chicks Catering. Turner/Bull Residence Chef Rick Shell of The Cliff House. Matthews Residence Chef Melissa Maidana of Sol Food.

A cocktail party with an ocean view on the wrap-around porch. At the Colony Hotel, sponsored by Kennebunk Beach Realty and Piscataqua Landscaping & Tree Service, Effen, Hornitos, and Sipsmith.

A series of intimate dinners prepared by top chefs in private homes in the Kennebunkport area. Each dinner showcases work by an Art Collector Maine artist. Sponsored by Maker’s Mark. Feingold Residence Chef Avery Richter of Black Tie Catering.

On the Marsh Bistro Chef Peter Pappas of On the Marsh Bistro.

Harrington Residence Chef Joseph Schafer of Earth.

Raffaelli Residence Chef Harding Lee Smith of The Rooms Restaurants.

Heard Residence Chef Guy Hernandez of Lolita. Marquis Residence Chef Adam Flood of Grace. Sponsored by Douston Construction

FRIDAY JUNE 8

Rice Residence Chef Emil Rivera of Sur Lie. Sullivan Residence Chef Matt Ginn of Evo Kitchen + Bar. Sponsored by Spang Builders

SATURDAY JUNE 9

MAINE ART HILL BLOCK PARTY

GRAND TASTING

MAKE MINE FROM MAINE

MAINE CRAFT MUSIC FESTIVAL

CHEF'S NIGHT OUT

AMUSE

Get the evening into full gear with this fun new event. Tour multiple art galleries including The Gallery, Shows and Studios on Maine Art Hill, and Gallery at the Grand. Live music, food trucks, art and more! A specially curated cocktail party featuring 15 craft distillers from all over Maine who will share their favorite drinks with you. Sip with us waterside at the Pilot House Boatyard and enjoy an early evening of drinks, nibbles, and conversation. Sponsored by Maine Spirits. A culinary experience featuring guest chefs from Maine and beyond joining forces to create a multi-course, family style seated dinner in a candlelit barn at the Wells Reserve at Laudholm. Hosted by Chef Justin Walker and Danielle Walker of Walkers Maine. Ticket includes Sweet Soirée (see below). Sponsored by Richard Moody & Sons and Maker’s Mark.

SWEET SOIR E

Save room for dessert! This dessert extravaganza will knock your socks off! Sample a number of sparkling wines and Champagne while you enjoy your desserts. Ticket to Sweet Soiree included with ticket to Chef’s Night Out or purchase Sweet Soiree tickets separately.

An afternoon tasting event under a tent on the water with offerings from over 20 different chefs plus wines, beer and cocktails. At the Pilot House Boatyard. Sponsored by The Pilot House Restaurant, Clarke Sub Zero & Wolf, Effen, Hornitos, Sipsmith, and Yelp. Enjoy an afternoon of original Maine-made music on the River Green at the Captain Lord Mansion, featuring live music by Spencer Albee and The Mallett Brothers Band as well as food trucks and craft beer. Sponsored by Seaport Development Group and Shipyard Brewing Company. A cocktail party to kick off the evening, dockside on the schooner restaurant Spirit of Massachusetts. At the Pilot House Marina sponsored by Yarmouth Boat Yard.

PRIVATE EYES

An invitation-only Champagne and caviar exhibition of Maine artists. At the Gallery at the Grand sponsored by Browne Trading Company.

GRAND FINALE

Wrap up the 2018 Kennebunkport Festival with this fun night featuring incredible spreads of food and drink, music and dancing. At On The Marsh Bistro, sponsored by Jim Godbout Plumbing and Heating and Maker’s Mark.


ARTof DINING

TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY JUNE 5 & 6 THURSDAY 7 - 10 PM JUNE 8 Private Homes Kennebunk 6 -&10Kennebunkport PM A series of intimate dinners prepared Vinegar Hill Barn by top chefs in private homes in the Kennebunkport area. Each dinner Arundel showcases work by an Art Collector Maine artist. Sponsored by Maker’s Mark.

THURSDAY, JUNE 7 6:30 - 10 PM Pilot House Boatyard Kennebunk

THURSDAY Hosted by David’s Restaurants and Wallace Events JUNE 8 with chefs David Turin, David’s, David’s Opus 6 - 10 PM Ten, and David’s 388

Josh Berry of Union, Daniel Dumont Hill BarnCorner, of TheVinegar Farm at Eastman’s Norm HebertArundel of Bintliff’s Ogunquit, German Lucarelli of Ports of Italy, and Harding Lee Smith of The Rooms Restaurants. Sponsored by The Pilot House Restaurant, Terrapin Landscapes and Wallace Events.

FRIDAY, JUNE 8 6 - 10:30 PM Wells Reserve at Laudholm Wells

THURSDAY JUNE 8 6 - 10 PM

A culinary experience featuring guest chefs from Maine and beyond joining forces to create a multi-course, family style seated dinner in a candlelit barn at the Vinegar Barn Wells ReserveHill at Laudholm. Hosted by Chef Justin Walker and Arundel Danielle Walker of Walkers Maine. Sponsored by Richard Moody & Sons, Maker’s Mark, Casco Bay Butter, Cellardoor Winery, and Pine State Beverage.


SATURDAY, JUNE 9 Noon - 3 PM

SATURDAY, JUNE 9 1- 5 PM

SATURDAY, JUNE 9 7 - 10 PM

Pilot House Boatyard Kennebunk

Spencer Albee & Band and The Mallet Brothers Band

On the Marsh Bistro Kennebunk

THURSDAY JUNE An afternoon tasting 8 event under a tent on the water with offerings from 6 - 10chefs PMplus wines, over 20 different

THURSDAY JUNE 8 Live on the River Green at Captain 6Lord- 10 PM Mansion

Vinegar Hill Barn Sponsored by The Pilot House Arundel

A day of original Vinegar HillMaine-made Barn music in a grassy field with food Arundel trucks and craft beers.

beer and cocktails.

Restaurant, Clarke Sub Zero & Wolf, Effen, Hornitos, Sipsmith, and Yelp.

Sponsored by Seaport Development Group and Shipyard Brewing Company.

THURSDAY JUNE 8 Wrap up the 2018 Kennebunkport Festival with this fun night featuring 6 spreads - 10 PM incredible of food and drink, music and dancing.

Vinegar Hill Barn

Sponsored by Jim Godbout Arundel Plumbing & Heating, Maker’s Mark, and On the Marsh Bistro.


E DITOR’S NO TE

PHOTOGRAPHY BY SEAN THOMAS

MAINE MEDIA COLLECTIVE PUBLISHER & CEO | Andrea King CFO | Jack Leonardi DIRECTOR OF SALES | Jeffrey D’Amico DIRECTOR OF MARKETING | Scott Wentzell ADVERTISING ACCOUNT MANAGERS |

Karen Bowe, Ryan Hammond, Peter Heinz, Tom Urban DIRECTOR OF EVENTS & EXPERIENTIAL MARKETING |

Reven Oliver

M

ost Mainers work hard to be able to live here, and my family is no exception. Many years ago, when I was working in publishing in New York City, with a soon-to-be oneyear-old, I turned to my husband and said, “We need to move.” At the time, we had spent the past 11 years looking forward to the few days every year when we would pile into the car to visit his family in York, Maine. They got to live here all year, and I was jealous. As much as I tried, I just couldn’t get Maine out of my mind. After many pitches, we were both able to convince our companies to let us relocate to Portland while maintaining our jobs. These days, my husband still travels to New York City a few times a month, but we feel extremely grateful we are able to live in this incredible state. Our kids love the winters filled with snowboarding, eating fresh snow topped with maple syrup, and sledding the hill behind our house. Summers are spent outside exploring, catching hermit crabs on the shores of Ferry Beach, and (for adults) sitting in our backyard enjoying an early-evening cocktail. Whether you’re here just for the summers or a weekend, or if you live here all year, you become part of this place. Our May issue of Maine Home+Design has always been our “Kennebunks” issue—a place that truly embodies the essence of Maine. The owners of the homes in this issue have one thing in common: they are all mindful of the natural riches of Maine. The Rizzieri family built their home abutting Goose Rocks Beach

DIRECTOR OF CORPORATE GIVING & VISIBILITY |

around grade challenges and coastline restrictions (A Twenty-First-Century Saltwater Farmhouse, page 82) to create a functional home that accommodates their love of cooking and entertaining. And nature and simplicity define the Morris home in Kennebunkport, with its shoebox design and flat grass roof (Neighbors, Friends & Friends of Friends, page 104). One of the best ways to explore and experience the natural beauty of Maine is by camping. Sandy Pines Campground in Kennebunkport asked 12 interior designers each to design a tent they felt conveyed their Maine design aesthetic (12 Ways of Looking at a Tent, page 120). One of the designers, Kennebunk resident Louise Hurlbutt, gave us a personalized tour of the Kennebunks. It is a route I will make sure to repeat when I’m there this June for the weeklong celebration of food, art, and music that is the Kennbunkport Festival. Speaking of paths, you might have noticed some changes on our masthead. Whether you listen to our radio station or read our magazines, you have gotten to know Dr. Lisa Belisle over the past seven years. I am thrilled to announce that Lisa has taken on the role of editor-inchief. And because every issue of Maine Home+Design takes you on a journey through the best design the state has to offer, we have to get out of the office: now our longtime art designer, Heidi Kirn, will be part of this exciting scouting process (turn the page to read more about Heidi’s new adventure).

Danielle Devine Managing Editor ddevine@mainehomedesign.com

Shelbi Wassick COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT MANAGER | Casey Lovejoy OFFICE MANAGER | Cyndi Alden CREDIT MANAGER | Melissa Olander CIRCULATION | Sarah Lynn

ART COLLECTOR MAINE |

Ann Caudle, Jack Leonardi, Taylor McCafferty, Kendra McDonald, Emma Wilson THE BRAND COMPANY |

Taylor Adams, Chris Kast, Maureen Littlefield LOVE MAINE RADIO WITH DR. LISA BELISLE |

Spencer Albee, Dr. Lisa Belisle, Kate Gardner, Paul Koenig, Casey Lovejoy, Shelbi Wassick MAINE MAGAZINE |

Paul Koenig, Joel Kuschke OLD PORT MAGAZINE |

Susan Axelrod, Joel Kuschke AGELESS MAINE MAGAZINE |

Susan Axelrod, Sarah Prak

SUBSCRIBE | mainehomedesign.com Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective LLC Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 16 Middle Street | Suite 501 | Portland | Maine | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff is responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright © 2018, Maine Media Collective LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A. mainehomedesign.com


MANAGING EDITOR | Danielle Devine ART DIRECTOR | Heidi Kirn PRODUCTION MANAGER | Nichole Heady

Photo © Rob Karosis | Architect, Whitten Architects

A MAINE MEDIA COLLECTIVE PUBLICATION

EDITORIAL ASSISTANT | Kate Gardner COPY EDITOR | Leah Whalen PROOFREADER | Amy Chamberlain STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER | Sean Thomas VIDEO PRODUCER | Lamia Lazrak WRITERS |

Susan Axelrod, Jen DeRose, Katy Kelleher, Debra Spark PHOTOGRAPHERS |

Myriam Babin, Trent Bell, Dave Dostie, François Gagné, Jonathan Reece, Jeff Roberts, Irvin Serrano, Christina Wnek

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF | Dr. Lisa Belisle EDITOR-AT-LARGE | Heidi Kirn

ARCHITECTS

BOOTHBAY MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 37

INTERIOR DESIGNERS

PORTLAND

BUILDERS

CABINETMAKERS

knickerbockergroup.com


S TA F F N O T E S

PHOTOGRAPHY BY SEAN THOMAS

O

Huffard House INTERIOR DESIGN

n a leap of faith, I returned home to Maine nine years ago. Just a week later Maine and Maine Home+Design magazines mysteriously appeared in my mailbox. I remember the feeling of running my hand across that beautiful matte cover. The thick, glossy interior pages were filled with stunning photography and thoughtfully written stories about Maine businesses, homes, and artists. I was thrilled that the Maine I grew up in was now being celebrated in this way. I had always tried to describe to my friends “from away” how Maine was not only beautiful but also filled with unique and creative people. When my dad was at my house a few days later, he saw the magazines on my coffee table, giggled, and asked how I liked them. He was beyond thrilled that we had moved here, and had secretly gotten me a subscription. The next day I reached out to the magazines to get a conversation rolling about the possibility of working with them. Eight years have passed since I joined the team as art director of Maine Home+Design as well as Maine magazine’s Annual Guide series. It’s a creative job that I have loved. It has given me the opportunity to cultivate close friendships with our writers and photographers while designing the layout of these pages. I have worked

207.747.5956 huffardhouse.com 38 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

with some of the most talented architects, builders, designers, artists, and craftspeople around the state. In your hands is my last issue as art director. Maine Media Collective has grown tremendously since my first days, and I couldn’t be more excited about moving into the role of editor-at-large. In this position I will focus on connecting even more with our community to learn about new projects and businesses. I will be taking journeys up the coastline to the lakes and mountains to visit homes and talk with homeowners. I want to hear about why they choose to live in Maine, what their design process was, and how they live in their homes. We cover homes in all of our publications, including Maine, Old Port, and Ageless Maine. If you have not had a chance to read these stories, I hope you will look for them. I am looking forward to curating home stories for all of our magazines, and continuing to contribute photography to our pages. And I won't forget to pull over on the side of the road and capture the beautiful views along the way. Follow along with me on Instagram @heidikirn and @mainehomedesign.

Heidi Kirn Editor-at-Large hkirn@mainehomedesign.com


WE LOVE MAINE.

We fill our work days creating Maine-centric media products— publishing magazines and guides, producing radio shows, managing social media sites, developing websites, filming videos, producing events—because of this simple tenet. Our staff have stayed here, come back here, or moved here because we love Maine’s rich history, its unique character, and the people who live here, and most important, because we believe in Maine’s potential. We simultaneously love the Maine we grew up in and fully embrace the reality that things change and evolve. And we bear witness to that happening here. We are cheerleaders for Maine as a place for people to live, stay, and thrive—a place for people from away to move to, a place for second homeowners to buy into, a place to raise children, a place to start and operate a business—as well as a place to visit and explore, a place to escape and heal. And, a place to be inspired. We cover Maine in a positive light. We intentionally leave the negativity and snark to other media outlets. There is a place for everything, and we honor that. But that place is not here. So if you love Maine, please turn to us with your reading eyes, your listening ears, your follows and your likes, your attendance, and your advertising and sponsorships. Explore what we believe is the best Maine has to offer, on the pages of our magazines and guides, through the airwaves, at events, and via social media. Auburn | Augusta | Bailey Island | Bangor | Bar Harbor | Bass Harbor | Bath | Beaver Creek | Belfast | Bethel | Biddeford | Biddeford Pool | Blue Hill | Boothbay | Boothbay Harbor | Brewer | Bridgton | Bristol | Brooklin | Brownfield | Brunswick | Buxton | Camden | Cape Elizabeth | Cape Neddick | Cape Porpoise | Caribou | Carrabassett Valley | Castine | Chebeague Island | Chesterville | Cliff Island | Cornish | Cousins Island | Cumberland | Cushing | Damariscotta | Dayton | Dixfield | Eagle Lake | Eastport | Edgecomb | Ellsworth | Eustis | Fairfield | Falmouth | Fort Kent | Frankfurt | Freedom | Freeport | Frenchboro | Frenchville | Fryeburg | Gardiner | Gray | Great Cranberry Island | Greenville | Hallowell | Harpswell | Harrison | Hermit Island | Hope | Hurricane Island | Isle au Haut | Islesboro | Jewell Island | Kennebunk | Kennebunkport | Kezar Lake | Kingfield | Kittery | Lewiston | Liberty | Limerick | Lincoln | Lincolnville | Lovell | Lubec | Madawaska | Mars Hill | Matinicus Island | Millinocket | Monhegan Island | Monson | Moosehead Lake Region | Mount Desert Island | Newcastle | New Gloucester | Newry | North Haven | Northport | North Yarmouth | Norway | Oakland | Ogunquit | Old Orchard Beach | Oquossoc | Orland | Orono | Otter Creek | Owls Head | Oxford | Peaks Island | Phippsburg | Poland | Port Clyde | Porter | Portland | Pownal | Presque Isle | Prospect | Prospect Harbor | Rangeley | Rockland | Rockport | Rockwood | Rome | Roque Bluffs | Rumford | Saco | Scarborough | Seal Harbor | Searsport | Sebec | Sedgwick | Sinclair | Skowhegan | South Casco | South Freeport | South Portland | Southport | Southwest Harbor | Squirrel Island | St. George | Stockton Springs | Stonington | Stratton | Temple | Tenants Harbor | The Forks | Thomaston | Thorndike | Union | Unity | Veazie | Vinalhaven | Waterville | Wells | Westbrook | Westport Island | Wilton | Windsor | Winterport | Wiscasset | Woolwich | Yarmouth | York

THE MODERN SHAKER BED An original design from Chilton Furniture. Modern and warm, with a distinct nod to the past. Built in Maine.

SUBSCRIBE | mainehomedesign.com

Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective LLC. Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 16 Middle Street | Suite 501 | Portland | Maine | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff is responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright © 2018, Maine Media Collective LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A. mainehomedesign.com

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2018 A r t i s t s Jacob Aguiar Kevin Beers M.J. Benson Daniel Corey Ken DeWaard Marsha Donahue Carol L. Douglas Cooper Dragonette Erin McGee Ferrell Margaret Gerding Ellen Welch Granter Elizabeth Hoy Jill Hoy Anne Ireland Marguerite Lawler Janet Ledoux Jill Hoy, Portland Head ligHt, Paint for P reservation 2017

Paint for Preservation 2018 11th A n nuA l W et PA int A uction B enefit Sunday, July 1, 2018 | 4:00pm - 7:30pm Join award-winning artists in celebrating Cape Elizabeth’s natural beauty and ecological significance at Breakwater Farm in Cape Elizabeth. A catered reception, elegant music and a lively auction of “wet” artwork painted en plein air throughout the weekend make this an event not to be missed!

Nathaniel Meyer James Mullen JohnDavid O’Shaughnessy Colin Page Matthew Russ John R. Santoro Lou Schellenberg Caleb Stone Janet Sutherland Judy Taylor Charles Thompson Emily Trenholm Michael E. Vermette

All proceeds benefit the Cape Elizabeth Land Trust.

