New England Home September - October 2017

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Meet the 2017 “5 Under 40” Award Winners Kitchens and Baths to Die For

Celebrating Fine Design, Architecture, and Building

AUTUMN ELEGANCE

September–October 2017

Display until November 14, 2017 nehomemag.com

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photography by michael j. lee

Creative Approach Sophisticated Sensibility

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Reflexion. Design Philippe Bouix.

Date: July 27, 2017

New England Home

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An Award-Winning Full Service Residential Interior Design Firm Please call us at 617-236-2286 to arrange a consultation. 224 Clarendon Street, Suite 61 (corner of Newbury Street) Boston, MA 02116

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PHOTO: MICHAEL J. LEE

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E X P L O R E

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T E R R I T O R Y

Morehouse MacDonald & Associates is currently designing custom homes in Greater Boston and Cape Cod, MA, Charleston and Kiawah, SC, as well as the islands of Nevis and St Kitts in the Caribbean. Morehouse MacDonald & Associates believes sophisticated design is more than a concept; it is a distinct expression of you. Isn’t it time you explore new territory?

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General Contractor: Four Seasons Real Estate Landscape Architect: Landscape Plan Studio Interior Design: Sterling Design Rendering: Design Distill

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Ventura table, $2599; Cora chairs, $399; Copenhagen bookcases, $1099 each. 375 Newbury Street, Boston roomandboard.com

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In This Issue

September–October 2017 I Volume 13, Issue 1

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122

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Featured Homes:

102 State of Grace

A lovingly remodeled Martha’s Vineyard home makes a congenial setting for a couple to welcome guests to the island that has captured their hearts. Text by Fred Albert I Photography by Michael Partenio I Produced by Stacy Kunstel

112 Garage Chic

With a vintage car collection below and a stylish apartment above, a coastal Rhode Island carriage house is a modern take on the traditional.

On the cover: A sunny start to

the day is ensured by a showstopping light fixture in the breakfast room of a Boston-area home revamped by architect Adolfo Perez and designer Manuel de Santaren. Photograph by Laura Moss. To see more of this home, turn to page 134.​

Text by Bob Curley I Photograph by Nat Rea Produced by Karin Lidbeck Brent

122 Smooth Sailing

A stem-to-stern makeover that incorporates sophisticated allusions to the seafaring life turns an old Cape Cod saltbox into a retreat with timeless cottage style.

134 Polished to Perfection

A nineteenth-century home takes on a new air of quiet sophistication that matches its owners’ modern sensibilities and showcases their collection of contemporary art. Text by Megan Fulweiler I Photography by Laura Moss I Produced by Kyle Hoepner

Other Features:

146 Special Focus: Kitchens & Baths

A half dozen kitchens and baths where form and function happily cohabitate. Text by Paula M. Bodah

160 “5 Under 40” Awards

Our eighth annual celebration of New England’s best young design professionals. Text by Erin Marvin

Text by Maria LaPiana I Photography by Michael J. Lee I Produced by Stacy Kunstel September–October 2017 | New England Home  21

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In This Issue

September–October 2017 I Volume 13, Issue 1

183 Perspectives

Stylish geometric-patterned rugs; Annsley McAleer designs a sleek, sophisticated dining room; Audio Video Design’s Brad Smith on the latest smart-home tech; a Massachusetts dining room is both elegant and lively.

196 Trade Notes

218

Noteworthy happenings in the New England design business. By Paula M. Bodah

200 Design Life

Our candid camera snaps recent gatherings that celebrate architecture and design. By Tess Woods

212 Calendar

Special events for people who are passionate about design. By Lynda Simonton

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218 New in the Showrooms

Unique, beautiful, and now appearing in New England shops and showrooms.

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By Lynda Simonton

52 26 From the Editor 35 Elements: Made by Hand

Knitted, knotted, blown, thrown, or carved, a handcrafted object brings a little extra heart and soul to the home. Edited by Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz

46 Artistry: The Lay of the Land Rhode Island plein-air artist Nancy Friese captures the nuances of dreamy landscapes near and far. By Julie Dugdale

52 Good Bones: Great Planes

222 Premier Properties

Notable homes on the market in New England. By Maria LaPiana

232 Resources

A guide to the professionals and products in this issue’s features.

238 Advertiser Index 240 Sketch Pad

Good old-fashioned drawing by hand is the secret to a bedroom’s beautiful details.

