Discover Concord Summer 2022

Page 68

All photos courtesy of the homeowners

The unrenovated carriage house.

In the process of raising the building to create a new foundation.

A Fine Carriage House Becomes a Refined Home

A

A couple with deep roots in Concord had the good fortune to inherit a property with an old carriage house near Concord Center. While already happily living in Concord, this inheritance posed the question: Where would they like to spend their retirement years? After consulting with the real estate company LandVest, they decided on the less likely candidate for their home—the unrenovated, unheated, uninsulated 1870s carriage house. Its prime location was ideally suited to their desire to age in place, and they did not want to sell a property that had been in the family since circa 1870. It took personal research and a high level of collaboration with experts in barn restoration, architecture, kitchen design, and landscaping to take a four-stall horse barn and turn it into a home. The result is an exquisite historical renovation, fitted for every modern need. To be clear, this was no ordinary carriage house even at its inception. Built in a whimsical Carpenter Gothic style, the level of workmanship and design signaled the 66

Discover CONCORD

| Summer 2022

BY BARBARA RHINES

esteem in which the original family’s horses and carriages were held. A ventilating cupola edged in gingerbread trim and topped with a sleek finial showcased the latest building innovations and style during the midVictorian period. But in 2012, the couple was greeted with the reality of a structure that had never been designed for heating and perched on its original brick-faced porous stone foundation. In fact, other than basic roof repairs, the carriage house had remained unchanged and unused since 1949. “A raccoon had moved into the cupola,” recalls the homeowner. During the 18-month planning process with the architectural team, the couple found a book, Cottage Residences by Andrew Jackson Downing, written in 1850. Design XV, “A Carriage-House and Stable in the Rustic Pointed Style,” seemed to be the inspiration for their own carriage house in terms of layout and facade. This book, along with Downing’s The Architecture of Country Houses (1850), became their references for making decisions on period-appropriate

colors and understanding the architectural components of the carriage house’s design. The couple felt that the original footprint should remain unchanged, so their builder lifted the entire structure and dug down to pour a new foundation, creating a finished lower level. The first floor was reconfigured into living space and the hayloft re-imagined into a music studio. Original doors, trim, and trusses were retained whenever possible. Woodwork was recreated where needed, and the symmetry of the facade was respected, including keeping the original stable doors. The couple now walks to all that Concord offers and retreats to this gem of a property. Saving a rare example of a 19th-century outbuilding in Concord Center and repurposing it to meet today’s needs is exactly what historical preservation seeks to accomplish. ———————————————————————— Barbara Rhines is a freelance writer in the Boston area specializing in architectural history, home renovation, and the decorative arts.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Adulteress & the Airman

7min
pages 32-33

The Homes of Henry David Thoreau

7min
pages 36-38

Bear Garden Hill Trail in Walden Woods

6min
pages 54-55

14 Things to See & Do in Concord this Summer

7min
pages 14-15

The Pleasures of Summer in Concord

2min
pages 76-80

Arts Around Town

4min
pages 74-75

Barrow Bookstore Presents: Concord Trivia

6min
pages 70-71

Make Summer Magic with a New Cocktail

2min
pages 72-73

Exploring Concord in a Morning A Day, or a Weekend

7min
pages 64-65

Architectural Phenomenology

3min
pages 66-67

A Fine Carriage House Becomes a Refined Home

3min
pages 68-69

Artist Spotlight

3min
pages 62-63

Summer in the Parks

4min
pages 60-61

The Founding of Concord’s Robbins House and a Debt of Gratitude

2min
page 59

Family-Friendly Ways to Unplug in Concord

4min
page 58

Native Plants Bee-long Here

6min
pages 50-53

Stories from Special Collections: Herbert Wendell Gleason

3min
pages 56-57

Elizabeth Freeman: A Free Woman on God’s Earth

7min
pages 48-49

Our Eden

7min
pages 40-42

Historic Concord: Plan Your Visit

2min
page 39

Concord Welcomes The 81st Annual Gathering of The Thoreau Society

6min
pages 28-29

Beyond Words: Louisa May Alcott’s Legacy

6min
pages 22-25

J. Drew Lanham: Taking the Wild Path to Human Understanding

7min
pages 20-21

Debra’s Natural Gourmet Opens Groundbreaking Space “Next Door”

4min
pages 26-27

A New Season at the Emerson House

3min
pages 30-31

Town Meeting: Concord’s Living Wonder

8min
pages 16-19
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.