Michael Walek Graham Wood

A limited number of tickets will be available. For more information visit: capelandtrust.org/paint Media Sponsor:

Preservation Sponsors:

Portland, ME • Portsmouth, NH • rmdavis.com

Conservation Sponsors:

For You, For Your Family, Forever 330 Ocean House Road | Cape Elizabeth ME 04107

Event Sponsors:

Stewardship Sponsors:

Brett Cary of Chimney Rock Food Co.

360 Uncoated • Casco Bay Frames & Gallery • Huffard House Design Knickerbocker Group • Maine Limousine Service • Town & Shore Associates LLC Veterinary and Rehabilitation Center of Cape Elizabeth

207-767-6054 E-mail: info@capelandtrust.org www.capelandtrust.org


WE GIVE BACK. At Maine Media Collective our mission is to make a substantial and unique contribution to supporting Maine’s nonprofit community statewide, regionally, and at the town level. We believe that the work Maine’s nonprofit organizations do, individually and collectively, makes our lives better and Maine a better place to live. With limited budgets, Maine’s nonprofits need help boosting awareness of their specific causes and raising the funds they need. We have established long-term relationships with over 120 nonprofits and community-based organizations. We give to these organizations by providing, free of charge, services ranging from advertising to graphic design, brand development, marketing advice, online announcements, and social media engagement. We often include nonprofit organizations in our editorial coverage through feature articles and/or recaps of their events. You’ll find the latter in our “There + Then,” “Turnout,” and “Gather” sections. Over the past year, MMC has made cash and in-kind donations of more than: $1,930,463 WE ARE PROUD OF OUR AFFILIATION WITH THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS: 317 Main Community Music Center | American Diabetes Association | AIA Maine | Alfond Youth Center of Waterville | American Lung Association | Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital | Bayside Bowl | Bicycle Coalition of Maine | Biddeford Ball | Biddeford/Saco Rotary Club | Boothbay Harbor Fest | Boothbay Region Chamber of Commerce | Boothbay Region Land Trus | Boys & Girls Club of Southern Maine | Bowdoin International Music Festival | Camden Garden Club | Camden International Film Festiva | Camden Opera House | Camp Sunshine | Camp Susan Curtis | Cape Elizabeth Education Foundation | Cape Elizabeth Land Trust | Casco Bay Islands SwimRun | Castine Arts Association | CEI | Center for Furniture Craftsmanship | Center for Grieving Children | Colby Museum of Art | Cross Insurance Center | Dempsey Challenge | Easter Seals Maine | Elias Cup | Environmental Health Strategy Center | Faily Hope | Farnsworth Art Museum | Fort Williams Park Foundation | Frannie Peabody Center | Friends of Casco Bay | Friends of Windjammer Days | Full Plates Full Potential | Georges River Land Trust | Gulf of Maine Research Institute | Good Shepherd Food Bank | Goodwill of Northern New England | Greater Portland Land Marks | GrowSmart Maine | Harbor House | Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project | Institute for Family Owned Business | Junior Achievement of Maine | Junior League of Portland | Kennebunk Free Library | Kennebunkport Conservation Trust | Kennebunks Tour de Cure | Kittery Block Party | L/A Arts | Life Flight of Maine | Lift360 | Maine Academy of Modern Music | Maine Audubon | Maine Cancer Foundation | Maine Center for Creativity | Maine Children’s Cancer Program | Maine College of Art | Maine Crafts Association | Maine Development Foundation | Maine Discovery Museum | Maine Flower Shower | Maine Interior Design Association | Maine Island Trail Association | Maine Jewish Film Festival | Maine Lobster Festival | Maine Preservation | Maine Restaurant Association | Maine Science Festival | Maine Start Up and Create Week | Maine State Ballet | Make-A-Wish Foundation of Maine | March of Dimes | Mercy/ Gary's House | MEREDA | Mitchell Institute | Museums of Old York | MyPlace Teen Center |Natural Resources Council of Maine | New England Craft Brew Summit | North Atlantic Blues festival | Ogunquit Museum of American Art | Ogunquit Playhouse | Osher Map Library | Passivhaus Maine | Portland Downtown | Portland Museum of Art | Portland Ovations | Portland Symphony Orchestra | Portland Trails | PORTopera | Portland Stage Education Programming | Ronald McDonald House Charities | Royal River Land Trust | SailMaine | Salt Bay Chamberfest | Scarborough Education Foundation | Share Our Strength | sheJAMS | Strive | Talking Art in Maine | TEDxDirigo/Treehouse | Teens to Trails | Travis Mills Foundation | The Strand Theatre | The Telling Room | United Way of Greater Portland | University of Maine Gardens | Viles Arboretum | Vinegar Hill Music Theater | Wayfinder Schools | Wells Reserve at Laudholm | Wendell Gilley Museum | WinterKids | Wolfe's Neck Farm | Woodlawn Museum | Yarmouth History Center

SUBSCRIBE | mainehomedesign.com

Maine Home+Design is published twelve times each year by Maine Media Collective LLC. Editorial and subscription information: phone 207.772.3373 | fax 888.836.6715 16 Middle Street | Suite 501 | Portland | Maine | 04101 Opinions expressed in articles or advertisements, unless otherwise noted, do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the publisher, staff, or advisory board. Every effort has been made to ensure that all information presented in this issue is accurate, and neither Maine Home+Design nor any of its staff is responsible for omissions or information that has been misrepresented to the magazine. Copyright © 2018, Maine Media Collective LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission, in writing, from the publisher. Printed in the U.S.A. mainehomedesign.com

KC K I T C H E N C OV E C A B I N E T RY & D E S I G N featuring crystal cabinet works

www.kitchencovecabinetry.com


C ON T RI BU T O RS

BRIAN BEAUDETTE received a liberal arts degree from Boston College and a master of architecture from University of Colorado. He lived in Denver for eight years before founding his architectural firm in 1995. He moved to Maine a year later and now operates out of Kennebunk and the Rangeley Lakes region. A TwentyFirst-Century Saltwater Farmhouse, page 82

Trained as a decorative painter, LISA TEAGUE worked in Southern France before seguing into interior design. She uses experience gleaned from working for her mother, who is also an interior designer. In addition to product design and running Lisa Teague Studios in Portsmouth, she owns Quiet Home Paints, which offers 80 organic, custom, noVOC paints. She frequently travels to East Africa for charitable work with families, and through her line of paints for nurseries, she aims to create healthy products for children no matter where they live. A TwentyFirst-Century Saltwater Farmhouse, page 82

COM E HOM E TO CREATIVITY

GEOFF BOWLEY now runs Bowley Builders, the Kennebunkbased construction company that his parents, Steve and Maureen Bowley, started in 1972, and where Geoff has been working since 2001. The business focuses on custom residential homes and builds throughout southern Maine. The current team includes Rusty Theriault, a fine carpenter, painter, and guitarist who serves as project manager. A Twenty-First-Century Saltwater Farmhouse, page 82

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A native of Memphis, WILL WINKELMAN went to architecture school in Houston and then lived in San Francisco before discovering Peaks Island in 1985. He has lived on Peaks ever since. Winkelman has been practicing residential architecture in Maine for the better part of the past 30 years. He established his Portland-based firm, Winkelman Architecture, in 2007. Neighbors, Friends, and Friends of Friends, page 104

Born in New York City during the blackout of 1965, BEN TROUT moved to Maine with his family in the late ’70s, when his mother took a job as a professor at Portland School of Art, the predecessor of today’s Maine College of Art. While still a teen, Trout apprenticed with a builder restoring dilapidated Victorians in Portland’s West End. By 1998 he had opened his own construction company, Trademark, which still has its shop and offices in South Portland. Trademark focuses on new homes, remodels, and additions in the Greater Portland area as well as the islands. Trout is a musician, father, and lover of the outdoors. Neighbors, Friends, and Friends of Friends, page 104

JOHN MORRIS A R C H I T E C T S

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KRISTA STOKES opened and managed restaurants in Colorado, worked for the satirical newspaper The Onion, and cofounded and operated a web design company in Washington, D.C., before she moved to Maine to open a secondhand home decor store with her best friend. That business, Favela Chic, grew to include a frame shop, seamstress studio, and a line of bedding and curtains, before the shop closed so Stokes could focus full-time on her interior design business in Kennebunkport. A Twenty-First-Century Saltwater Farmhouse, page 82

photos © Jeff Roberts



Get to know your neighbors. TRACY GUERRETTE

PODCAST

#337

Tracy Guerrette played on the women's basketball team at the University of Maine, and she has now become an elite runnerÑin October, she won the Maine Marathon and hopes to qualify for the 2020 Olympics. She is also the Director of Faith Formation at Saint Paul the Apostle Church in Bangor.

CAROLANN OUELLETTE

PODCAST

#338

Carolann Ouellette joined Maine Huts and Trails as executive director in January of 2017. Previously, Ouellette served as director of the Maine Office of Tourism. Under her leadership, Maine has benefited from multiple years of consistent growth in tourism.

PAUL GOLDING AND ALEXANDRA SAGOV

PODCAST

#342

Paul Golding is the executive director of Family Hope, a mental health resource agency located in Scarborough. He has served in a number of senior roles in public health advocacy, higher education, and social services. Alexandra Sagov, who has worked in the mental health field for over twenty years, has served with Family Hope since 2017.

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In each episode, Dr. BelisleÑEditor-in-Chief at Maine Media CollectiveÑintroduces you to our neighbors, one conversation at a time. Hear what they have to say. Welcome to our community.

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D E S IG N W I RE After purchasing the YACHTSMAN HOTEL AND MARINA CLUB in October, the KENNEBUNKPORT RESORT COLLECTION is reopening the renovated 30-room hotel this May. Grounded in a bright color palette of blue, mango, and magenta, the redesigned interiors feature shiplap walls, cathedral ceilings, and boutique-style furnishings, including updated Regencystyle burnished chests and side tables as well as skirted chairs. Nautical accents, like custom striped rugs inspired by lobster rope and V-groove paneling, reference the hotel’s location on the banks of the Kennebunk River. Outdoors, each bungalow overlooks the river and offers private outdoor space and a teak terrace.

ANUSAT LIMSITONG, owner of Scarborough’s THAI 9 RESTAURANT, is opening a new poke restaurant at 658 Congress Street in Portland. Called Poke Pop, the new casual restaurant was designed by DELANO ARCHITECTURE and features a take-out counter and sit-down dining area. Chris Delano of Delano Architecture created a 35-foot-long builtin bench and tapered ceiling plane from bamboo, taking inspiration from origami folds. With its edges exposed above the floor before angling into the wall, the bench appears to float in space. As a finishing touch, Thai artist Ricky Tsujaya designed a colorful wall mural inspired by pop art.

JEWETT FARMS AND CO. is moving its cabinet shop and offices back to York. The cabinetry, soapstone, and flooring company’s new location is 27,000 square feet, double the size of its previous site. It includes two spray booths, a large woodworking production space, a staging area, and offices. The new facilities will also help the company meet the growing demand from its showroom at the Boston Design Center, opened in 2015. Founded in York in 1999, Jewett Farms and Co. moved its central operations from York to Dover, New Hampshire, in 2011. To inaugurate their new space, the company plans to host an open house in the summer.

ANTHONY CATALFANO, the president and principal designer of Anthony Catalfano Interiors and owner of Anthony Catalfano Home in Wells, has published his first book, Embellished Spaces. The coffee table book, which features Catalfano’s designs, was released in March. In addition to showcasing his work, the book also offers creative tips and insights into interior design. A successful launch party was held in Naples, Florida, in March, and another is being planned in Maine in July.

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TU R N OU T PHOTOGRAPHY BY SEAN THOMAS

CINQ A SEPT & DESIGN Maine Media Collective hosted a Cinq a Sept exclusively for its Maine Home+Design community on February 22 at its new offices at 16 Middle Street in Portland. Over food and drink from Black Tie Catering, Maine Home+Design friends and community members met up and made connections.’

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“This Maine Home+Design Cinq a Sept brought together creatives from throughout the state and made me realize how tight-knit the Maine design community really is and how supportive we are of each other. Some wonderful ideas were shared, and the energy was strong. I’m honored to be part of this dialogue.” —Danielle Devine, managing editor of Maine Home+Design

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CABINETRY ∏ CONSTRUCTION ∏ RENOVATIONS 207.846.5105 ∏ MAGUIRECONSTRUCTION.COM

1. Mark Leinenbach, regional manager at Hurlbutt Designs; Jeffrey D’Amico, director of sales at Maine Media Collective; Dana Whitney, director of marketing at Legacy Properties Sotheby’s International Realty; and Ralph Hurlbutt, co-owner of Hurlbutt Designs 2. Joe Capozza, vice president and commercial manager of Capozza Tile and Floor Covering Center, and Billie Capozza, special events director at Cheverus High School 3. Doug Lashley, founder and CEO of GreenVest; Andrea King, CEO and publisher at Maine Media Collective; and Dave Matero, architect 4. Joe Seremeth, owner of Woodlab and Kate Seremeth (and their son), owner of Tack Studios 5. Linda Banks, founder of Banks Design Associates and Simply Home, and Brett Johnson, owner of Maine Street Design Co. 6. Kevin Lord, owner of Thomas and Lord, and Yegor Malinovskii, market president at Berlin City Auto Group 7. Harry Hepburn, architect at Briburn, and Jessie Carroll, architect at Whitten Architects 8. Rob Whitten, architect; Myriam Babin, photographer; and Jeff Roberts, photographer


T U RN OU T PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE DOSTIE

oriental | contemporary | vintage

CULTIVATE : THE 2018 CONTEMPORARIES WINTER BASH The Portland Museum of Art’s Contemporaries came together on February 15 to celebrate their enthusiasm for art and for the museum itself. Contemporaries members are young art appreciators including entrepreneurs, community leaders, business owners, creatives, and influencers.

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1. The Portland Museum of Art was transformed with lights and decorations for its 2018 Contemporaries Winter Bash. 2. Paul Koenig, managing editor of Maine magazine, and Caroline Cole, community services program manager at STRIVE 3. John Winters, hematologist at Maine Medical Center; Tiffanie Winters; Andrea King, publisher and CEO of Maine Media Collective; and Hugh Wilkinson, consultant at Coral Hill 4. Emily Wallace, guest relations manager at Allagash Brewing Company; Celine Frueh, HR director at Allagash Brewing Company; and Stephen Langdon, territory manager at Reynolds American 5. Stephanie Scherer, marketing operations manager at Diversified Communications, and Graeme Kennedy, director of communications at Portland Museum of Art 6. Madeline Rudman, recruitment professional at OfficeTeam, and John Ambler 7. Daniel Minter, artist; Sean Alonzo Harris, photographer and artist; and Marcia Minter, vice president of creative at L.L.Bean 8. Carrie Cianchette; Jason Cianchette, president of Group Marketshare; Maria Reppucci Rinaldi; and Carmen Rinaldi, dermatologist at Dermatology Associates MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 49

www.BradfordsRugGallery.com 297 Forest Avenue Portland, ME p: 207.772.3843 | f: 207.773.2849


TU R N OU T PHOTOGRAPHY BY DAVE DOSTIE

BOWDOIN INTERNATIONAL MUSIC FESTIVAL

The Bowdoin International Music Festival invited the community to meet artistic directors David Ying and Phillip Ying for a special announcement about the 2018 season program. There were drinks, light appetizers, and an opportunity to meet the festival community. MH+D

SEPTEMBER 18–23

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5 “The event was a great success and gave new faces a chance to learn about the festival and our upcoming season. Getting the chance to talk with the festival community in the off-season is always a treat.” —Casey Oakes, director of marketing and communications

SPONSORED BY:

7 1. Dan Nitsch, executive director at Bowdoin International Music Festival (BIMF); Phillip Ying, artistic director at BIMF; Elliot Rosen, BIMF chairman of the board; and David Ying, artistic director at BIMF 2. Cara Sullivan, operations manager at BIMF 3. David Ying; Dan Nitsch; and Tim Carter, Midcoast Symphony Orchestra 4. Cynthia Howland, Friends of the DaPonte String Quartet board member, and Dan Nitsch 5. Elliot Rosen and Sandy Stott, writer 6. Margy Burroughs, BIMF board member; Susanne Stover, finance and HR officer at BIMF; and Grace Bell, development associate at BIMF 7. Susan Lavan, BIMF board member; James T. Morgan, BIMF board member; and Pat Brown, BIMF board member

Produced by Maine Media Collective

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Photo: Heidi Kirn

CRAFTSMANSHIP. INNOVATION. PRECISION.

