The Art of Creating Houses

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The Art of Creating Houses

POLHEMUS SAVERY DASILVA JOHN R. DASILVA, FAIA FOREWORD & PRINCIPAL PHOTOGRAPHY BY BRIAN VANDEN BRINK INTRODUCTION BY VICTOR DEUPI, PHD
3 Contents 6 Foreword – Photographing Houses Made With Care 10 Introduction – Inspired by New England’s Coastal Vernacular 18 Lessons from Houses of the Past Select Houses 32 North-by-Northeast 54 Brace Rock 76 Riptide 98 Seapine Point 114 Sandy Bluff 154 Moon Shadow 160 Pleasant Heights 176 East to Avalon 184 Le Château de Famille 194 Just Off Shore 212 Seapine Gables 218 Summer Mooring 242 Town Hill 248 Warm Welcome 266 Patience 284 Vineyard Landing 300 Historic Hamblin House 306 Meadowcrest 322 Saint Peter’s Cottage 344 Arrowhead Point 350 Summer School 362 Manomet Ridge 368 Beachmist 374 Windswept 404 Eagle’s Nest 418 Harbor View Guesthouse & Social Pavilion 438 Lucky’s Bluff 448 Floor Plans 466 Credits & Acknowledgments
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Photographing Houses Made With Care

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I remember the first Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders (PSD) house I photographed. It was in 2003, and I was shooting the house for a magazine. At the time I didn’t know the firm or their work, but the house was very interesting, photographed well, and was published several times. The house was on a small island in Chatham MA, on Cape Cod, and it was a challenge just getting the gear to the house across the salt marsh (at the time, I was using a large format film camera that had several cases of equipment that went with it). I can remember thinking how difficult it must have been to build the house if it was this logistically challenging to shoot it. I mention that because, in retrospect, I learned some important things about PSD on that shoot. I think these characteristics are worth noting because they are generally descriptive of the firm.

One thing I learned was that any assignment done for PSD would be very well supported. On this first shoot, a technician from PSD was there to make sure we understood how things worked in the house, that it was shipshape and ready to photograph, and that we got everything we needed technically to make the shoot successful. His presence was appreciated. In the twenty years since then, and after shooting roughly seventy other

houses for PSD, this support and “sweat equity” has been there each time. In addition to technical support, there’s always a team on each assignment, with at least two people from the office. This team usually consists of myself and my assistant, the project’s design leader (either John or Sharon DaSilva), PSD’s marketing manager, and a stylist. Without exception, these folks have been excellent to work with. We all go home after a shoot totally exhausted (at least I do!), but the result of everyone’s hard work is exceptional. It’s fair to say that the shoots I’ve done for PSD would not have been as successful without these folks’ input and logistical support. This says a lot about the firm’s work ethic, professionalism, and commitment to their projects, not to mention the willingness to do the hard work that comes with achieving something special. PSD is all about “whatever it takes.” I sense that this not only applies to photo shoots, but also to how the team approaches their design and construction processes.

These architects/builders, led by CEO Aaron Polhemus, create unique houses with great attention to detail—something that I noticed on that first assignment. Not only the basics of making sure that systems are in order or that everything works properly, but also rich architectural details that

provide depth to the design and a playfulness that is fun and exuberant. All of the PSD houses I’ve shot have had this same carefulness, revealing a clear understanding of New England architecture or of other great houses from outside New England. The level of craftsmanship—carpentry, painting, cabinetry, trim and finish work, and so forth, are all consistently well done.

Many of the houses I’ve photographed with PSD have been on or near the shore. Siting and fenestration are very important with any house, to maximize views and create a well-lit interior. As a photographer, I think it’s noteworthy that artificial lighting is rarely needed on a PSD shoot, as the houses are generally well lit by the sun. I appreciate that because it enables us to produce images that look natural and helps us to move more quickly on the job. Of course, the occupants of the houses are able to enjoy the benefits of a light-filled interior year in and year out.