Modern but certainly not cold, natural but hardly rustic, a Vermont getaway nestles contentedly into its mountain environs. Text by Robert Kiener I Photography by Nat Rea

60 In Our Backyard: Double Vision

With their line of sleek, sculptural mirrors, lighting, and furniture, Ben and Aja Blanc prove two creative heads are better than one. By Lisa H. Speidel

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Special Marketing Section:

Distinctive Kitchens & Baths

22  New England Home | September–October 2017

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P h otograp h y b y E le v in S tudios

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STUDIOADESIGN Boston | New York | San Francisco

A N N - M A R I E F I L L E S , P R I N C I P A L | 617.759.6563 | A@S T U D I O A D E S I G N L L C .COM

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PHOTO: ERIC ROTH, BUILDER: HOLMES HOLE BUILDERS


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Editor’s Letter

Autumn In Transition

T

here was once a time when the approach of September meant the end of summer enjoyment. Seasonal communities would close down, canoes and lawn furniture would go back into storage, newspapers and radio stations would be full of ads for back-to-school sales. These days, however, it seems to me that our not-a-care-in-the-world vacation season slides more gradually toward nose-tothe-grindstone fall; the metamorphosis has become blurrier, less quick, less definite. For one thing, most schools now begin well before August is over. For another, coastal towns that formerly emptied out after Labor Day now stay active into the autumn as restaurants remain open and schedules of social events extend toward the end of the year. More and more second homes are being

Corrections and Amplifications: In “Fabric of Our Lives,” about artist Karen Henderson in our July-August issue, we mistakenly wrote that Henderson learned to weave on a loom while working at a New Jersey fiber studio. In fact, she learned to work a loom earlier, as a student at Moore College of Art & Design in Philadelphia. Also, in “New Home in Old Newport,” in Premier Properties in the July-August issue, we learned only after we went to press that architect Alec Tesa, of A. Tesa Architecture in Newport, Rhode Island, designed the house.

For subscriptions call (800) 765-1225 or visit nehomemag.com See additional great content at:

26  New England Home | September–October 2017

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built for three-season or twelve-month use—few and far between now are the spidery, uninsulated cabins of yesteryear. As I look over the lineup for this issue of New England Home, it occurs to me that it is, essentially, a celebration of what used to be known, in less politically correct times, as Indian Summer: that in-between period when New England’s skies are a clearer blue, the afternoon sun perhaps a riper gold, and the evening’s repast more likely to feature duck and mushrooms than lobster rolls, but when the frost isn’t, as the poem would have it, yet on the pumpkin. We’ve focused on houses that promote enjoyment of the outdoors, even if they may also function as a full-service home base. One overlooks sparkling Narragansett Bay and the Newport bridge (and provides accommodations for a collection of vintage autos to boot); one is a Cape Cod getaway whose design is based on fine boatbuilding; one is a classic, white-clapboard Edgartown beauty with a harbor view, and one is a full-dress Victorian manse that is nonetheless bright, chic, and tucked into its own wraparound landscape despite a compact urban site. Plus, those of you for whom shorter days mean an increased appetite for planning your next renovation should find plenty of inspiration in our annual review of noteworthy kitchen and bath designs. So we’re sort of transitioning into our autumn back-to-business groove, but we aren’t quite ready to completely give up on warm weather just yet. There are still too many beautiful pre-frost days left in the year to enjoy. —Kyle Hoepner

Find more at nehomemag.com

Our editors and a fascinating lineup of guest blog­gers share beautiful photography, design ideas, and advice every week on the New England Home Design Blog. The site also features ongoing content updates, where you’ll encounter house tours, interviews and commentary, before-and-after stories, and other special items for lovers of great home design.

Sign up for our Design Discoveries editorial ­e-newsletter and get weekly updates on luxury home style, including the latest products, upcoming events, and green ideas.

Portrait by Hornick/Rivlin Studio

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experience our re-imagined

DESIGN SHOWROOM Editor-in-Chief Kyle Hoepner khoepner@nehomemag.com

Be Inspired.

Homes Editor Stacy Kunstel skunstel@nehomemag.com Senior Editor Paula M. Bodah pbodah@nehomemag.com Creative Director Robert Lesser rlesser@nehomemag.com Digital Content Director Lynda Simonton lsimonton@nehomemag.com Copy Editor Lisa H. Speidel lspeidel@nehomemag.com Contributing Editors Cheryl and Jeffrey Katz candjkatz@nehomemag.com Karin Lidbeck Brent klidbeck@nehomemag.com Contributing Writers Fred Albert, Regina Cole, Bob Curley, Julie Dugdale, Megan Fulweiler, Robert Kiener, Maria LaPiana, Erin Marvin, Louis Postel, Nathaniel Reade, Debra Judge Silber, Lisa H. Speidel

be sure your

Nantucket Home

is perfect for the season.

We offer the most luxurious textiles, kitchen and bath design, and custom carpets.