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5.1–7.31 GARTH WILLIAMS, ILLUSTRATOR OF THE CENTURY Illustration Institute Curtis Memorial Library 23 Pleasant St. | Brunswick illustrationinstitute.org

5.3 FIRST THURSDAY ART OPENING FEATURING ARTWORKS BY DEBORAH RANDALL 5 p.m.−7 p.m. Portland Art Gallery 154 Middle St. | Portland artcollectormaine.com

5.4 DANIEL BERNARD ROUMAIN: EN MASSE 5 p.m. Portland Ovations 50 Monument Way | Portland portlandovations.org

5.4 MECAMORPHOSIS RUNWAY FASHION SHOW 7:30 p.m. Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art 522 Congress St. | Portland meca.edu

5.4–5.13 THE MIDVALE HIGH SCHOOL 50TH REUNION The Public Theatre 31 Maple St. | Lewiston thepublictheatre.org

5.7 MAINE BUSINESS HALL OF FAME SOUTH Junior Achievement of Maine 5:30 p.m.−8:30 p.m. Portland Marriott at Sable Oaks 200 Sable Oaks Dr. | South Portland juniorachievement.org

5.9 MAINE WOMEN’S CONFERENCE 7:30 a.m.−7 p.m. Holiday Inn by the Bay 88 Spring St. | Portland themainewomensconference.org

52 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


5.10 CLAIRE MESSUD IN CONVERSATION WITH RICHARD RUSSO Wayfinder Schools 6 p.m. Hannaford Hall 88 Bedford St. | Portland wayfinderschools.org

5.11 MR. LONGFELLOW’S COCKTAIL PARTY Maine Historical Society 5:30 p.m.−8:30 p.m. O’Maine Studios 54 Danforth St. | Portland mainehistory.org

5.12 THE SHIPYARD MAINE COAST HALF MARATHON 8 a.m. University of New England 11 Hills Beach Rd. | Biddeford mainecoast262.com

5.12 MAGICAL HISTORY TOUR 10 a.m.−4 p.m. Maine Historical Society 485 Congress St. | Portland mainehistory.org

5.12 THE 2018 MAMM SLAM FINALS Maine Academy of Modern Music 1 p.m.−5 p.m. Empire Live Music & Events 575 Congress St. | Portland maineacademyofmodernmusic.org

5.13 THE SHIPYARD MAINE COAST FULL MARATHON 7:30 a.m. Kennebunk High School 89 Fletcher St. | Kennebunk mainecoast262.com

5.15 2018 MAINE FAMILY BUSINESS AWARDS Institute for Family-Owned Business 5 p.m.−9 p.m. Holiday Inn by the Bay 88 Spring St. | Portland fambusiness.org

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5.16 AIA DESIGN AWARDS 5:30 p.m.−8:30 p.m. Brick South at Thompson’s Point 8 Thompson’s Point | Portland aiamaine.org

5.16 PARTY WITH A PURPOSE Maine Children’s Cancer Program 5:30 p.m.−8 p.m. DiMillo’s on the Water 25 Long Wharf | Portland mainehealth.org

5.17 ANNUAL TASTE EVENT Maine Interior Design Association 5:30 p.m.−8:30 p.m. Cellardoor Winery at the Point 4 Thompson’s Point | Portland midamaine.org

5.17 SPLASH! Maine Island Trail Association 6 p.m.−9 p.m. East Coast Yacht Sales 106 Lafayette St. | Yarmouth mita.org

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5.17–5.18 STOMP Portland Ovations 7 p.m. Merrill Auditorium 20 Myrtle St. | Portland portlandovations.org

5.18 2018 ANNUAL AUCTION: CELEBRATE THE PAST, IMAGINE THE FUTURE 6 p.m.−10 p.m. Children’s Museum & Theatre of Maine 142 Free St. | Portland kitetails.org

5.19 ANNUAL PLANT SALE 9 a.m.−1 p.m. Wolfe’s Neck Farm 184 Burnett Rd. | Freeport wolfesneck.org

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5.19 RUN OF THE ROYAL Royal River Conservation Trust 10 a.m. Yarmouth History Center 118 East Elm St. | Yarmouth rrct.org

5.26–5.27 PINELAND FARM TRAIL RUNNING FESTIVAL Pineland Farms 15 Farm View Rd. | New Gloucester pinelandtrails.com

104 Neighbors, Friends & Friends of Friends

Brian Vanden Brink Photography

YOUR VISION. | YOUR LIFE. | YOUR HOME.

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In Life Unstyled by Emily Henson, vintage paintings, a floral backdrop, and warm natural textures combine for a cool and collected look.

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casual, cool loft space mixes natural elements such as flowering branches; fun hues of lilac, garnet, and pale pink; and rich textures (note the plentiful sheepskin rugs). The space is featured in Emily Henson’s Life Unstyled: How to Embrace Imperfection and Create a Home You Love (Ryland Peters and Small, 2016), in which the stylist and author reminds us that there’s beauty not just in the “pristine and polished” but also in making “the most of the home you have.” So feel free to mix and match decor for a quirky and collected vibe: try glass blower Joe Cariati’s smoky blue vase, brilliant red tea cups with curlicue handles, and a whimsical lantern in bubble gum pink. Does the space, after bringing together various eras and styles, feel a bit like an eclectic mishmash? Well done, that’s the point. MH+D


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A IA D ESIGN T HE O R Y EDITED BY DANIELLE DEVINE | PHOTOGRAPHY BY SEAN THOMAS

FORENSIC ARCHITECTURE ARCHITECT DAVID DOUGLASS

"T

he focus of my practice and my company, Envelope Architecture and Consulting, is building science—how buildings perform in the hostile environment in which we live,” says architect David Douglass. Douglass has worked in the Portland area since 1997. “A colleague of mine has referred to me as a ‘forensic architect,’” says Douglass. “I feel that building performance is one of the most important aspects of architecture, since buildings keep us protected from the environment and allow us to live our lives daily in a safe and comfortable way.” MH+D asked him to tell us more.

IN MH+D’S CONTINUING COLLABORATION WITH AIA MAINE, WE PRESENT TO YOU EACH MONTH A DESIGN CONCEPT FROM AN ARCHITECT’S POINT OF VIEW. 62 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Q.

How does forensic architecture work? Do you collaborate with other architects?

A.

I believe you can’t truly understand how building assemblies succeed or fail unless you design them. I wear a lot of hats as an architect. I help people fix buildings that have problems such as masonry failures, leaks, flashing leaks, and window leaks. This includes investigations that often require taking a wall or roof apart to determine where the failure is. I provide them with remedial details as well. I design exterior enclosure packages, roof walls, and foundations for other architects. They design the look of the building, and I provide the components and details to make it perform properly. I will do peer reviews of other architects’ details when asked. I also assist clients with historic restoration, window design or replacement, authentic period details, and material selections.

Q.

You have been in this field for over 20 years. How have design problems changed?

A.

In new construction, many problems come from two places in today’s building industry. The first is that building wall assemblies are getting more and more complicated. In the past we built very simple walls: mass masonry or wood structures. These buildings were inefficient and wasteful from an energy standpoint. They breathed and had big variables in what they could withstand from wet to dry or hot to cold. Today we have a need for energy efficiency and sustainability. The demand on an enclosure system to perform is very complex. Add to that all the holes we put in our buildings—windows, doors, vents, air exchange, makeup air—and you have hundreds of intersections that need

to perform for decades. Then just for fun we have many different types of building materials with various makeups that must work together, but often don’t. It is my job to make sure that what’s there works, and if it is not working, find out how to make it work. Where we once had walls that acted as buffers to the environment, we now have control layers for moisture, vapor, air, sound, odor, thermal resistance, and light. It’s my responsibility to choreograph all of this.

Q. A.

How is this all regulated?

This complex dance we have today has brought on the concept of building commissioning. Building commissioning is a structured quality-assurance process intended to ensure that a building, when delivered, meets the owner’s requirements. Simply put, commissioning means that all parts of a building, including all the systems, perform as designed and intended for the owner. I provide building enclosure commissioning as part of this process. I am currently the only certified Building Enclosure Commissioning Process (BECxP) provider in Maine. This role is unique, as I am responsible for properly verifying other architects’ design work and ensuring that what is installed by the contractor is per the design. If it is different, I give input on it if I feel it will meet the intent of the design. AIA is a huge advocate for building performance and education. Much of what I do relates directly to the health, safety, and welfare of people, and AIA has that at the forefront of their mission.

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CREATIVE CABINETRY

66 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Decorative painter Hope Angier designs artful paneling for a Penobscot Bay home

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his nautical-inspired decorative painting was intended as a colorful focus for the kitchen area. I decided to treat all the cabinet doors as one mural, rather than creating a separate vignette on each panel. It was a challenge to create an image that could break into sections yet remain as an uninterrupted design. In the kitchen, the windows look out toward the open waters and islands of Penobscot Bay, so it was important to me to create a mural that incorporates the environment and continues the nautical theme. I chose an earthy palette, using yellow ochre to represent the ocean and sky. In this room, where heather green and white are predominant, the yellow ochre contributes to the space rather than overwhelming it. The softness of the mural allows other colors to play off it as accents. The yellow ochre background is easy to live with, and it’s unique and distinctive, while offering a touch of sophistication as well. The mural is simplistic in style, but balanced. The weight of the piers on the far left and right frame the design, allowing me to treat the middle panels with fewer details. On their own, the middle panels might seem sparse, but in a bank of many doors, they become graceful, balancing out the weight of the sides. After I painted the mural, my husband fauxgrained the cabinet door frames as well as the island base and drawer fronts throughout the rest of the kitchen, tying the room together. We also designed two four-foot-square compass roses on the floors of two adjacent rooms and fauxgrained the drawer fronts in those rooms to further complement the kitchen. On two major staircases, we painted compass roses on each of the risers, echoing the nautical elements in the kitchen. Nautical themes have a personal draw for me, since my husband and I are avid sailors and spent about six years living on a boat while still painting. We’ve been in the decorative painting business for 36 years. Over that time, as tastes have changed, we’ve taken basic decorating techniques and adapted them for any style, in any palette. Because we use oil paints and glazes for all our work, it’s going to last indefinitely, regardless of trends. In this particular house, I appreciate the serenity of these scenes. Every little boat, tree, and element has the faintest shadow against the stillness of the water. To me, it’s restful, happy, and calming. And timeless, too. —Hope Angier, owner of Hope R. Angier Interior Decorative Painting MH+D


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PR OF ILE KEVI N L O R D

Builder Kevin Lord in the bay window of a Kennebunkport home under construction by his firm, Thomas and Lord.


BY SUSAN AXELROD | PHOTOGRAPHY BY CHRISTINA WNEK

HARD WORK ETHIC For custom homebuilder Kevin Lord, success happens the old-fashioned way

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n direct contrast to the stunning, richly detailed homes he builds along the southern Maine coastline, Kevin Lord’s office building on Route 1 in Arundel is an unassuming box. On the approach, the only key to its identity is a parked truck lettered with his company’s name, Thomas and Lord. Inside, among the cabinet door and moulding samples, a framed quote attributed to Franklin D. Roosevelt offers a key to Lord himself: “A smooth sea never made a skilled sailor.” Lord is more of a powerboat guy, but the words still aptly describe his path to success: he has ridden out the rough waves with hard work, tenacity, and a fearless ability to take risks. Lord grew up in the western Massachusetts mill town of Chicopee, the middle child of three siblings whose father left the family when Lord was 12. His mother worked three jobs to keep their modest house; Lord and his brother Jim pitched in to help pay the mortgage by getting work permits in their mid-teens. “Our biggest fear was going to live in one of those horrible projects,” Lord says. From a young age, he spent his free time building things in a small wood shop in the basement. “When all the other kids were outside in the summer, I was down there,” he says. After graduating high school, Lord went to work for a custom homebuilder, eventually ending up on the crew that built a home for Kevin Thomas, owner of Maine Media Collective, who also lived in Western Massachusetts at the time. After eight years with the builder, Lord went out on his own as a skilled finish carpenter, and when Thomas bought a house in Kennebunkport that needed some work, Thomas’s friends suggested Lord. “He said, ‘Kevin who?’” recalls Lord with a

laugh. Because Thomas had left for work before sunrise and returned after dark, the two had never met in Massachusetts. In Maine, however, they quickly bonded, and Thomas soon floated the idea of launching a home construction business here. Lord declined; he had just purchased an old mill as an investment property, and business in Massachusetts was good. A few months later, Thomas asked him to do more work on the Kennebunkport house. They had the same conversation, and even though things were slowing down with work, Lord again said no. “Then he called me a couple weeks later and said, ‘Look, if I don’t do this with you, I’m going to do it with somebody else.’ I sold my house, sold my business, sold my interest in the mill, and moved to Maine.” That was in 2003. Originally named Welcome Back Cottages, Thomas and Lord became synonymous with fine homebuilding, especially in the Kennebunks, where the company thrived even after the stock market crash in 2008. “Right when the bottom fell out, a developer we worked with bought a big piece of land in Kennebunk that had all of these little cottages on it, Seagrass Lane,” says Lord. “They turned each one of them into a house, and we were the preferred builder there.” By the time the project was finished, the economy was turning back around. “We just kept on trucking,” he says. Thomas and Lord also connected with Kennebunkport real estate developer and hotelier Tim Harrington. “I built his last three custom homes, and 20 of his cottages at Hidden Pond [part of the Kennebunkport Resort Collection],” says Lord. Many of the homes the company builds are versions of the classic shingle style, with craftsmanship inside and out that reflect Lord’s fondness for fine woodwork

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 71


PR OF ILE KEVI N L O R D

(This page, clockwise from left) Cedar shakes cover the exterior of a custom home designed in the classic New England shingle style. Lord made this wooden truck when he was a boy. A new space Lord is finishing above a carriage house on his property. The rooflines and trim of the home (opposite) Lord built for himself and his family reflect his fondness for fine woodwork.

72 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


and also give new construction a sense of timelessness. “We put our own interpretation into these houses, which I think makes them feel the way they do,” says Lord. “We get a lot of subcontractors who work for other builders and they say, ‘Nobody puts the detail into these houses like you guys.’” In 2011 Lord bought his partner and friend Thomas out of the business, a move he acknowledges took a leap of faith. “I said, ‘I don’t know where this money is going to come from, but I’m just going to put my head down and drive.’” He has since expanded, relocating from a rented office to the building in Arundel, where he also runs a stone countertop business, Maine Marble and Granite. He also partnered with Larry Stoddard, owner of Distinctive Tile and Design in Portland, to open a location in Kennebunk. “It’s great because a lot of the people we work for will be here in the summer for two weeks with their family on vacation, but they need their house done next year, and we no longer need to send them to Portland for tile and to look at countertops,” says Lord. Not only does this make it easier on his clients, he notes, but “there’s some comfort knowing we’re all tied together.” Lord is clearly proud of his close relationships, both with his subcontractors and with his clients, many of whom become friends following what are often complex home-building projects. “I spend a lot of time drinking wine and beer at all these stops during the summer,” he says. “They’ll call me out of the blue when I’m on my way home and say, ‘I know you’re getting done, why don’t you swing by.” One such client is John Mills, the retired president of the clothing retailer Aeropostale, whose framed letter hangs in Lord’s office. “Recently, Mary and I have been able to make several visits to our Crescent Surf project,” Mills writes.

“As we traipse through our future home, we are enormously impressed by the workmanship and care taken with every aspect of the construction process.… The tradesmen, all, have affected their part of the building process with expert confidence and personal dedication.” Dedication to his work and to building a good life is what continues to drive Lord. He, his wife Kelly (whose family owns Alisson’s Restaurant in Kennebunkport), and their three children “live in a great house that I never, ever thought I’d live in,” he says. The garage holds a deeply personal marker of his success, one that he is aware may be misunderstood. “When I first met Kevin Thomas, he had this Porsche 911 Carrera convertible, and I thought, ‘I want to be successful enough to be able, when I want something nice, to buy it,’ because Kevin worked his butt off for it,” Lord says. After he bought Thomas out of the business, Lord asked him to let him know if he ever wanted to sell the 2000 Porsche, and in 2017, he got the call. “I don’t want people to get the wrong idea because they don’t know the story,” he says emphatically. “The value isn’t what matters; my new truck cost three times as much as that car. It’s just the meaning of it—being able to buy one of my motivations.” Even more motivating is the time Lord now gets to spend with his wife and children—winter weekends skiing and snowmobiling from their cabin in Bethel and summer days out on their boat, named Square Footage. His brother now lives in New Jersey and runs a division of the payroll company ADP. They’ve come a long way from their childhood, and Lord has never forgotten that. “I don’t think I would change anything, because it made us who we are and how hard we work,” he says. “If we don’t know the value of a dollar, nobody does.” MH+D

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PORT RAIT OF P L AC E BY SUSAN AXELROD | PHOTOGRAPHY BY SEAN THOMAS

KENNEBUNKS A Designer’s Tour

A shingle-style summer home sports two weathervanes. A sunny afternoon on one of several sandy beaches in the Kennebunks. Come summer, the Kennebunk River is packed with boats of all stripes. Founded in 1889 by 13 summer residents, the Kennebunk River Club (opposite) was originally focused on canoeing, with tennis courts added in 1929. The club’s iconic, shingled boathouse is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

A

lmost everywhere you look in the Kennebunks there’s another Instagram-worthy scene: wide beaches bordered by wild roses, winding streets lined with classic New England homes, handpainted signs pointing the way to galleries, shops, and restaurants. Separated by the tidal Kennebunk River, Kennebunk and Kennebunkport have been popular summertime destinations since the mid-1800s. Today, visitors come almost year-round for weekend getaways, or to experience events such as Christmas Prelude in December, Paint the Town Red in February, and the Kennebunkport Festival in early June. Those lucky enough to live in this scenic place are accustomed to welcoming out-of-town guests. Interior designer Louise Hurlbutt, who lives in Kennebunk with her husband, Ralph, has a regular route she takes to introduce visitors to the community. “I always love to walk out our back gate and show my guests the Webhannet Golf Club, a beautiful 1890 club house with spectacular grounds,” she says. A short walk leads to Trinity Chapel, where antique ship models are displayed on the walls. Next, it’s on to Lords Point, a spit of land extending into the ocean, with stunning, shingle-style homes on either side of its dirt road. Hurlbutt and her guests then visit the beaches. “We drive along Beach Avenue past Mother’s Beach, Middle Beach, around the old Narragansett Hotel (now condos) and park at the point there,” she says. “We walk across Gooch’s Beach and all the way to the 76 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

Kennebunk River, recounting all the history along the way—in my childhood there were 14 hotels on this side of the river.” Returning to the car, Hurlbutt makes a stop at Saint Anthony’s Franciscan Monastery. “The grounds are beautiful, especially if you take the path down to the river and the old boathouse,” she says. Next, the tour heads across the river to Kennebunkport, turning onto Ocean Avenue and stopping at the Arundel Yacht Club. “Everyone loves seeing the interior of this old wooden building with all the festive colored burgees hanging from the rafters,” Hurlbutt says. Across the street is the town green, where the gardens are dedicated to Barbara Bush. Farther along, walking into the Kennebunk River Club “truly brings one back in time,” she continues. “From the porch you can look left out the mouth of the river to the ocean, and on a clear day you can see across the water to Mount Agamenticus.” Just down Ocean Avenue is the grand Colony Hotel. “It’s always a treat to take friends into the lobby and back to another era,” Hurlbutt says. Across the road on the ocean side is Saint Ann’s Episcopal Church; the historic stone chapel is an especially popular spot for weddings. The final stop is another lovely old hotel, the Cape Arundel Inn and Resort, which has a view of the open ocean and of Walker Point—the summer home of Kennebunkport’s most famous residents, the Bushes. “The porch at the inn is the place to be on a summer evening,” Hurlbutt says. “It’s a perfect spot to have a drink, breathe in the salt air off the ocean, and feel truly grateful for where we live.”


PHOTO: Heidi Kirn


PHOTO: Heidi Kirn


(Opposite,clockwise from top left) Nautical details and patriotic colors decorate the exterior of a classic cape. Now condos, Narragansett by the Sea on Kennebunk Beach was built in 1905 as a hotel. Having sailed around the world as a teaching vessel with the Ocean Classroom Foundation, the Spirit of Massachusetts is permanently docked in Kennebunk and operates in the summer as a floating restaurant. This new home incorporates classic seaside cottage elements and modern design. The bridge (above) over the Kennebunk River that divides Kennebunk Lower Village from Kennebunkport’s Dock Square is named for local businessman and Kennebunkport selectman Mathew J. Lanigan, who died unexpectedly in 2012 at age 48.