Finally, a few words about my relationship with architect John DaSilva, PSD’s Design Principal. Over the years, I’ve probably spent more time working with John than with any client. And when I say “working with John,” I mean “working”. Doing a photo shoot of a house involves difficult

labor and very long hours. John has been on almost every PSD shoot I’ve done from first thing in the morning to late at night. He is totally committed to the job, beginning to end. I’m the same way, and find that we make a good team. He doesn’t ask anyone to do something he’s not willing to do. He understands that dynamic images don’t just “happen,” they’re usually created with a lot of effort—just like dynamic buildings. I’ve learned to listen to his perspective, particularly when it involves a photograph I wouldn’t ordinarily do. As I review the pages of this book, I can see why he wanted to do those shots. They bring important variations that add richness to the storytelling of a house. I appreciate his diligence, knowledge of architectural history, and dedication to the art of design. I value our friendship built on years of working together toward the same goal. This is also true of my experience with everyone I’ve worked with at PSD.

Brian Vanden Brink is an architectural photographer based in Rockport, Maine. He has been photographing architecture and the built environment since 1973. His work has been widely published, including six books of his own. Brian and his wife Kathleen live in Camden, Maine.

PREVIOUS & BELOW Vineyard Landing
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Inspired by New England’s Coastal Vernacular

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A modest shingled building in a commercial district of Cape Cod houses the office of Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders (PSD) (1). The only hint at the creative work produced inside is the fanciful entry—an over scaled hood roof held up on emphatically stated cut-out bracket shapes and a sophisticated back-lit pattern made from the initials “PSD.” Inside, the company, led by CEO Aaron Polhemus and founded in 1996 by his now retired father, architect Peter Polhemus AIA, runs its architecture and construction practice as it has for nearly thirty years. In addition to the requisite drafting desks, computers, and bright lighting, are mock-ups of newel posts, balustrades, column capitals, parts of fireplace surrounds, and more. The conversations center on design (the best proportions for a window, the best approach for a driveway … ), construction (the best methods for waterproofing, the best options for sequencing … ) and, yes, how the Red Sox are doing, or where the fish are running.

Polhemus insists on a level of creativity, craft, and management professionalism that is unusual in design/build firms. In fact, the company doesn’t refer to itself in those terms, preferring to say “integrated architecture and construction” instead of “design/build” as the latter typically refers to a builder who employs a designer whereas PSD is a fully fledged architecture practice with rigorous academic training behind it. The architectural vision is provided by Design Principal John R. DaSilva, FAIA, and Senior Designer Sharon M. DaSilva, both exceptionally trained academic architects with experience at major twentieth-century architectural firms. Key employees studied at major institutions nationwide, and in some cases internationally.

Indeed, the firm is highly pedigreed, if you wish to accept Bernard Rudofsky’s designation of educationally trained architects from his groundbreaking book, Architecture Without Architects, which accompanied the 1964 exhibition he curated at MoMA of the same name. The subtitle, An Introduction to NonPedigreed Architecture, which he lays out in the preface and throughout the book and exhibition, refers to the vernacular, anonymous, spontaneous, indigenous, and rural buildings and monuments throughout the world that at the time had not been the subject of academic inquiry—at least not by architects.1 The work of PSD takes on Rudofsky’s challenge by learning from the vernacular architecture of coastal New England and re-presenting it as an intellectual exercise of modern residential design and construction, and in doing so they introduce profound artistic intent to their houses (2 and 3).

As John DaSilva believes, creating a place where dreams can flourish should be the aim of any creator of thoughtful and meaningful homes. He summarizes this goal with the term “poetic house.” 2 It is worth noting, however, that a house is not the same thing as a home, which is why we need the two words. Home is where we begin and end each day—it is a place of focus—and in that sense, it takes on much greater importance than the house itself. 3 As noted by DaSilva, “[u]sing the word and phrase ‘poetic’ and ‘house’ together involves the automatic transfer of familiar meaningcarrying associations invoked by ‘poetic’ (like artfulness, expression, intimacy, and emotion) to ‘house.’”4 The “poetic house,” then, is a place to dream and get lost, the perfect way to rediscover the simple pleasures of being at home, and this tends to be the central tenet—if not defining characteristic—of PSD’s work.