Separated by the tidal Kennebunk River, Kennebunk and Kennebunkport have been popular summertime destinations since the mid-1800s. MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 79


PHOTO: Heidi Kirn

Creating Maine's outdoor lifestyle

St. Ann’s Episcopal Church on Ocean Avenue is open from mid June through September. Built of stones from the surrounding shoreline, it has twenty stained-glass windows, some of which incorporate seashells in the design. The church’s expansive grounds include flower gardens and an outdoor chapel.

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This house on Goose Rocks Beach in Kennebunkport was designed with multiple indoor and outdoor spaces. Seen here is the firstfloor sunroom with a balcony on the roof (at left), and the indoor/outdoor back porch, which has a second-floor sunroom off the owners’ bedroom.


A Twent y - Firs t - Cent ur y Saltwater Farmhouse A s o p h i s t i c a t e d , s p a re h o m e fo r ove r n i g h t g u e s t s t o g a t h e r a n d re t re a t b y D e b r a S p a r k // P h o t o g r a p h y b y I r v i n S e r r a n o // S t y l i n g b y K r i s t a S t o k e s

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uilder, architect, interior designer, and landscape architect—they all have the same thing to say about Melissa Rizzieri: she knows what she likes. “Oh,” Melissa worries, “I must have been a pain.” On the contrary, the team that worked with her and her husband, Jerry, on the Kennebunkport house they built in 2016 adored the process. Melissa was detailed, precise, and very clear in her desires. Plus, she always brought baked goods to meetings. (Raspberry bars get mentioned more than once.) Some of what she wanted was inevitable given that the existing Cape on the property abutted Goose Rocks Beach but did not take advantage of the views. Still, as a client, Melissa was asking for more than a beautiful house that would be mindful of its location. Part of her vision simply came from how she and her family planned to use the house. Melissa is an enthusiastic baker, and Jerry loves to cook. Both love to entertain. Paramount were a large kitchen with plenty of counter space, two sinks, and a central table to integrate both sides of the kitchen—not an all-purpose island but a true work table. Melissa found a photograph online of a machinists’ table with elegantly curved metal legs that she liked. Derek Preble adapted it, building a long table with a blue de Savoie marble surface and using oak instead of metal for the base.

Melissa also wanted her home to allow her frequent and plentiful overnight guests to both gather and retreat over the course of a stay. To that end, the house has the kitchen, living room, and dining room that you’d expect in a contemporary residence, as well as five en suite bedrooms, including two separated by sliding barn doors, which were targeted for the Rizzieris’ daughters. The basement, which has a polished concrete floor, holds a pool table, sitting area, and exercise equipment. Otherwise, the house is full of surprise spaces that simply don’t appear in many contemporary houses, including a foyer that segues into a generous hall and multiple exterior and interior sitting areas. A covered back porch (with remote control window and door screens that retreat into the mouldings) faces the ocean. The entry landing has a chair in which one can enjoy a cup of coffee while awaiting visitors. Both the living room and the owners’ bedroom have an adjacent sunroom. Grade challenges and coastline restrictions, not to mention the buildable footprint, presented building challenges that resulted in solutions that make the house all the more unique. The house is organized around two central corridors, one up and one down, and is divided vertically. If you are facing the house, the left side is “the barn”—not because it is a separate building but because its fenestration suggests a barn door with hayloft above, and

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 83


Homeowner Melissa Rizzieri wanted a very simple dining room with a partial wall to define the space. The dining table came from the Rizzieri’s previous Maine house and was refinished by interior designer Lisa Teague. The wovengrass chandelier is from Made Goods.

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MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 85


Vintage bed stands, a vintage bedspread, and a simple area rug suggest a bedroom one might find in an old Maine cottage. The storage window seats are lifted off the floor to give the built-in the appearance of having legs. A bookcase is fitted under the roofline. A view of the detailed kitchen trim (opposite) shows how the space opens to the first-floor hallway and staircase.

its floors are staggered at half-level with the floors of the main house. Inside, “the barn” references an old farmhouse with nickel-gap walls and poplar floors painted gray rather than the more sophisticated furnishings and antique white oak floors used elsewhere. Stairs rise from both ends of the central corridor. A full set goes to upstairs bedrooms, and a half set leads to yet another surprise space—a den with an adjoining nook with a double daybed. Another half-flight leads to a guest bedroom with yet another sitting room and a private balcony with views down the whole length of the beach. The Goose Rocks house was the Rizzieris’ second home in Maine. The first was a mere three blocks away. The couple moved for the opportunity to live directly on the beach, but saying goodbye to their first house was not easy. “The community was nirvana. It was Mayberry, USA,” says Melissa. Her kids grew up with idyllic summer childhoods, riding bikes and playing Capture the Flag, that would have eluded them in Manhattan, where they lived during the school year. “You’d think I was leaving Maine,” says Melissa of how traumatic she found the transition, even though she was bringing not only her family to the new house

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but many of her belongings, as well as Brian Beaudette, the very architect who’d designed her initial Maine home in 2000, and who had since become a friend. Melissa also carried over specific favorite features from her first house (like a gray and white exterior palette and transom windows for the dining room) and materials (including reclaimed Belgium limestone from a previous project, now used for the living room’s fireplace surround). The new players on the project were builder Geoff Bowley of Bowley Builders, landscape designer Ted Carter of Ted Carter Inspired Landscapes, and interior designer Lisa Teague of Lisa Teague Studios. Their combined efforts produced a home that suggests a sophisticated yet spare saltwater farm, a house that might have grown organically over time, given the array of spaces and finishes and the presence, in the guest rooms, of vintage nightstands, oldfashioned coverlets, and built-in bookcases under the eaves. Teague minimally outfitted the rooms with textured neutrals and the lightest of ocean blues and greens for most of the house, letting the color come from the artwork, such as the paintings in the living room (one of Rizzieri and her two daughters) by Holly Irwin (of Roswell, Georgia).


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The extra-large kitchen features casework and a custom table by Derek Preble. Architect Brain Beaudette broke up the kitchen space with an arch to divide the baking area to the rear of the room from the rest of the kitchen. The pendant lamps are from Farm Plus Table in Cape Porpoise.


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The house is clad in double-dipped gray Maibec shingles (opposite) with white PVC trim and white clapboard at the front entry. The colors were inspired by the homeowners’ previous home. The porch and three windows to the left of the front door help “create a face to the house” and “an identity to the entrance,” says architect Brian Beaudette. A nook off the den in the “barn” portion of the house has nickelgap walls, a double daybed, and a poplar floor painted gray. It is one of the many spaces in the house intended for family or guests who want to sneak away for a nap or to read a book.

In the same way that the interior of the house has two impulses—one on the barn/cottage side, which has more color, and one on other side, which is subtler and more sophisticated—Ted Carter designed a landscape with two impulses, one to reflect the abutting dunes on the beach and another, by the front entry, to suggest an English garden. To this end, Carter used ornamental grasses, dwarf arctic willow, and butterfly bushes to create a loose, buoyant landscape on the beach side, and Hidcote lavender, Russian sage, sedum, and artemisia in the front of the house. The approach to the front door includes a partial driveway wall of New England fieldstone, which transitions into a weathered granite veneer stone by the house, all built by stonemason Herb Meyer. Steps and flatwork are of Mystic Mountain granite. The rough-edge profile of the risers and the inherent life and movement in Mystic Mountain granite (as opposed to static pebbly gray

granite) are intended to create an effect reminiscent of the Maine coastline, says Carter. Lisa Teague is a master colorist with a clear sense of how pigments change in varying lights. She worked as a decorative painter in France before she began her interior design career, and she brought her painting talents to the Rizzieri job. She sanded down the bright white farm table that the Rizzieris brought from their previous home and then added layers of gray and white glaze, surrounding the table with wishbone chairs by Hans Wegner from Design Within Reach and lighting it with a round woven-grass chandelier. Among her visual tricks for the house: using dark Pietra marble for the perimeter kitchen counters to make the room seem larger and hanging pendant lights over the owners’ bedroom side tables to reduce nightstand clutter. Color allows you to “force the eye to see only what you want to see,” Teague says, so the MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 91


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The covered porch at the back of the house has automated remote control screens that retreat into the space above the door and windows, so it can function like an open porch in good weather.


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The sunporch off the living room with views of the landscape designed by Ted Carter.


The owners' bed is inset because of a challenge in creating the bathroom on the other side of the wall. Lisa Teague, who often likes to have a focal wall, turned the quirk into an asset, highlighting the unusual design feature with grass cloth. The pendant lamps prevent clutter on the bed stands. One of the kitchen’s two sinks is next to an open shelf holding cookbooks. “I do like Martha Stewart,” says Melissa Rizzieri. “She is tried and true.”

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modest size of the owners’ bedroom is visually offset by the darkness of a textured grass cloth she selected for the alcove that accommodates the head of the bed. To convey her vision to the design team, Melissa referenced magazine and online images and used “her magic pencil,” a term architect Brian Beaudette coined for her drawings, because she sometimes sketched complicated ideas that didn’t easily translate to real life. But, back when building began, she said to Rusty Theriault, Bowley Builders’ project manager, “You know, if this doesn’t work, let’s just bag it.” Theriault invariably responded, “I am going to make it work.” In the end, that conviction was what Melissa most appreciated about the whole team who built her home. They were able to access her dreams and translate them into reality. MH+D For more information, see Resources on page 158.

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T

he architects I know often talk about how they choreograph the approach to a house. If the location is beautiful, there’s always the possibility of arranging sight lines and pathways for a big reveal: the “Wow!” of the view. I get this “wow” when I visit Carol Morris and Barry Salter’s home in Kennebunkport, but only after I get a chuckle, greeted as I am by four chickens. They were pecking by the front door when I stepped out of my car. I notice them at the same moment I see Salter seated at a table inside, raising his arm for a hello. The next thing I know, the door is open and three dogs are pushing forward for their own greetings. I hear Salter ask, “Are you OK with dogs?” I’m not—terrible phobia since girlhood—but I lie and say I am, because the three animals pressing forward are so friendly. Ditto Morris and Salter, who were just behind them. Somehow it seems right that friendliness should so overwhelm me at the doorstep, since friendliness was, in a manner of speaking, what got the house built. Morris and Salter have lived in Kennebunkport since 2003. In 2012, despite their fondness for their previous house and land, the latter cut through by a tidal river, they were ready to downsize. Morris was still self-employed as a communications outreach consultant, and Salter was beginning to consider retiring after four decades of work as an internist in York. They weighed their options, including the possibility of moving to Portland. But they kept stumbling over their love for their land. Because they had four acres, they wondered if they could sell their existing house and carve off a portion of the land to build anew. Even if they could, they didn’t imagine working with an architect. It would be too pricey, they reasoned, especially given that downsizing was partly about budget. A year later and still mulling things over, Morris, who is an interior design enthusiast, was flipping through an issue of Maine Home+Design and saw an article about a small house. It was open to its surroundings, topped with a green roof, and designed by architect Will Winkelman of Winkelman Architecture in Portland. Morris thought, “I could live in that.” Some time later, Morris shared her thoughts with

by Debra Spark Photography by Jeff Roberts Styling by Janice Dunwoody

The extra-wide boards used as cladding for this contemporary house are square-edge, solid tight-knot Western red cedar. They have been installed like clapboard and woven at the building’s outside corners. The front door is fir, and stepping through it, one immediately see the river on the other side of the house.


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The solid maple stairs (opposite) have thick treads and risers, a maple handrail, stainless-steel cabling, and iron rails. The stacked etchings are from homeowner Carol Morris’s father but have been reframed and rematted. The painting is by Molly Morpeth Canaday, a relatively unknown twentieth-century oil painter. It was a gift to Morris’s father, who published a book of Canady’s paintings.

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Ben Trout of Trademark built custom cabinetry of prefinished maple plywood to keep costs down. Part of the drama of the space comes from the way the windows run from the leather granite countertop virtually to the ceiling, even behind the stove. The light fixture over the sink is from Schoolhouse Electric and Supply Company. The faucet is a Moen pull-down sprayer.

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a friend from down the road, landscape architect Todd Richardson of Richardson and Associates in Saco. Coincidentally, Richardson and Winkelman are frequent collaborators, so Richardson offered to make an introduction. It turned out that, with a budget-conscious builder—Ben Trout of Trademark in South Portland—and a creative yet simple design from Winkleman, Morris and Salter could afford what they wanted. And Richardson could be part of the project, too, helping to locate the house in a spot where (given wetland setbacks and regulations) the couple hadn’t even known they could build: on a plateau overlooking the river ravine, just above the spot where fresh water burbles noisily into salt. This is the “wow” that I see through large windows when I first enter the house. Morris and Salter wanted an affordable, forwardthinking, environmentally conscious house with modern, industrial design, minimal ornamentation, clean surfaces, a green roof, and a shower sans bath for the owners’ bathroom. As a doctor, Salter is all too aware of how many older patients slip in the bath. 110 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

Morris pointedly didn’t want anything shiny. They wanted to be able to live on one level. For cost effectiveness, “simplicity is your mantra,” says Winkelman, and this belief happily dovetailed with other priorities. “When you have a view-oriented site, very frequently the shape of the plan is a long thin rectangle, so every space lines up to get a view, instead of some spaces being behind other spaces,” Winkelman adds. He designed a singlestory rectangular form with a flat grass roof, almost like a shoebox with green hair, which is to the right when you arrive at the house. To the left is a soaring, glass-filled, double-story form with a shed roof. The different levels allow for both “tall spaces and cozy spaces,” Trout points out. Inside, the ground floor has eight-foot ceilings for an open kitchen/dining/living room with a striking staircase of maple and stainlesssteel cabling that incorporates the light-filled, open stairwell into the central space. A short hallway off the entry has closets and a laundry room. A parallel short hallway at the far side of the great room leads to the powder room and owners’ bedroom with


The living room (opposite) has a Rais stove and a window seat with an oversized window that faces the woods and a chicken shed. The floor is bamboo, chosen for being a renewable and inexpensive wood. The rug from Mougalian Rugs complements the couch and pillows from Pottery Barn. The baskets tucked under the window seat are from Target. Carol Morris stands in the pantry of her kitchen. The cabinets vary from the other side of the kitchen. Here, the bottom cabinets read as furniture (given the solid maple legs), and there is open shelving and a maple countertop. The cabinets, as well as the metalwork, were designed and fabricated by Trademark.


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(Opposite, clockwise from top left) A walk-in shower has a Wedi shower system and subway tile laid in a straight rather than a staggered pattern by Five Brothers Tile in Scarborough. The wood headboard in the owners’ bedroom was acquired online. The oil painting by David Little was bought at auction in the 1980s. The second-floor landing is also an office, which includes this chair. A detail of the staircase. “Stairs in houses or buildings are sculpture if you treat them right,” says architect Will Winkelman. The dining area (above) of the great room features a Restoration Hardware French boulangerie table that butterflies out to seat 12. Morris first saw it in Julie Carlson’s Remodelista: A Manual for the Considered Home, a book Morris referenced for many design ideas. The wall sculpture by Lin Lisberger is called Gathered In and was made in the wake of 9/11. The pendant lamp is from Schoolhouse Electric. The river is just outside the glass doors, and one can hear it burbling in the summer.

adjacent bath. The stairs lead to an upstairs office on a large landing with a separate TV room. Though the facade of the single-story portion of the house has narrow, vertical windows for privacy, oversized windows otherwise fill the home, offering views of the green roof (seeded with a fescue mix), the woods, and the back deck facing the river and a seating area just beyond. “You feel like you are outside, even when you are inside,” says Morris. There are even big windows, per Salter’s preference, behind both the kitchen sink and stove, so one can gaze outside while cooking. The kitchen glass runs dramatically from the countertop to the ceiling, necessitating a four-sided oven hood. As installed, it has an almost sculptural quality. Trademark’s cabinetry shop further customized the kitchen. The space is one room but with two sections: one a work

space, another more like a pantry. The countertops are black leathered granite in the work space and maple (which Morris regularly oils) in the pantry. The cabinetry below the counters is of prefinished maple plywood with iron hardware. Morris wanted open shelves above the counters, and Trout found inspiration for wood shelves with iron brackets at Bramhall Pub in Portland. At first, Morris worried her belongings would look too eclectic on her open shelves, despite her desire for such shelves. She discovered the items she’d culled from her previous house “ended up going together, because I have a specific palette that I like,” she says. The same was true for furnishings. The couple mostly used items from their previous house; however, one new purchase is a French farm table from Restoration Hardware that cleverly butterflies open so it can seat 12.

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You feel like you are outside, even when you are inside.”

Landscape architect Todd Richardson and architect Will Winkelman considered drainage, elevation, grading, environmental regulations, setbacks, views, and existing trees when they worked to site the house next to the Little River in Kennebunkport. The owners’ bathroom (opposite) has custom cabinetry of prefinished maple plywood by Trademark, and subway tiles laid in an even pattern. 114 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM



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The windows run up to the ceiling, which, Will Wilkelman observes, allows light to flow across the ceiling while reinforcing the inside/outside flow that is central to the design of the house. The upstairs landing, seen here (above), is also an office with built-in bookcases from Trademark.

The back side of the house has eight-foot sliding glass doors that lead to a cedar deck.


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With no interior trim around the doors and windows and “few visual lines to capture your eye inside,” says Winkelman, the focus is always toward the outdoors. Even so, there are a few extra design touches: simple built-in bookshelves and a deep bench below a large square window. Intended as a reading nook, the space, in practice, functions more like a baby-changing table for grandchildren, Salter says. When it is time for me to go, I cross a short bluestone path to my car that takes me across an oversized slab of Mystic Mountain fieldstone that Richardson found at Genest in Biddeford. It forms a small bridge over a drainage swale in the yard. (Siting, elevations, water management, and drainage were part of Richardson’s contribution to the overall plan.) When I arrive

at my car, I turn back to look one more time at the house. It has Scandinavian-inspired, extra-wide red-cedar boards with square edges that serve as cladding. They have been laid like clapboard and treated with a dark semitransparent stain. An even darker stain has been used for the red cedar that frames the windows. “I like to do something different,” says Winkelman, speaking of the atypical exterior choices (though he could be speaking of the house as a whole), “and to have a little bit of a pause.” Before I drive away I pause myself, thinking how sensibly unusual this whole house is, both practical and one-of-a-kind, tucked just off the road but feeling worlds away. MH+D For more information, see Resources on page 158.

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12 Ways

of Looking at a Tent

Last summer, 12 interior designers and artists created a series of glamping (a portmanteau of “glamorous” and “camping”) tents at Sandy Pines Campground in Kennebunkport. The designs ran the gamut from nautical to woodsy, globally eclectic to hyper-local, and each one functioned as a miniature showcase of the designer’s talents and aesthetic. So what are you waiting for? Let’s go glamping!

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Just minutes away from downtown Kennebunkport, Sandy Pines Campground feels like a glamorous escape—particularly now that they have glamping tents available to rent. Visitors to the campground can also stay in their “camp carriages” (tiny houses on wheels), the A-frame tent huts, or the refurbished RVs (opposite). While Sandy Pines has an undeniably retro aesthetic, they also mix in modern and rustic elements, like this stag triptych (left). A view from above: the pool at Sandy Pines (below).

B y K a t y K e ll e h e r // P h o t o g r a p hy by J e f f R o b e r t s


Nautical Nights

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rom the moment you enter Deborah Chatfield’s preppy sailing-themed tent, your eyes go straight to the bright and boldly painted headboard. The sturdy natural wood bed frame is topped with a striking painting by artist Semper Lockwood. Lockwood’s piece was inspired by a 1653 nautical chart that Chatfield found that “has great coloration.” She says the map “set the tone for the rest of the tent design.” “We kept everything nautical in nature, but with some organic elements as well.” Chatfield brought in a chandelier made from New England–grown oyster shells to inject some texture into the room, which contrast neatly with the sleek brass boat cleats she installed on the punchy green dresser. She worked with Alfred’s Upholstery to create pillows for her rattan armchairs and sourced one-of-a-kind vintage pieces from Rockport Antiques and Design in Rockport and Suburban Home Outfitters in Scarborough to give the space a homier feel. The result is like walking onto a well-appointed sailboat—Nautical Nights feels like a cozy place to retreat following a day of adventuring in the Kennebunks.

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Coastal Comfort

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ronwyn McCarthy Huffard drew the inspiration for her tent from the “Yankee sensibilities of most Mainers.” Every element inside the space, from the black iron bed from Four Hands to the round metal coffee table, was chosen with an eye toward durability and practicality. “Nothing is too fussy or fancy, but it’s all great quality,” Huffard says. “I was after a casual, fresh, welcoming style, and so I used navy blue, white, and some pops of red and yellow.” These hues harken back to Huffard’s time spent sailing up and down the Maine coast, but rather than present a straightforward nautical-themed tent, Huffard decided to mix in some global elements. She picked out ikat throw pillows, wicker chairs, and an indoor/ outdoor rug in blue and white from Williams Sonoma. Toward the end of her design process, Huffard noticed that she had an empty space to fill above the bed. “I couldn’t find just the right thing, so I tried my hand at painting,” she reveals. The funky red and white print was just the ticket, and she adds that making it gave her a “new appreciation for how hard artists work at their craft!”


Modern Earth

“I

chose a theme that would reflect my own philosophy of incorporating design elements that have the least possible amount of negative impact on our environment,” explains Jan Robinson. Her tent pays tribute to Maine’s natural bounty; she chose a headboard made from a live-edge pine slab as a nod to the Pine Tree State’s forestland and an area rug printed to look like river stones. “The color scheme was chosen to reflect the colors of the Maine woods,” she says. “I used moss green, beige, brown, and a few pops of pink.” Above the bed, Robinson hung a piece of art she created using live moss (cut into the shape of the Maine state boundaries) set behind an old window frame. When Robinson herself needs to unplug and relax, she heads for the woods. “The forest centers me,” she says. “My ultimate goal for the tent was to design a place where someone could come, stay, and feel at peace.” Visitors to the Modern Earth tent told Robinson it feels “very zen,” which is “exactly what I was going for,” she says. “It felt wonderful to hear that.”

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Beyond Boundaries

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isa Teague, owner of Quiet Home Paints, wanted her tent to feel serene and reflective of the Maine coast without seeming overly “beachy.” “I chose to work with a classic palette of blues and white, and I brought in rustic boards salvaged from a New England barn for behind the bed,” she says. “I chose a chandelier made of rope from Shades of Light to give a nod to the fishing industry, and other small accessories had a coastal vibe.” Teague played up the airy nature of the tents through an original piece of artwork she painted specifically for the tent that depicts a slice of brilliant blue summer sky and white fluffy clouds. She worked with craftsman Matt Bataran from Berwick to create the oversized headboard, which divides the room into two and shields the dresser and storage from view, effectively creating a small dressing area behind the bed. She brought in blue textiles and a porch table and chairs from Vagabond Vintage to round out the rustic-yet-light design. “The barn board set the tone for the room while the painting set the palette,” she explains.


Wanderlust

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ouise Hurlbutt drew from the aesthetics of two very different locales for her tent. “I went to camp in Maine as a child, and then later in life I went on safari in South Africa,” she says. “I wanted my tent to have the feel of sophisticated camping,” complete with some of the same luxuries you might find in a British safari camp. She worked with local craftsman Ben Welch to create the one-of-a-kind birch-bark clothes rack and sourced antler lamps from Barbara Cosgrove Lamps. She layered a soft cowhide rug tracked down from Santa Fe on top of a 100-year-old oriental rug to create a plush, romantic atmosphere from the ground up. Hurlbutt chose a distinctive color palette of black, gold, and seafoam green. Once she nailed down her colors, she found a black metal bed with linen upholstery, to which she added black and gray striped bedding. “That bed so reminded me of my days at camp,” she enthused. “Each piece I found added more excitement to the room. I could imagine myself staying in Wanderlust for a week.” She adds, “My age group wants to be in nature with all the conveniences.” Cushy yet adventure themed, Wanderlust hits all the right notes.

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Seagrass

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nnie Stickney fondly remembers summers spent in Kennebunkport at her grandmother’s house. It was a large old New England home, with woven sea grass rugs, splatter-painted floors, and a “puzzle room.” “We would have a puzzle going all summer long,” Stickney remembers. “My tent is an homage to my grandmother.” In order to stay within budget, she sourced almost all her items from online shops, including Garnet Hill and Vaxcel Harwich, where she purchased the pendant lighting. She bought metal chairs from Flash Furniture, which she and her husband customized with layers of joyfully applied splatter paint. She used Safavieh rugs to create texture on the floors and dimmable pendant lamps to set the mood. Stickney chose colors that “took me back to my childhood,” she says. “I wanted soft blues, cream, and pops of orange.” She wanted guests to feel immediately at home and beset with the childlike desire to “run straight to the beach.”


Under the Indigo Sky

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ngunn Milla Joergensen describes her neutral-toned tent as a “boho luxury nest,” perfect for lounging and soaking in the salty ocean air. She used natural materials throughout the tent, including wood, cotton, linen, and wool, with the intention that these items would become “softer and more beautiful with time and wear.” Her husband made a set of traditional Adirondack chairs that she stained “the same color as the sand on the beach.” Joergensen also brought in huge whitewashed logs that she found on Kennebunk Beach to serve as side tables. “It took me two hours to haul them across to where a friend could put them in his truck,” she remembers. While Joergensen used primarily stormy grays and unbleached cottony beige, she did bring in bits of indigo here and there to add depth and dimension. She purchased heavy cotton throws from Maine Woolens in Brunswick, in case the nights in the tent ever felt chilly. But overall, Joergensen kept her space sparse and clean. “I didn’t want my tent to have too much stuff—I need to breath and move in a space, and I like to think others want the same thing,” she says.

128 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Blixen’s Oasis

N

icola Manganello of Nicola’s Home believes that “ambient, dramatic lighting is the pinnacle of good design,” which is why, when she was designing her decadent and bold tent, she started with standout chandeliers made from seashells. “I wanted visitors to feel as though they were in another world,” she says. “As if they had traveled from far away and opened a chest of precious things.” Her tent feels like a bohemian fantasyland, with beaded valances on the screen windows, rattan chairs, a mosquito net–draped canopy bed, and quirky chic items piled on every surface (many of the items were sourced from Antiques on Nine). She even incorporated some personal items, including a pair of taxidermy animal heads. “They were left to me by a dear friend who passed away,” Manganello explains. While some visitors were a little wary of the animal items, Manganello says she likes how wild the space feels. “One woman told me, ‘I want to spend a rainy day here with a good book, lying in bed.’ That, I understood.”


Base Camp

K

rista Stokes describes her tent as “Out of Africa meets Walden Pond and then goes to a Guns N’ Roses concert,” and as quirky as this explanation sounds, it fits. With a focus on functionality, Stokes created a comfortable yet slightly wild space with sheepskin throws on the bed, a vintage gaming table, outdoor poufs for lounging, and a hightop dining and bar area for guests to “unload provisions, prepare snacks and cocktails, and play games.” Stokes says she was inspired by her father’s career; as a child of an Army Ranger, Stokes spent much of her childhood traveling and camping. The space is “rugged, versatile, sturdy, practical, with the heart of an adventurer.” She also worked with Jess Jenkins and her team at Daytrip Society and Daytrip Jr. to create a tagalong teepee for children, with two cozy little beds, two cushy log-printed nightstands, and a black shiny chest for treasures.

130 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Wildflower Retreat

S

unny and bright, Nicki Bongiorno’s tent is a celebration of blossoms. “Wildflower Retreat’s graphic palette of black and white, accented with pops of colorful floral, is inspired by the current lines at the fashion houses of Prada and Yves Saint-Laurent, and is intended as a nod to my mother,” Bongiorno says. She chose furniture based on its durability, function, and style, mixing in metal details (like the wire and wood coffee table and the seafoam green double-rocking metal lounge chair) alongside wicker and rattan. “The ebony-limed oak bed that I designed is one of my favorite features,” she says. “I love the way the liming process brought out the grain in the wood and how it stands out against the ebony stain.” She also notes how this piece created a separate changing and storage area for guests. Alongside the vanity, “these comforts of home are unexpected in a tent,” she says. Bongiorno also used succulents purchased at nearby Snug Harbor Farm and perennials from Estabrook’s to add a living element to her playful and artistic space.


Plein Air

P

lein air is an outdoor painting style popularized in the nineteenth century, and James Light’s tent salutes and celebrates landscape artists. On one side of the tent, he created a small dining space that is lit by a black iron drafting lamp and could easily be transformed into a workstation for watercolors. Light mixed industrial-style furniture and midcentury modern pieces throughout the open and airy room to create a trendy yet timeless space. He also included a selection of art supplies for visitors to try their hand at painting, plus Scrabble and cribbage for less artistically inclined guests. “I’m hoping that my tent will draw out the artist in all of us,” he said.

132 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Nomad

B

everly Bangs, owner of Antiques on Nine in Kennebunk, brought an eclectic retro sensibility to her Hemingway-inspired tent. Named Nomad, this space calls to mind the “bohemian Parisian lifestyle and the arts and design of Morocco,” explains Bangs. “I wanted it to be funky, but not too funky. I wanted it to be the kind of place where you might find really valuable pieces mixed in among some cool found objects.” She sourced old vintage portraits, which she framed and placed on the table, and threw a World War II–era leather bomber jacket over one of the chairs. “I sourced that from my colleague’s grandfather,” she revealed. “I wanted the tent to feel as though there is a person who could have lived here, and that person had traveled all around the world and lived a full, rich life.” Aside from the small, personal touches, Bangs also added a few large showstopper items, like the bed, which has “extra-tall bedposts to match the high ceiling,” and the chandelier. “It took the form of a classic chandelier, but made with unfinished wooden beads in place of the crystals,” she says. “With the black iron and the wood, it’s been knocked down a notch, and that works perfectly inside a canvas tent.” MH+D

For more information, see Resources on page 158.


SO ST linen

STRIPES FOR SPRING

“PORTALS” BY HARRISON WALKER COREY DANIELS GALLERY

5 South Street

Portland, ME

774.234.7678

so uthstre e tline n.co m

GREATER PORTLAND LANDMARKS presents

Historic Gala on Peaks Island

Photo colorized by Patty Allison

Friday, June 22nd, 2018 n 5:30 to 10:00 p.m. Greenwood Gardens, Peaks Island, Portland

Join us in Rusticator Style: n

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TICKETS: www.portlandlandmarks.org  n FMI: 207-774-5561

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Boat Ride, Lobster Feast, Amusements Live and Silent Auctions Open Oyster and Cocktail Bars Live Music


chatfield design fine interiors

ANNIE STICKNEY DESIGN, LLC INTERIOR DESIGN

. chatfielddesign.com ASID . IIDA . 207-236-7771

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Private Offices Available Work alongside the people who created this magazine.

Maine Media Collective has moved to a brand new building with offices we customized ourselves. Within our space we included eight private offices to rent to like-minded people who crave a creative workspace. Whether you’re a freelancer, a small business, just getting started, or need a fresh start, consider joining the 16 Middle community. Apply online at

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No phone calls, please.


PETREA NOYES 154 Middle Street, Portland, Maine 207.956.7105 artcollectormaine.com petreanoyes.com FA RMER’S MARKET NO.1 4 | 3 8 ” X 3 8 ” X 3 ” | MIX ED MED IA O N CANVAS, GAL L E RY W RAP

Supporting Maine artists and the creative economy since 2000

“LOVE” alphabet canvas flag prints by Addie Peet Design

Archipelago

THE ISLAND INSTITUTE STORE 386 Main Street | Rockland, Maine | 207.596.0701 | www.TheArchipelago.net


A RT S P O T LI GH T | A S H OW P R EVI EW

D EBO R AH R AN DALL M AY 3 - J U N E 2 PORTLAND ART GALLERY Opening Reception M ay 3 , 5 –7 p . m .

Afternoon Rain, oil on canvas, 50” x 60”

I

$8,600

am fortunate to live in a part of the country that is picturesque, and I am constantly aware of the natural beauty of Maine when I step out my door every morning. The Maine coast and the tidal marshes nearby inspire my landscapes. I hope to evoke the feeling of being in the landscape by communicating the quality of light and color, the feel of the breeze and vastness of

space. I most often work from imagination, memory, and intuition to convey atmospheric perspective and timelessness in nature. I am an artist because I want to know what it is to be alive. To be present. I want my paintings to reflect a moment in time as an experience of what it is to be human tethered to this mortal coil.

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 137


A RT SPOT LIG HT|A S HO W P R E V I E W

Mauve Light, oil on canvas, 50” x 60” $8,600

138 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Plum Afternoon, oil on canvas, 48” x 52” $7,800


A RT SPOT LIG HT|A S HO W P R E V I E W

Walker’s Point, oil on canvas, 40” x 50” $6,200

140 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


Vista, oil on canvas, 36� x 36� $4,800

Kennebunk resident, Deborah Randall draws inspiration for her paintings from the Maine coast. Randall was the 2014 Maine Artist of the Year. Her gallery and studio, Deborah Randall Fine Art, is located in the Lower Village in Kennebunk. To view the entire show, please visit artcollectormaine.com or contact Emma Wilson at ewilson@artcollectormaine.com


L EA D EX HI BI TI O N SP ON SOR :

Mrs. F. Eugene Dixon Primary media sponsor:

Farnsworth Art Museum | 16 Museum Street, Rockland, ME 04841 | farnsworthmuseum.org Ai Weiwei, Circle of Animals/Zodiac heads: Gold – Dragon, 2010


7 Shows. 9 Galleries. 21 weekly pop-ups. 35 artists. 20 years in the making.

GALLERY | SHOWS | ARTIST STUDIOS POP-UP GALLERIES | CUSTOM FRAMING & PRINTS

Join us in 2018 to celebrate the growth of Maine Art in the Kennebunks. HOLLY READY May 26 - June 16 MAINE ART HILL BLOCK PARTY & CHOICE ART SHOW PREVIEW June 8 CHOICE ART SHOW June 9 - June 28 BETHANY HARPER WILLIAMS & DAVID WITBECK June 30 - July 19 JEFFREY T. FITZGERALD | REBECCA KINKEAD | SUSAN WAHLRAB July 21 - August 9 LIZ HOAG | TRIP PARK | JANIS SANDERS August 11- August 30 CLAIRE BIGBEE | INGUNN JOERGENSEN | JOHN LECOURS September 1 - September 20 WILLIAM B. HOYT September 22 - October 11 14 WE STERN AVE. CRAIG MOONEY

DAV I D W I T B EC K

|

KENNEBUNK, ME

|

2 0 7. 9 6 7. 2 8 0 3

|

M A I N E - A R T.C O M

WILLIAM B. HOYT

R E B EC C A K I N K E A D

MARGARET GERDING

E L L E N W E LC H G R A N T E R


S AV E T H E D AT E

J U N E 29, 2018

ART PARTY TH E

A GALA CELEBRATION OF NEW ART IN MAINE

@cmcanow | #cmcanow cmcanow.org

P H OTO BY EMI LI E I NC.

P R E S E RV I N G Y O U R A R T F O R O V E R 3 0 Y E A R S B AC K C O V E - H A N N A F O R D P L A Z A - P O R T L A N D | 2 0 7 . 7 7 4 . 1 2 6 0 | W W W. C A S C O B AY F R A M E S . C O M


Distinctive Tile proudly supports the design community. | DISTINCTIVETILEANDDESIGN.COM


S HOP T ALK|FAR M P L U S TAB L E BY KATY KELLEHER | PHOTOGRAPHY BY SARAH BEARD BUCKLEY

BIG BARN, Small Batch From April to December, Farm Plus Table in Cape Porpoise sells smallbatch gifts, locally made home goods, and thoughtful kitchenware

1. tktkktktkt

1

W

hen Liz and Bruce Andrews first opened Farm Plus Table in Kennebunkport’s picturesque Cape Porpoise neighborhood, Liz knew she needed to find some “mice for the barn,” as she puts it. The home goods store is located inside a large red building built in 1889 that once functioned as a livery stable. (Bruce and Liz even have boarding receipts from 1913 to prove it.) “Barns always have mice, and I like that whimsical touch,” Liz says. And so she went out and found some mice. The mice in question are three inches tall and made of iron. They sit on a distressed wood cutting board facing each other, and one of them holds a small serving knife. “I wish we could 146 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

figure out who put that knife in its hand and thank them,” jokes Bruce. “Ever since they did that, we’ve sold so many of these guys.” The figurines, the cutting boards, and the cheese knives are all flying off the shelves. “People often purchase them together,” Liz adds. Although they have been in business for only four seasons, Farm Plus Table has already amassed a loyal following of summer residents and year-round shoppers. Before moving to Maine from South Carolina, the Andrews vacationed frequently in the Kennebunks, which gave them a feel for the community (and stoked their desire to move north). On the day I visit, the store is jam-packed with both people and products. Every


1. This big red barn (opposite) was built back in 1889. It once housed horses, but now it plays host to Farm Plus Table, a thoughtful home goods shop owned by Liz and Bruce Andrews that specializes in small-batch items and rustic gifts. 2. This display features candles, diffusers, stick scents, and Escape bags made by Forestbound, a small company based in Somerville, Massachusetts. “We have items from 29 different states,� says Liz. The Andrews pride themselves on sourcing items made in America.