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1 PSD’s office on Cape Cod 2 Entry façade of Summer Mooring
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3 Family room at Historic Hamblin House

So, where does the ambition to create such houses come from, and how does PSD translate that into intentionally built form? The answer, for one, is simply in New England’s coastal vernacular architecture. 5 More specifically, the regions of Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket have provided an extraordinary richness of built form that responds to such natural qualities as the omnipresent New England coast and the unique temperate micro-climates and reflected sunlight that it creates, or expansive views to the horizon over endless, scaleless dunes and marshes. There are of course historical qualities as well; for example, the many charming towns and villages where the whaling industry prospered, full of weather-beaten houses and curious public buildings such as the 1887 Chatham Depot, a whimsical neo-Gothic railroad station that is right down the street from PSD’s previous office (4). But what makes the coastal vernacular architecture of New England so powerful is not just its environmental response or obvious charm, but rather that, in the words of the noted American architectural historian Richard Guy Wilson, it is “both conservative and radical, pragmatically based in experience but [also] a source for new architectural solutions.”6 In that sense, the coastal vernacular architecture of Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket offers ordinary solutions that transcend their familiarity by allowing clever and unique inventions that are not only infinitely variable, but also clearly identifiable within a rich tradition of building that encompasses the past, present, and future (5). It should come as no surprise, then, that Richard Guy Wilson is also one of the many writers on architecture who have shaped the firm’s thinking, which brings me to the next important point about PSD’s work in relation to what inspires it.

There are several late-twentieth-century architects and writers on architecture whose works, driven by their interest in history, the vernacular, or simply the ordinary, have contributed to the intellectual basis of PSD’s work, and many of them were important teachers, mentors, and friends. The debt to Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, and Charles Moore, both in their professional work and in their writings, has been explained at length in the firm’s previous books. Other influential figures include Cesar Pelli, Michael Graves, William Turnbull, and Turner Brooks, all successful practicing architects who experimented with various forms of postmodernism, and, in the case of Brooks, with integrated architecture and construction. These are traditions that are critical to the success of the firm’s work. In fact, the late Charles Jencks, about whom John has written extensively, designed a notable house on Cape Cod.7 He transformed an off-the-shelf garage kit into an ad hoc studio/guesthouse, renaming it the Garagia Rotunda—a combination of vernacular, shingle, and modernist grids with whimsical classical references—and it has since become an icon of postmodern architecture (6). 8 Jencks was particularly important in bringing postmodern architecture to the masses. It would not be an exaggeration to say that John DaSilva is one of the few beneficiaries of the intellectual tradition of building for the masses. DaSilva has carried it forward with such conviction and creativity, reminding us of how important the postmodern debates on architecture were in the late twentieth century, and how meaningful they remain today.

It should be noted that stylistic matters are not the primary concern to the work of PSD, as John would continue beyond those

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4 Train depot, Chatham, Cape Cod 5 Oak Hill, Monument Beach, Cape Cod 6 Garagia Rotunda, Truro, Cape Cod
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7 Bracket and arches at Brace Rock porch 8 (PAGES 10–11) Saint Peter’s Cottage with Just Off Shore in the distance
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Select Houses

27 HOUSES DESIGNED & BUILT BY POLHEMUS SAVERY DASILVA

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LEFT Living, dining, and kitchen spaces line up to take in the view. A rhythmic pattern occurs across the façade of operable, gridded casement windows; fixed-pane picture windows and French doors with no grids; and plain transom windows alternating with fan-light, transom windows. The interesting and complex pattern doesn’t even come close to overwhelming the spectacular view.

ABOVE The central arcade defines the edge between the living spaces and the circulation space. These spaces have their own character and separation but do not impede social flow. The compressed linearity of the circulation spine contrasts with the vast open space of the ocean beyond the other side of the room. The columns are an abstraction of real Greek temple columns—a reference to the Greek Revival popular in the region during Thoreau’s time.

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