2


S HOP T ALK|FAR M P L U S TAB L E

1. A selection of gourmet salts, flavored with various spices and herbs, from Beautiful Briny Sea in Atlanta, Georgia. 2. Pottery from Farmhouse Pottery in Woodstock, Vermont. “They are old-world potters who use simple tools,” says Liz. 3. These elegant table linens hail from Mississippi but look equally good on a Maine table.

1

2

3 148 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

available surface holds giftable wares, from locally made jellies and preserves to woven baskets and wool blankets. But while the outside of the shop makes a bold and colorful statement—as does the owners’ restored 1953 cherry red Ford truck emblazoned with the Farm Plus Table logo—the clutter of the shop’s interior is offset by the couples’ conscious choice to highlight natural wood, creamy linens, and off-white tones. “It’s how I decorate at home,” Liz explains. “My style is neutral. We often get the comment that our store feels so calming. That’s intentional.” Also intentional are their careful vignettes, which Liz and Bruce have designed so that shoppers can either purchase items en masse or individually. Clean white ceramics from Vermont are paired with hand-carved wooden spoons and sea-salt–scented soaps, and eco-friendly Bee’s Wrap is presented next to honey dippers, jars of Maine wildflower honey, and cheese boards from Whitten Hill Studios. Elsewhere in the shop, Liz and Bruce have set up a collection of pet-related items, including cat treats, pet dishes, and a beady-eyed woven-fiber dog statue. While the items are eclectic in their purpose, they are unified by the Andrews’ commitment to promoting “small-batch makers,” says Bruce. “One of our favorite things to do is share the stories behind these products. One of the things that we’ve found is that people who visit Maine and have second homes here take a lot of pride in the place,” he says. He’s observed some of these summer residents touring the store with their houseguests, pointing out individual items and retelling the very same stories that Bruce and Liz shared with them. “We see the same people come in every week in the summer. We joke that we need a frequent shopper card,” says Liz as she straightens a display of cookbooks. Bruce nods in agreement: “I think we have the very best customers.” MH+D


TIPS FOR THROWING A PERFECTLY IMPERFECT RUSTIC DINNER PARTY

BEAUTIFULLY BUILT IN AMAZING PLACES.

uWelcome your guest in with plush

blankets, a neutral color palette, and a variety of touchable textures. “Chunky baskets or tufted couches can add interest to a room,” Liz says. “In the store, we offer giant, thick-woven baskets that can bring such beauty to a living room.” She suggests storing soft wool blankets inside a rustic natural-fiber basket. says Liz. “I’m all about things that are perfectly imperfect,” she says. Galvanized buckets with spots of rust can be used as rustic vases, lending a country vibe to a classic dinner setting, and the “rust adds character.” Blueberry stains also can add character; Farm Plus Table sells vintage wooden blueberry boxes that are stained purple, sourced from a blueberry farm in Calais, Maine. “If you’re serving dinner outside, they make the perfect serving tray,” Liz adds.

uEntertain with locally made items.

“It’s great to share these stories at dinner parties,” Liz says. In addition to providing conversational fodder, these locally made goods also support small-batch makers, like Rare Berry Farm and Northwoods Gourmet Girl. “And when the label is beautiful, like it is with Rare Berry, I serve it right from the jar.”

PHOTO: BRIAN VANDEN BRINK

uNot all antiques need to be restored,

DESIGN. BUILD.

uFinish out the evening with a simple

dessert—like a caramel log from Suss Sweets in Nashua, New Hampshire. “We started displaying the caramel logs on wooden boards for customers to try, and they just took off,” Liz says. “It’s a great presentation—simple and unexpected.”

BELGRADE • SUGARLOAF • RANGELEY 207 864 3925 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 149

RANGELEYBUILDERS.COM


From the kitchen to the dining room: Old Port magazine’s managing editor and food editor Susan Axelrod combines two of her greatest passions—the written word and amazing meals— to let you know where to eat, and why. @eatmaine + themainemag.com

Salt Pine Social | Bath


Know the Facts:

Challenge Cancer

1

Do not use indoor tanning beds.

2

Wear sunscreen every day, even when it’s cloudy.

3

Seek shade between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. when sun is strongest.

Once a month, check your skin for new or changed spots and moles. Talk to your doctor if you notice any changes.

SKIN CANCER IS THE MOST COMMON CANCER IN THE US. REDUCE YOUR RISK.

Learn more about joining Maine’s fight against cancer at MaineCancer.org.


SUMMER SUMMER SOLSTICE SOLSTICE CELEBRATE SUMMER SOLSTICE THE CELEBRATE THE

LIGHT! LIGHT! Our Annual Celebration and Art Our Annual Celebration and Art CELEBRATE THE LIGHT! Sale for Friends of Maine Media Sale for Friends of Maineand Media Our Annual Celebration Art Sale Friends of Maine Media SAVEfor THE EVENING: SAVE THE EVENING:

JUNE 20, 2018

SAVE JUNETHE 20,EVENING: 2018

JUNE 20, 2018

COME AGAIN FOR THE COME AGAIN FOR THE POP-UP SALE COME AGAINART FOR THE POP-UP ART SALE

JUNE 20-30, 2018 POP-UP ART SALE JUNE 20-30, 2018 JUNE 20-30, 2018

162 Russell Avenue, Rockport, Maine 162 Russell Avenue, Rockport, Maine 162 Russell Avenue, Maine For more information andRockport, tickets to the event: For more information and tickets to the event: www.mainemedia.edu/celebratelight For more information and tickets to the event: www.mainemedia.edu/celebratelight www.mainemedia.edu/celebratelight

Photo Photo © © Cig Cig Harvey. Harvey. Photo © Cig Harvey. Graduate of Maine Maine Media College College MFA MFA program. program. Graduate of Media Graduate of Maine Media College MFA program. Current faculty Current faculty and and board board member. member. Current faculty and board member.

Generously supported by: Generously supported by:


SHOWCASE BY BRITTANY COST

COMING OF AGE Maine College of Art’s 2018 Thesis Exhibition highlights the next generation of contemporary artists

ANGELA CASAGRANDE You don’t really want to know who I am, do you? 2017, various materials You don’t really want to know who I am, do you? (details), 2017, various materials

fter two years of rigorous study and practice, seven Maine College of Art (MECA) graduate students will show their work at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) in the 2018 MFA Thesis Exhibition. Featuring video projects, sculpture, performance, photography, and installations, the MFA thesis exhibition gives graduating MFA students in studio art the opportunity to explore a range of concepts and materials, and refine their approach to contemporary art. Participating artists include Emile Boisvert, Angela Casagrande, Kylie Ford, Jacq Hunter, Jessalyn Levesque, Rand Renfrow,

and Golaleh Yazdani, all of whose artworks emphasize “the overlooked and the exceptional,” according to Chris Stiegler, chair of the MFA in studio art at MECA. “The emergent nature of what is shown during this exhibition highlights the cutting-edge position the ICA holds within our community,” says Stiegler. “This symbiotic relationship offers us all new ideas and new forms in a place structured for thoughtful examination.” MECA’s 2018 MFA Thesis Exhibition runs from May 11 to June 8 at the ICA in Portland, with an opening reception on May 11 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. On the following pages, Maine Home+Design provides a preview of the exhibition. MH+D

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 153


SHOWCASE

LIVE WITH THE TIDES

Buoy Floor Lamp $695 + Channel Marker End Table $450

RAND RENFROW All the Evidence So Far, 2017, various materials All the Evidence So Far (detail), 2017, various materials

Designed + Built in Portland, Maine

D S O C F.C O M 154 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


HALEY’S METAL SHOP, INC CELEBRATING 100 YEARS OF SERVICE

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Maine’s culinary community is taking a stand!

NO CHILD SHOULD GROW UP HUNGRY. So, they’re helping to end child hunger in Maine one meal at a time. Look for the FEED KIDS logo on a menu near you.

HOW CAN YOU HELP? Find our FEED KIDS partners at fullplates.org/feedkids and look for the FEED KIDS logo at a business near you. Maine businesses are invited to get involved by launching a FEED KIDS campaign of their own. Our turnkey cause marketing platform is designed for businesses of all sizes, concepts, and locations to take action toward ending child hunger in Maine. Learn more at SOHO--WOOL & SILK RUGS

fullplates.org/feedkids

A FEW OF OUR FEED KIDS PARTNERS:

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up ! gn ay si d to

! U O Y , S YO U . Y E Introducing the

Susie Konkel PASS Giving FREE admission to everyone 21 years old and under For more information and to sign up for the Susie Konkel Pass, visit PortlandMuseum.org/ThePass Free admission for everyone age 21 and under, provided by the generosity of Susie Konkel.

(207) 775-6148 | Por tlandMuseum.org


RE S OU RC E S A TWENTY-FIRSTCENTURY SALTWATER FARMHOUSE PAGE 82 Architect: Brian Beaudette Architect bjbarchitect.com Builder: Bowley Builders bowleybuilders.com Interior Designer: Lisa Teague Studios lisateague.com Landscape Architect: Ted Carter Inspired Landscapes tedcarterlandscapes.com Appliances: Central Furniture & Appliance shopatcentral.com Eldredge Lumber & Hardware eldredgelumber.com

PORTLANDSTAGE Theater for Kids

2018

207.774.1043 x104 www.portlandstage.org 25A Forest Ave, Portland ME

Colonial Woodworking 603.938.5131 Cabinetry: Derek Preble derekpreble.com Carpentry (Finish): Bowley Builders bowleybuilders.com CEBE Hoover Tim Sheely Brian Battista Carpentry (Rough): S.P. Scott Construction 207.793.2533 Chairs in Dining Area Design Within Reach dwr.com Chandelier (woven grass) Made Goods madegoods.com

Sears sears.com

Countertops:

Arm Chairs (Living Room) Cisco Brother ciscobrothers.com Artist, Artworks & Gallery Info: Holly Irwin hollyirwin.com

Bathroom Fittings & Fixtures: Garrett Pillsbury garrettpillsbury.com

Grades K-12

Seacoast Hardwood Lumber & Plywood seacoatharwood.com

Haley’s Metal Shop haleysmetal.com

Audiovisual: Smart Solutions smarthomesolutions.com

SUMMER CAMPS

hancocklumber.com

Bed: Urban Outfitters urbanoutfitters.com Boiler: Garrett Pillsbury garrettpillsbury.com Building Supplies: Hancock Lumber 158 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

Derek Preble derekpreble.com Morningstar Stone & Tile morningstarmarble.com Blue Rock of Maine bluerockmaine.com Doors: Hancock Lumber hancocklumber.com Drapery/Upholstery: Puffin Interiors for Lisa Teague Studios lisateague.com Drywall: John Cliche 207.229.6268 Electrical: William J. Clark Electrical Contractor 207.985.6663 Barn Light Electric Company barnlight.com


Excavation: Foglio foglioinc.com

kingsleybate.com

Exterior Stone: J.C. Stone jcstoneinc.com

Olde Port Painters 207.232.7037

Floors:

F O RT U NATO I N C .

Paint:

Quiet Home Paints (select wall paint) quiethomepaints.com

Nickerson Brothers Longleaf Lumber Inc. longleaflumber.com Maine Wood Flooring Clinton Robinson 207.468.9576 Jon Meade Design (concrete floor) jonmeadedesign.com Framing: S. P. Scott Construction 207.793.2533 Glass: Portland Glass portlandglass.com Hardware: Hancock Lumber hancocklumber.com Insulation: Builders Installed Products buildersinstalledproducts.net Landscape Installation: Ted Carter Inspired Landscapes tedcarterlandscapes.com

Pendant lamps in Owners Bedroom Farm Plus Table 207.604.8029 Plumbing & HVAC: Garrett Pillsbury garrettpillsbury.com

Interior Design by Patricia Fortunato, ASID

W W W. F O RT U NAT O I N C D E S I G N. C O M

Roofing: Bowley Builders bowleybuilders.com S.P. Scott Construction 207.793.2533 Sconces & Hall Chaise: Restoration Hardware restorationhardware.com Side Tables & Stools: Antiques on Nine 207.967.0626 Site Work: Foglio foglioinc.com Sofa (Living Room) Lee Industries leeindustries.com

Lighting: William J. Clark Electrical Contractor 207.985.6663

Tile:

Masonry: Herb’s Masonry 207.985.9397

Old Port Specialty Tile oldporttile.com

Genest genest-concrete.com

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Portico Fine Tile & Design porticofinetile.com

Southern Maine Tile & Stone 207.590.3788

Metalwork: LMC Light Iron 207.793.9957

Vanities, Kitchen Work Table, & Built-ins: Derek Preble derekpreble.com

Millwork: Seacoast Hardwood Lumber & Plumbing seacoasthardwood.com

Wallcovering: Kerry Munn Wallcovering & Painting 207.743.1785

Outdoor Furniture: Kingsley Bate

Window Manufacturer: Andersen

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 159

Interior Design by Patricia Fortunato, ASID

W W W. F O RT U NAT O I N C D E S I G N. C O M


RE S O U RC E S

Maine

andersenwindows.com

PORCH & PERGOLA C O M P A N Y

Window Supplier: Hancock Lumber hancocklumber.com

ENJOY OUTDOOR

Window Treatments: Maine Sun Solutions mainesun.com

LIVING D E SIGN | BU I L D | D I Y KI T S | 8 3 3 .6 3 7 .6 7 2 4 | M AI N EPO RC H .CO M

IT’S NOT JUST LANDSCAPING,

IT’S NATURAL ENGINEERING.

CMNIC HOLSL AND SC A PE.COM • 207.256 .3167 •

LANDSCAP EMAIN E

65th Anniversary Season

STEVE HAWLEY: STUDIO LIGHT May 1 - July 4

Energy Consulting: Goggin Energy gogginenergy.com

Seacoast Rollshutter Systems seacoastrollshutter.com

Engineer: Albert Putnam Associates albertputnam.com

Woodstove: Yankee Fireplace Grill & Patio yankeefireplace.com

Fescue Mix for Green Roof: Allen, Sterling & Lothrop allensterlinglothrop.com

NEIGHBORS, FRIENDS, & FRIENDS OF FRIENDS PAGE 104

Floors: Atlantic Hardwoods atlantichardwoods.com

Architect: Winkelman Architecture winkarch.com

Furniture: Restoration Hardware restorationhardware.com

Builder: Trademark trademarkdesignbuild.com

Glass: Strictly Frameless Glass & Mirror Services strictlyframeless.com

Landscape Architect: Richardson & Associates Todd Richardson richardsonassociates.com

HVAC: ReVision Heat truenorthenergyservices.com

Appliances: Kenmore kenmore.com

Kitchen Fixtures: Moen moen.com

Artworks: David Little maineartcollectors.com

Lighting: Schoolhouse Electric & Supply Co. schoolhouse.com

Lin Lisberger linlisberger.com Molly Morpeth Canaday mollymorpethcanaday.co.nz Bathroom Fixtures: Frank Webb Home frankwebb.com Cabinetry: Trademark trademarkdesignbuild.com Carpentry: Trademark. trademarkdesignbuild.com Countertops: Blue Rock of Maine bluerockmaine.com

Steve Hawley, Summer Studio (detail), 2011, Oil, wax, alkyd/linen, 26 x 42 inches, ogunquitmuseum.org Private collection

Electrical: Elldee Associates Electric 207.282.8896

Doors: Simpson Door Company simpsondoor.com 160 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM

WAC Lighting waclighting.com Paint: Devoe Color & Design Center devoecolor.com Plumbing: RSD Plumbing & Heating 207.415.3375 Tile: Distinctive Tile & Design distinctivetileanddesign.com Tile Installation: Five Brothers 5brotherstile.com Window Manufacturer: Kohltech kohltech.com Window Supplier:


Maine Green Building Supply performancebuildingsupply. com Woodstove: Rais us.rais.com

12 WAYS OF LOOKING AT A TENT

PLANNING

Annie Stickney Design Annie Stickney anniestickneydesign.com

INTERIOR DESIGN

Ingunn Milla Joergensen ingunnmillajoergensen.com

PAGE 120

Nicola‘s Home Nicola Manganello nicolashome.com

Designers: Chatfield Design Deborah Chatfield chatfielddesign.com

Krista Stokes kristastokes.com

Huffard House Bronwyn McCarthy Huffard huffardhouse.com

Spaces Kennebunkport Nicki Bongiorno shop.spaceskennebunkport. com

Jan Robinson Interiors Jan Robinson janrobinsoninteriors.com

James Light Interiors James Light jameslightinteriors.com

Lisa Teague Studios Lisa Teague lisateague.com

Antiques on Nine Beverly Bangs 207.967.0626

Hurlbutt Designs Louise Hurlbutt

ARCHITECTURE

hurlbuttdesigns.com

207·326·9339 EACarchitecture.com

ERIC A CHASE ARCHITECTURE

207. 774. 8482

w w w. b r i b u r n . c o m


SATURDAY JUNE 9 7 - 10 PM On The Marsh Bistro Kennebunk A waterfront evening-into-the-night party with incredible spreads of food, fun drinks, live music, and dancing.


M E E T . M I N G L E . E AT . D A N C E . R E P E AT .

THURSDAY, JUNE 7 6:30 - 10 P.M. $135 YOUR HOSTS:

D AV I D ’ S R E S TA U R A N T S & WA L L A C E E V E N T S WITH CHEFS: D a v i d Tu r i n , D a v i d ’ s , D a v i d ’ s O p u s Te n , a n d D a v i d ’ s 3 8 8 Josh Berry, Union at the Press Hotel D a n i e l D u m o n t , T h e Fa r m a t Ea s t m a n ’ s C o r n e r Norm Hebert, Bintliff’s Ogunquit Restaurant Germán Lucarelli, Ports of Italy H a rd i n g L e e S m i t h , T h e R o o m s R e s t a u r a n t s SPECIAL MUSICAL GUESTS:

G e t re a d y t o d a n c e t o s o m e h i g h - e n e r g y c l a s s i c r o c k .

LET’S GET THIS PARTY STARTED.


(Back Row): Mark Fortier, Brenda Cerino-Galli, Bob Knecht, Lucy Foster-Flight, Joi Kressbach, Whitney Harvey, Gail Landry, Tish Whipple, Susan Lamb, Pete Molloy, Sue Lessard, Jeff Davis (Front Row): Sandy Johnson, William Davisson, Dianne Maskewitz, Steve Parkhurst, Lynn Hallett.

more than 60 years of industry experience

DISTINCTIVE REAL ESTATE

coastal living recognized leaders

local expertise

international exposure

11 WinSloW homeR Road, ScaRboRough | mlS 1315605 William daviSSon | 207-523-8116

474 lafayette yaRmouth | mlS 1337379 Joi KReSSbach | 207-838-1865

60 meRe Wind dRive, cumbeRland | mlS 1339679 dianne maSKeWitz | 207-523-8112

Bold ocean environs are on offer with this rare opportunity in coveted Prouts Neck. Two buildable lots have been combined to form a contiguous parcel. Lot A of 0.46 acres and Lot B of 0.48 acres are sited on a high promontory and “inside the gate”, and enjoy expansive southerly views to Bluff and Stratton Islands.

Gorgeous farm with rolling fields and elevated sweeping views out to Broad Cove and all the way Portland! Only 23 minutes to the International Jetport and 20 minutes to Portland’s Old Port, this 19 acre saltwater farm is very conveniently located. Catch fish in your own trout pond or explore the quaint restaurants and shops.

List Price: $3,900,000

List Price: $1,795,000

Situated on 12+ acres of absolute privacy at the end of a pretty, winding drive sits this spacious custom home with an attached 3 car garage and an additional 4 stall barn. Built in 1995, this home’s many amenities include great light, large rooms with vaulted ceilings, first floor12 master suiteR with a gas a very | open layout.1264875 Reef oad , ffireplace, almouth mlS

one union wharf | portland | 207.773.0262

www.townandshore.com

List Price: $739,000


RE A L ESTATE

4 Atlantic Place

Photo: courtesy Town & Shore Associates

Cape Elizabeth

Town & Shore Associates Susan Lamb $1,995,000 207.523.8105 townandshore.com

MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM 165


l e g acysi r.co m

south portland oCeanfront

5-bedroom Shingle-style home situated in the coveted Loveitt’s Field area atop a cliff overlooking Portland Harbor, the Casco Bay Islands, lighthouses and at the mouth of the ship channel. Panoramic views from nearly every room make this the perfect place to call home. MLS 1340876 Anne Bosworth 207.233.3175 | $2,200,000

Connect with legacysIr:

kennebunk oCean vIews

Graciously situated overlooking Mother’s Beach, Lord’s Point and Strawberry Island, this stunning Bowley built home has ocean views from nearly every room! 5BR, 3BA home with custom kitchen, vaulted ceiling, gardens, 2-car garage, irrigation, security & so much more. Steps from golf, tennis & beach! KennebunkBeachLuxury.com Betsy Coughlan 207.229.3661 | $2,050,000

C a mden

44 High rests on Camden’s most beautiful street, in the “Historic District”, exquisitely sited and newly constructed three blocks from the center of town. Skilled craftsmanship and attention to detail are evident throughout this impeccable property. MLS 1311976

Kate Jackson 207.691.3684 | $1,495,000

l e a s h o r e s - w o o lw I C h

b r Id g to n wat er fro nt

Camden

l I n C o l n v I l l e - s h a g ro C k

w e st p o rt Isla nd

fr eep o rt wat er fro nt

roCkp o rt h a r bo r

h a r p s w e l l wat e r f ro n t

so ut h br Isto l

High quality Contemporary-style Cape. The property consists of a 4,200 s.f. residence on 1.9 acres with 254’ of waterfront that is navigable to open ocean. Easily accessible common dock area. Separate outbuilding with garage/studio/guest cottage space. Beautifully landscaped & in truly move-in condition. MLS 1309118 Dennis Duggan 207.522.3747 | $995,000

Reminiscent of the romantic turn-of-the-century Shingle-style Cottages of that era. The home is sited to capture the views of Penobscot Bay and the Ensign Islands. Steps descend to the beach from this masterfully designed 4-bedroom beach house with 3 baths & a large deck overlooking the ocean. MLS 1337299 Kate Jackson 207.691.3684 | $895,000

Traditional village house overlooking Rockport Harbor. 3BR and 3.5BA. Second floor master suite with sitting level and access to deck. Immaculately maintained grounds, interior and exterior. Remodeled kitchen. Perfect retirement or second home. Walk to harbor, village amenities and Beauchamp Point Trail. MLS 1328675 Peter van der Kieft 207.592.9366 | $650,000

Premier Long Lake waterfront boasting views of both sunrises/sunsets from the expansive wrap around deck. Open-concept home, approx 200' private shoreline, 2 docks. Charming writer’s cabin is steps from the lake. Carriage house has 3-bays/ living space above/ bath. game room. Garage to store snowmobiles with lake access. MLS 1321318 Lois Lengyel 207.233.2820 | $865,000

Exclusive waterfront home imagined by Midcoast Home Designs and to be built by highly regarded Frohmiller Construction Inc. Expansive eastern facing views and deepwater frontage. The 11 acre lot is part of the McCarty Cove Association, with rights to an association deepwater dock a short walk from the site. Subdividable. MLS 1335025 John Collins 207.607.2442 | $791,000

This 3-level log and timber home is sited to take best advantage of panoramic west views. Live the coastal Maine lifestyle surrounded by water and within walking distance to 2 restaurants and a highly regarded marina. The location enjoys full-time ocean breezes throughout the house. MLS 1338873 Pat Lawson 207.798.1828 | $575,000

Like no other. An artfully expanded single-family Cape potentially transitioning into two private living quarters. Finest craftsmanship inclusive of cherry floors and fireplace mantels. Exceptional full length deck leading to expansive manicured lawn bordered by professionally design plantings. Understated elegance. Peter van der Kieft 207.592.9366 | $947,000

Amazing panoramic views over Maquoit Bay and as far as Whaleboat Island & Broad Sound. Sail off your mooring into some of Maine’s best cruising grounds. Granite steps to the shore, & a 18' long granite ledge. Complete exterior refresh including big picture windows & cedar siding , the property is in top condition. MLS 1337687 John Collins 207.607.2442 | $699,000

Newly renovated 3-bedroom, 2-bath home on a quiet 1-acre site on Rutherford Island. Stone fireplace in living room, new wood floors up & down, granite counters & new kitchen appliances, porcelain tiled baths, screen porch & a 26' x 9' balcony. Also a winterized guest cottage with kit, living room, sunporch, bedrm & bath. Kathleen Shattuck 207.215.4161 | $259,000


l eg acysir.co m

Connect with LegacySIR:

LIVE RIveRfRont We keep gRoWIng…ConStRuCtIon haS begun on ouR next phaSe. CuRRentLy SeLLIng unItS foR SpRIng 2019 oCCupanCy.

Bath RiverWalk Residences are committed to the ar t and the ease of living well. Feel relaxed with a proper ty that is professionally managed, energy efficient, and offers fine craftmanship inside and out. Located just a stones throw to historic downtown Bath, residents experience gracious single floor living and comfor t as well as the convenient location offering easy access to cafes, fine dining, farmers market, ar t galleries, exceptional beaches, and maritime pursuits. Custom layouts offering 2 bedrooms, 2 bedrooms plus office, or 3 bedrooms, 2-car heated garage, private storage, on-site dog wash and fabulous water views. Prices star ting in the $500’s to the low $700’s.

sandRa WendLand bathRIveRWaLk.Com | 207.233.7788 | SWendLand@LegaCySIR.Com Call to schedule an appointment in our model home or for more information.

susan desgRosseiLLieRs

207.975.4304 susand@legacysir.com

brokEr & rEdEVELopmEnt SpEcIaLISt

in addition to her professional roles in economic development, marketing and design, susan currently owns and manages residential and commercial rental real estate, including both shor t and long-term proper ties. Her vast business and development experience give her a unique perspective when working with clients to purchase or sell real estate. she sees the potential in proper ties where others may not, using her financial exper tise, strong negotiating skills and her incredible aptitude for customizing design for the benefit of her clients.

21 atLantIC StReet rockLand brick warehouse conversion with 16’ ceilings with multi-levels, exposed brick, roof-top deck & outstanding ocean views from every room! Incredible location - take a stroll on the waterfront board walk to Rockland’s historic down town area and visit the farnsworth art museum, the Center for maine Contemporary art, numerous galleries, outstanding restaurants and quaint shops or collect sea glass and shells on the intown beach located diagonally across the street!

21AtlanticStreet.com | $940,000

86 beLLevue StReet owLS hEad maine seaside cottage at its best built in 2016 on Crescent beach. Just minutes from the airport - sitting directly on mussel Ridge Channel. enjoy your next lobster bake at this completely furnished 3-bedroom cottage, open floor plan, contemporary kitchen & gorgeous sitting area overlooking the ocean. beautifully landscaped yard, large deck, new septic & well with a fantastic rental history.

86BellevueStreet.com | $875,000


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Alexa Oestreicher Artfully uniting extraordinary properties with extraordinary lives Portland - Western Promenade

Yarmouth - Royall Point

Yarmouth - Cousins River Waterfront

$1,575,000

$1,195,000

$499,500

Live.... work, and pick May flowers.

Featured Listing

Representing buyers and sellers in Greater Portland & beyond.

Melissa McKersie m 207.776.8390 o 207.770.2216 MMcKersie@LegacySir.com

Polly Nichols

m 207.831.6062 o 207.770.2216 Pnichols@LegacySir.com

26 Pine Ledge drive, Scarborough Classic 4-bedroom

2.5-bath Colonial near beaches. Well cared for home with hardwood throughout first floor. Nestle into the living room and cozy up to the fireplace. Great home for entertaining. In the warmer months take advantage of the screened in porch and deck while enjoying the backyard. Flexible space finished over the garage. $488,000


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207.838.1050 elise@elisekiely.com Featured Listing - 25 Channel Point,Yarmouth | Offered at $1,225,000

Nestled along the coast in one of Yarmouth’s most desirable waterfront neighborhoods, with 200+/- ft of ocean front, this home offers an active coastal lifestyle with boating, fishing or swimming off your private deep water dock all while a 20 min drive into Por tland. First floor master bedroom suite and open living room, dining room and kitchen all open to expansive deck with stunning views. Expansion potential in the walkout lower level. Star t living the lifestyle that Maine water frontage has to offer.

John McCar thy 207.522.3638 | jmccar thy@legacysir.com

HistoricMaineInn.com Offered at $875,000

Historical Maine Inn - Waterfront - Restaurant & Bar

a s k ab ou t ou r confid ential lis tings.


l eg acysir.co m

Connect with LegacySIR:

bria n w ic k end e n

207.975.9650 bw ickenden@leg acysi r.com

RepReSeNtINg BuyeRS ANd SeLLeRS of exCeptIoNAL pRopeRtIeS IN tHe MId-CoASt

islesboro | MLS 1337200 | 74+/- Acre peninsula | dock & pier 4 BR | 4 BA | Home + Cottage | 6,800’ frontage | Beaches | $4,495,000

rockport | MLS 1280525 | ocean & Mountain Views 7 BR | 6+ BA | 39+ Acres | pond, Beach & dock | $1,950,000

camden | MLS 1339090 | Historic Victorian | great Location 5 BR | 4 BA | In-Law Apt. | fenced Backyard | $1,195,000

cUsHinG | MLS 1309837 | unobstructed Views and privacy 4 BR | Modern Amenities | Waterfront Access | $1,095,000

camden | MLS 1339516 | Architect designed Contemporary 4 BR | 3+ BA | Stunning penobscot Bay Views | $1,050,000

camden | MLS 1340827 | Renovated Village Home 2 BR | 2.5 BA | New Heated Studio | $449,000

Chris stone 207.590.3425

| cstone@legacysir.com

biddeford Pool - Hill beach road

biddeford Pool - Hills beach road

biddeford Pool - Mile Stretch road

$4,950,000

$799,900

$679,000



289 Ocean Avenue, Kennebunkport $1,650,000 Gorgeous custom 3-4 bedroom, 3.5 bath cottage-style home in turnkey condition, ROW to private beach, must see!

261 Ocean Avenue, Kennebunkport $1,295,000 Late 1970’s contemporary located in the highly sought-after Cape Arundel Zone. The possibilities are endless!

54 Pier Road, Kennebunkport $629,000 Perched on a hill before the causeway in Cape Porpoise is this building lot with sweeping views of Cape Porpoise Harbor and Vaughn’s Island.

21 Kings Lane, Kennebunkport $995,000 Beach days are coming! Enjoy water views throughout the home.

225 Sea Road, Kennebunk $1,495,000 Renovated Antique Farmhouse. Amazing location walk or bike to the beach.

00 Woodland Drive, Kennebunkport $720,000 Opportunity to own 10 Acres of prime real estate in the prestigious Cape Arundel Zone.

25 Elizabethan Drive, Kennebunkport $855,000 Life by the beach just got kicked up a few notches in this stately colonial home.

7 Winslow Lane, Kennebunkport $865,000 Amazing Kennebunkport location, one mile from the Ocean and Dock Square.

22 Summer Street, Kennebunk $985,000 Exquisite antique home has been fully modernized and sensitively updated.


A

M Aine

T rAdiTion

w e ’ v e be e n d oi n g t h i s f o r a l mo s t 20 0 y e a r s n ow w h i c h m e a n s you c a n s ay w e j u s t a b ou t c r e at e d t h e r e a l e s tat e i n du s t ry i n m a i n e . s o w h y wou l d n ’ t you wo r k w i t h u s ?

r e ac h ou t t o u s t o day . 183 US r oUTe o ne , F AlMoUTh , M Aine 04105 | 207-781-1111 | FoB Ailey r eAl e STATe . coM


This is more than a real estate transaction.

It’s where your dreams will unfold.

For most people, buying a home is the biggest financial and personal investment of their lives. That’s what inspires William Raveis agents every day and what drives us to bring unparalleled service to our neighbors throughout Maine. We combine the strength and resources of one of America’s leading real estate firms with the local knowledge and community focus of a real family business. So when you’re ready for your dreams to take flight, you can count on our family to be there for yours.

RaveisME.com

Bath I Brunswick I Portland Independently Owned and Operated

(207) 729-1863


Edgecomb • $795,000

MLS–1340443

Quintessential Maine home meticulously maintained with both deep-water and tidal frontage on the Sheepscot River. accommodates a 50’ boat.

Phippsburg • $625,000

MLS–1341415

Bath • $329,000

MLS–1340380

Historic 1790’s cape. If you have have been dreaming of a home, a space for your professional offices, an ideal location for AirBnb, or all the above—this is a unique opportunity.

Westport • $545,000

MLS–1319935

Come home to this light-filled year-round timber frame at the water’s edge. Contemporary cape w/granite counters, new appliances, whole house generator, hot tub & screened porch.

BOATERS TAKE NOTICE. This well maintained contemporary on Westport has some of the best deep water access and proximity to open ocean the area has to offer.

Wiscasset • $289,000

Topsham • $419,900

MLS–1334008

A successful downtown antique shop for decades this home offers both residential and commercial possibilities. Wide plank floors, exposed beams, 3 rebuilt working fireplaces – more!

www.thegladestopsham.com

Offering wide views of your own waterfront and dock on Robinhood Cove. Set your HGTV impulses free to upgrade some cosmetics and be handsomely rewarded. Deeded boat launch. access!

04530


LUXURY PROPERTIES | TIMBERLAND | CONSULTING

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East Bay Islesboro, ME | $4,875,000 | 4.2± Acres Terry Sortwell | tsortwell@landvest.com| 207-236-3543

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Oceans Edge Cape Neddick, ME | $1,495,000 | .46± Acres John Scribner | jscribner@landvest.com| 207-874-2057

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Whale’s Ledge Frenchboro, ME | $1,950,000 | 26.21± Acres Story Litchfield | slitchfield@landvest.com| 207-276-3840

We’ve traveled the back roads, we’ve navigated the waters and we know Maine. Celebrating 50 Years of knowledge, service and results. HQ: Ten Post Office Square | Suite 1125 South | Boston, MA 02109 | www.landvest.com Maine: 23 Main Street, Camden • 207-236-3543 | 4A Tracy Road, Northeast Harbor • 207-276-3840 | 36 Danforth Street, Portland • 207-774-8508


K ATIE KINNEY BR OKER | KATIE@L A ND I NG H OM E SM A I NE.COM

603.205.2276 UNITING BUYERS AND SELLERS IN THE GREATER PORTLAND AREA

MAT T DIBIASE B R O KE R/OWN E R | M AT T@L A N D I N G HO M E S MA I NE.CO M

207.653.0376 OVER 500 HOMES SOLD TOTALING OVER $115 MILLION!

BE SEEN. BE DISTINCT. BE MORE. 44 EXCHANGE STREET, SUITE 200 PORTL AND | 79 TANDBERG TRAIL, WINDHAM, ME 207-775-7653 | L ANDINGHOMESMAINE.COM /landingrealestate

/landingrealestate


26 HAMILTON WAY, COUSINS ISLAND | YARMOUTH - $2,450,000

207.773.2345 | DavidBanksTeam.com


S t e ve n C h i c o i n e Re a l E s t a t e Te a m

Keller Williams Realty Steven Chicoine Team Steven Chicoine Team Steven Chicoine -

2017

#1 #1 #1 #1

Company in Sold Sales Volume in Maine Team at Keller Williams Realty, Maine Waterfront Team at Keller Williams Realty, Maine Agent at Keller Williams Realty, Maine

Steven Chicoine - Highest Priced Sold Home at Keller Williams Realty, Maine - 3rd Year in a Row!

1 0 4 L o o ko u t Po i n t Ro a d , H a r p s we l l - $ 1 , 1 7 5 , 0 0 0 Beautiful 3 bedroom, 3 1/2 bath home has views that will take your breath away! Features granite countertops, 2 fireplaces, master bedroom suite, game room and private guest quarters - this property is sure to impress. Large deck and enclosed porch overlook sprawling yard. 1.5 acres with 142 feet of frontage on Northeast Cove, patio at water’s edge and your own private pebble beach!

7 0 0 Broad way, S ou th Por tl and

207-446-8060

www.s tevenchico in e. com

-

s tevenchi coi ne@k w. com

“Based on information on dollar volume data and on units sold from the Maine Real Estate Information System, Inc. for period of 1/1/2017 to 12/31/2017. Provided by an individual user of MREIS. MREIS has not reviewed the contents and does not make any representations, warranties or guarantees regarding the accuracy, timeliness or completeness of any statistical information and data provided.”


CAMDEN - Stunning Arts & Crafts Estate $7,900,000 ROCKPORT - 53 Ac, Includes Guest Cottage $1,295,000 ISLESBORO - 20 Acres, Peaceful Retreat $1,100,000 WALDOBORO - Private 14 Acre Island $1,700,000 CAMDEN - Spectacular View from Mt. Battie $1,250,000 CAMDEN - Megunticook Lake Cottage, 3 BRs $965,000

ROCKLAND - Pub, Fantastic Investment $895,000 CAMDEN - Sherman’s Point, Renovated $875,000

LINCOLNVILLE - Home Theater, Sauna WARREN - Commercial Opportunity, Rt. $1,895,000 90 $850,000

Taking Real Real Estate Estate to a Higher Higher Level Level camdenre.com camdenre.com 43 Elm Street, Street, Camden Camden 800.236.1920 800.236.1920 STOCKTON-SPRINGS - Oceanfront Cottage $583,500 $699,000 ROCKPORT 4-Unit Rental, Great Income

STOCKTON SPRINGS - 3-BR Oceanfront Cape $650,000 ST GEORGE - Architect Designed, Waterfront $995,000

- 5,040 SF, 1 Acre - The Helm, Rt. 1 $595,000 ST GEORGE - Private Oceanfront $595,000 ROCKPORT PALERMO - LakefrontFeatures Home $550,000 $550,000 BELFAST OWLS HEAD - Peaceful, 1.66 $525,000 Ac. $395,000 CAMDEN - Megunticook River $485,000 ROCKLAND ROCKPORT - Impressive - Original Charm $585,000

CAMDEN - Intown, Spacious $589,000 ROCKPORT - Lake View, 3-BRs $395,000 WARREN - Idyllic Horse Farm $350,000 LINCOLNVILLE - Retail & APT $350,000 LINCOLNVILLE - Waterfront Lot $399,000 WASHINGTON - Restored, 7 Ac. $349,000 ROCKPORT - Cozy, Near Village $340,000 ROCKLAND - Great Location $339,000

CAMDEN - Home, Office or Both $334,900 BELFAST - 75 Acres, Pond $375,000 THOMASTON - Renovated Federal $285,000 HOPE - Well-Built, Open KIT $279,000 HOPE - 22 Beautiful Acres $295,000 ROCKLAND - 10 Ac, Inviting $249,000 UNION COMMON - 3-Story, Barn $239,000 LINCOLNVILLE - Condo, Tennis $235,000



JUNIPER POINT WATERFRONT

Winterized 4BR/2.5BA cottage style home in Boothbay Harbor’s coveted Juniper Point community. West-facing frontage & deep-water dock, living room with 16’+ ceiling, fireplace & porch. $1,295,000

CROSS POINT ROAD WATER ACCESS

Spacious 3BR/1BA home in Edgecomb offers access to a shared deep water dock on the Sheepscot River. Home offers abundant space including a 23’x22’ workshop. $199,000

STAY CONNECTED

CAPTAIN’S WAY SOUTHPORT

Captain’s Way is an age qualified neighborhood. New cottage style 2BR/2BA home is perfected to balance easy care with admirable finish details. Open deck & front porch. Ready for occupancy. $350,000

DAMARISCOTTA RIVER WATERFRONT

3BR/2BA cape with 315’+/- of waterfront & access to a common deep-water dock. With sunroom, open kitchen, dining room, living room w/ fireplace & river side deck. $499,000

OCEAN POINT WATERFRONT COTTAGE

4BR/1BA seasonal cottage with updates to 1st fl living area. Westerly facing with views of Card Cove & spectacular sunsets. Large open roofed porch & deck to enjoy the outdoors. $525,000

DECKERS COVE WATERFRONT

3+ BR/ 2BA Southport home with classic New England architecture. Property features an open, level lawn & 331’+/- of cove frontage. Great for seasonal or year-round use. $375,000

32 Oak Street, Boothbay Harbor, ME • 207-633-6711 • www.tindalandcallahan.com

Superior rental management services for our homeowners and guests Kennebunk | Kennebunkport | Biddeford Pool 207-221-3436 • KPTLUXURYPROPERTIES.COM

Vacation Rental Management • Concierge Services


P E T E R H AW K E S W W W. M A I N E P R O P E R T I E S . C O M

2 0 7. 6 3 2 . 2 3 4 5

R E D I N G T O N | $ 5 4 9 , 0 0 0 WO N D E R F U L 4 0 0 0 S F H O M E W I T H S U G A R L OA F V I E W S ! 5 B R / 3 . 5 B A , S PA C I O U S L I V I N G & G R E AT R O O M S , F I R E P L A C E S , C H E R R Y K I T C H E N , H O T T U B & S AU N A . I N C L U D E S E X T R A L O T.

K I N G F I E L D | $ 7 5 0 , 0 0 0 C O U N T R Y E S TAT E O N 1 7 + A C R E S W I T H 1 7 5 0 ’ A L O N G T H E CA R R A B A S S E T T R I V E R . T O P Q UA L I T Y B A R N S , S TA L L S , S H O P, G U E S T A P T. A N D C OV E R E D R I D I N G A R E N A . A E R I A L V I D E O

K I N G F I E L D | $ 8 7 5 , 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 S F C U S T O M CA P E W I T H L A R G E B A R N S I T E D O N 4 0 A C R E S W I T H I D Y L L I C V I E W S T O M T. A B R A H A M & S U G A R L OA F. G O U R M E T K I T C H E N , G A M E R O O M , S AU N A & S U N R O O M . 3 D T O U R

WWW.MAINEPROPERTIES.COM


A PEAKS ISL AND TREASURE... PEAKS ISL AND, MAINE

HO

Arguably, this home is in one of the best spots on the Island. Sitting 50’ from the rocky shore with a Cat Bird’s Seat to watch all the ocean has to offer – from the moon and sun rising over its’ horizon to crashing surf to the islands that dot its’ surface – it’s a spectacular spot. The home, in good condition, offers 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, a great covered porch and could be lived in year-round. It’s the last of two houses on a no exit dirt lane with conservation lands beyond so privacy, peace and quiet is the tone of the day – every day. $729,000.00

PORT ISLAND REALTY | 14 WELCH STREET, PEAKS ISLAND | 207 766 5966

MH&D5-2018 3/19/18 5:42 PM Page 1

BIDDEFORD POOL - ST. MARTIN’S LANE One of the most remarkable properties in Southern Maine, with 2+ acres of ocean/bayfront privacy at the end of a private lane, just steps to all Biddeford Pool offers. Expansive deck overlooks private beach cove a few steps down the lawn for swimming, kayaking, bonfires, and possible mooring and dock. 5 bedroom colonial reproduction takes advantage of its amazing location with views of Wood Island Light, Saco Bay, and the open ocean. A one of a kind opportunity for a family retreat for generations.

$4,950,000

BIDDEFORD POOL 18 Yates Street 207.282.1732

KENNEBUNKPORT CAPE PORPOISE 165 Main Street 207.967.5444

www.oceanviewproperties.net

www.oceanviewproperties.net


WELCOME TO

TIDEWATER LANDING A PREMIER PROPERTY DEVELOPMENT FROM FATHER AND SON BUILDERS INC. IN WELLS, MAINE

Dramatic views of Wells Harbor and the Atlantic Ocean are just the beginning at Tidewater Landing. Set in one of New England’s most picturesque and historic coastal communities, Tidewater Landing offers a rare opportunity to own a new home in one of the most desirable locations in Wells, Maine.

LOTS STARTING AT $150,000

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TIDE WATERLANDING.COM

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207.646.6466

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FSBHOMES.COM


5 Udell Park | York | $1,375,000 Steps from the ocean, this shingle-style stunner with heated in-ground pool has everything you could want for year-round living and entertaining.

14 Winter Hills Lane | Ogunquit | $628,000 New custom built Craftsman, in new North Village Estates neighborhood, designed with incredible attention to detail & for maximum enjoyment & functionality.

1 Carlton Street | York | $625,000 Located less than 400 ft from Long Sands Beach,

2 Bristol Lane | York | $368,000 Last remaining lot of 5! 7+ acres to build your dream home minutes from York Harbor Beach, historic York Village & within walking distance to the York Harbor Marina.

this spacious year-round 4 BR home has plenty of room for family & friends.

"""""""""""""""""""""" * +, We make moving easy. Moving is stressful. Owners Jim and Kathleen Frati have designed their company to help smooth the edges of your moving experience by providing a damage-free transition for your fine furniture, valuables, and estate.

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Contact us today for a free estimate

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Local & Long Distance Moves • Heated Long & Short Term Storage (207) 233-5545 Packing & Unpacking Services • Consignment Delivery estimate@integritymovers.com -./01".22!3343"5"678&9$86:&;86<=&8>9?%6=7)@?9"5"AAA)&;86<=&8>9?% Professional Piano Movers • Family Owned Business integritymovers.com


RE/MAX RIVERSIDE

“Award Winning Broker”

1 Bowdoin Mill Island, Ste. 101, Topsham, ME 04086 Office: (207) 725- 8505 Ext. 111 Cell: (207) 751- 9701 agaluza@remax.net ~ www.galuzahomes.com

Andrea Galuza Broker/Realtor

ANTIQUE

FEDERAL HOME BATH/Federal Style Home within walking distance of downtown, waterfront park, and library. Formal living room with newer propane stove and dining room with older fireplace mantels, wood flooring, double bedroom on 2nd floor will allow your imagination to create a sitting area, walk in closet or private office. There are baths on each level including 1st floor laundry. The 3rd floor has an additional bedroom spaces or is just wonderful storage. MLS#1339915 | Offered at $219,000

ARUNDEL $549,000

BIDDEFORD $875,000

Well maintained riverfront bungalow in idyllic setting. Many updated features from custom kit to baths, open flr plan. Docks are in place, private deck.

High Blue Farm, 90 acres of protected forest, charming 4 bdrm historical home and an exceptional timber framed three story barn make this property a rare find!

KENNEBUNKPORT $899,000 Pastoral setting w/outstanding design, Chef’s kitchen, open concept living, stone fireplace, teak flooring, 1st flr master suite, option for apt over garage.

KENNEBUNKPORT $875,000

KENNEBUNK $879,000

KENNEBUNKPORT $650,000

Steps to Turbat’s Creek Beach. Water & Island views! Open concept, multiple fireplaces, 5 bdrms, 5.5 ba, custom kitchen & more. Very strong rental history.

A perfectly maintained cape on a private lot: ideal balance of elegance & utility, 2 master suites, generator, central vac, custom finishes throughout.

Lovely Bungalow style home on 1.67 acres. 3 bedrooms/2.5 BA, 2 car garage. Deeded right of way to 13+ acre open space. Similar home to be built.

1 Fletcher Street, Kennebunk, Maine | Office 207-985-4952 | KennebunkInfo@OwnNewEngland.com Independently Owned and Operated. Equal Housing Opportunity.


Second Home Sales & Vacation Specialists! Moose Rocks Road ~ Kennebunkport 19+ acres situated on a private road off of Goose Rocks Road. Survey and soils test available. Waiting for you to build your dream home and plenty of room to plan for additional lots in the future. Offered at $225,000

122 Kings Highway ~ Goose Rocks Beach 5 bed/4 bath Colonial situated on a little over a half an acre. Deeded beach access directly across the street. 40’ x 8’ screened in porch, two mini-splits (A/C). Excellent rental history! Offered at $1,100,000.

The Resort at Goose Rocks, Unit 4B ~ Kennebunkport 2 bed/1.5 bath, 1st floor seasonal condo, located within a mile to Goose Rocks Beach. This Resort offers everything you need for a relaxing vacation, get-a-way or income property. Indoor/outdoor pools, hot tub, sports courts and fitness room. Offered at $160,000.

FOR SALE

Contact us now to book your Southern Maine Beach Vacation! Introducing... 2 0 7 . 9 6 7 . 3 41222 Kings 1 Highway ∏ S ~AGoose N D D O L L A R R E A L E S TAT E . C O M Rocks Beach, Kennebunkport, Maine

Heather Motes

Owner/Broker/ABR/CRS 207.967.3421 hmotes@sanddollarrealestate.com SandDollarRealEstate.com

BREMEN Deepwater frontage and dock on scenic Greenland Cove! Picture yourself in this beautifully appointed, thoughtfully designed 2007 Contemporary offering three bedroom, two & half baths, extra garage space. Year-round guest house included. $1,399,000 MLS#1309931

DAMARISCOTTA Custom cape in a private setting with open floor plan, three bedrooms, first floor master suite, attached two car garage and two & half baths. Beautiful cherry floors, 2nd floor loft and a short drive to downtown! $299,000 MLS#1341662

Five bedroom, 4 full bath Colonial style home situated on .51+/ - of an acre directly across the street from deeded beach access. Oversized lot with plenty of outdoor space, 40’ x 8’ +/- screened in porch perfect for evening meals, games and entertaining. Two bedrooms, two baths located on the first level, dual staircases lead to an additional three bedrooms, two baths. Downstairs bedrooms have separate entrances/exits, two gravel drives for extra parking. Central vacuum, two mini -spits (A/C-Heat) installed 2016. Excellent rental history and a favorite among our repeat customers. Offered at $1,200,000.

“Your Best Interest is My Business”

Highlights:

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Deeded Beach access across the street !

Vinyl siding means low maintenance by the beach!

5 Bedrooms, 4 baths built in 2009. Half of an acre, across the street from the beach.

Sand Dollar Real Estate, LLC Heather Motes, CRS /Broker 5 Dyke Road, Unit 9 P.O. Box 87 Kennebunkport, ME 04046

Phone: 207-967-3421 Fax: 207-967-0507 Email: hmotes@SandDollarRealEstate.com www.SandDollarRealEstate.com

87 M AINE S TREET D AMARISCOTTA, M AINE 207-563-1003

BOOTHBAY Beautiful water views from every room. Three bedrooms, post & beam family room, large eat-in kitchen and a new large deck great for entertaining. Gradual steps to your deep-water dock and float. $649,000 MLS#1332611

NEWCASTLE

“The Standard” Rare opportunity to dock your boat within sight of your cozy two bedroom condominium located on the top floor! Glorious views and walk to downtown Damariscotta. $499,000 MLS#1258417

BOOTHBAY HARBOR Historic Colonial c. 1805 located just minutes from downtown and the waterfront. Three bedroom, two bath, garden shed and cozy guest cottage. You will love the perennial gardens and landscaping! $279,900 MLS#1296952

S pecialized B uyer and S eller r epreSentation e xcluSive H ome S taging S erviceS r eal e State a uctionS l uxury H omeS p rogram S earcH for m aine r eal e State at m y n ewcaStle . com


THE OLSEN TEAM 17 YEARS OF LOCAL EXPERIENCE

Recipient of the 2017 Circle of Excellence Award Call Cindy & Courtney for your Maine home today!

417 US ROUTE ONE I FALMOUTH, ME www.portsiderealestategroup.com

THE OLSEN TEAM I CINDY OLSEN & COURTNEY BABBIDGE CELL: 207.650.1627 I OFFICE: 207.619.7571

Your best life begins with a home that inspires you.

OGUNQUIT WATERFRONT – Built on the banks of the Ogunquit River, this 7 bdrm home is perfectly sited with views of the shimmering dunes and white sands of award winning Ogunquit Beach. $2,200,000

WELLS – Meticulously maintained, this spacious 3 bdrm Cape offers an eat-in kitchen, formal dining room, first level master, finished basement w/ wet bar, guest suite above the 2 car garage & more. $519,000

YORK WATERFRONT – Sited in coveted Western Point with commanding views of York Harbor, this charming shingle style home enjoys 400’ of water frontage on 5.65 private acres. $1,595,000

YORK WATERFRONT – Set on 1.66+/- acres, this secluded 3+ bedroom single level ranch features 410 feet on the York River and offers a year round 1,100 sq. ft. guest house, 2 docks and mooring. $1,399,000

ELIOT – Built in 2004, this open concept 4 bdrm Colonial on 3+ landscaped acres features a spacious family room, first level office, eat-in chef’s kitchen, a large patio with fire pit & more. $439,000

OGUNQUIT – Steps to Perkins Cove, this 3 bdrm striking and modern residence features a stunning kitchen, fireplaced living room, a first level en suite bedroom, 4-season sun room and more! $799,900

31 Long Sands Road, York, Maine | 207.363.6640

AnneErwin.com Each Office Is Independently Owned And Operated

19 Beach Street, Ogunquit, Maine | 207.646.8802


September 22, 2018

10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

A UNIQUE TOUR OF 12 FABULOUS CAPE ELIZABETH KITCHENS SHOWCASING PREMIER KITCHEN DESIGNERS, BUILDERS AND CRAFTSPEOPLE. COME BE INSPIRED!

Presented by:

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT EVENTBRITE.COM And for more information go to ceef.us or email ceefkitchentour@gmail.com

All proceeds benefit Cape Elizabeth Education Foundation, fostering innovation and excellence in Cape Elizabeth schools.


FIND YOUR DREAM...

CUMBERLANDFLATS.COM | BENCHMARKMAINE.COM


DR AWING BOAR D

A Return to Child’s Play

T

he property had been in the family for several generations

when Stoneboat Architectural was enlisted to STONEBOAT ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN PC: WHISTLING Design PINES COTTAGE

design a new two-family cottage. The natural lay of the land had been the perfect backdrop for childhood memories. The aim was to preserve both the character of the land and its occupants’ fond memories while looking ahead to the pleasure of generations to come. Whistling Pines Cottage is nestled into a cozy site overlooking a private cove on Damariscotta Lake. Surrounded by the eponymous pines, it evokes a subtle sense of stability and respite for all. The contrast of materials—stone, metal, and wood—are perfectly suited to the rustic charm of the land. The combination of cedar shakes and board-andbatten siding give the cottage traditional charm. while contrasting stonework and metal offer an update with flair. MH+D

Location: Damariscotta Lake, Nobleboro Architect: Stoneboat Architectural Design Builder: Paul Garber Residential Builders Construction start: Winter 2017 Construction complete: Spring 2018

STONEBOAT ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN PC: WHISTLING PINES COTTAGE

192 MAINEHOMEDESIGN.COM


| custom builders of finely crafted homes and commercial properties | 207.536.0235 | SYLVAINSEVIGNY.COM

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Design ¡ Installation ¡ Management

tedcarterlandscapes.com {207} 761.1823


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