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Contributing Photographers Trent Bell, Robert Benson, Tria Giovan, Sam Gray, John Gruen, Keller + Keller, Michael J. Lee, Richard Mandelkorn, Laura Moss, Michael Partenio, Greg Premru, Nat Rea, Eric Roth, James R. Salomon, Brian Vanden Brink •

Editorial Submissions Designers, architects, builders, and homeowners are invited to submit projects for editorial consideration. For information about submitting projects, e-mail ­edit@nehomemag.com. Letters to the Editor We’d love to hear from you! Write to us at the above address, fax us at (617) 663-6377, or e-mail us at ­letters@nehomemag.com. Upcoming Events Are you planning an event that we can feature in our Calendar of Events? E-mail information to calendar@nehomemag.com, or mail to Calendar Editor, New England Home, 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302, Boston, MA 02118.

134 Orange St . Nantucket, MA 02554

Parties We welcome photographs from design- or architecture-related parties. Send high-resolution photos with information about the party and the people pictured to lsimonton@nehomemag.com.

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A r c H i t e c t u r A l m i l lw o r k

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A r c h i t e c t: S c h w A r t z / S i l v e r A r c h i t e c t S A n d l d A A r c h i t e c t u r e & i n t e r i o r S PhotogrAPher: greg Premru

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Publisher Kathy Bush-Dutton kbushdutton@nehomemag.com Executive Sales Manager Jill Korff jkorff@nehomemag.com Sales Managers Roberta Thomas Mancuso rmancuso@nehomemag.com Kim Sansoucy ksansoucy@nehomemag.com Robin Schubel rschubel@nehomemag.com

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David Simone dsimone@nehomemag.com Marketing Designer Jared Ainscough jainscough@nehomemag.com Production Manager Glenn Sadin gsadin@nehomemag.com Marketing, Events, and Sales Executive Tess Woods twoods@nehomemag.com •

Subscriptions  To subscribe to New England Home ($19.95 for one year) or for customer service, call (800) 765-1225 or visit our website, nehomemag.com. Advertising Information To receive information about advertising in New England Home, please contact us at (800) 609-5154, ext. 713, or info@nehomemag.com. Editorial and Advertising Office 530 Harrison Ave., Suite 302 Boston, MA 02118 (617) 938-3991, (800) 609-5154 •

New England Home Magazine, LLC Managing Partners Adam Japko, Chris Legg Finance Manager Kiyomi DeBay kdebay@nehomemag.com Accounts Receivable & Collections Manager Beverly Mahoney bmahoney@esteemmedia.com Circulation Manager Kurt Coey Newsstand Manager Bob Moenster

30  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Woodmeister_ New England Home MayJune‘17_Trim size: 8 x 10.875

Gary Sloan Photography

A Legacy of Extraordinary Craftsmanship Since 1980

How are you BUILDING Your Legacy?

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Photo: Sam Gray Photography

JANINE DOWLING I N T E R I O R

INTERIOR DESIGN

D E S I G N

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ART & ACCESSORIES

(617) 445-3135 www.janinedowling.com

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INFO @ NICO LEH O GART Y . COM II 617 . 849 . 8551 II B OSTO N , M A INFO @ NICO LEH O GART Y . COM II 617 . 849 . 8551 II B OSTO N , M A * M ICH A EL J . LEE PH OTO GR APH Y * M ICH A EL J . LEE PH OTO GR APH Y

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•Elements The Things That Make Great Spaces

Chain Stitched

This ancient sewing and embroidery technique takes a modern turn in the Modulo Goyescas chair designed by Sandra Figuerola for Gan. It comes in three colorways (yellow shown here). | $2,430, Montage, Boston montageweb.com

Made by Hand

Every day until she reached her mid-nineties and negotiating the cellar steps became untenable, the Cape Cod artist Mary Fassett could be found in her pottery studio. After a morning swim—tide permitting—in the Pamet River, Mary would descend into her basement to throw a pot, mix a glaze, or fire up her kiln. As longtime August renters of a small cottage on her property, we got to know Mary and her work

intimately. By example, she taught us the value and beauty of the handmade object. Lovingly and carefully crafted, each of her pieces served as a source of inspiration for both user and maker. Here, we celebrate the art of making. Whether knitted, knotted, blown, or thrown, each item featured is made by hand and bears the imprint of its maker—a quality that even the most finely calibrated, highly sophisticated machinery can’t duplicate.

| edited by cheryl and jeffrey katz | September–October 2017 | New England Home  35

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Elements

1

Made by Hand

2

3 4 Thrown, Turned, Glazed, and Hand-Built

5

1. Dating back to the eighteenth century, Koishiwara Pottery is known for its utilitarian beauty. | $124. Pod, Cambridge, shop-pod.com 2. With an MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, potter Tracie Hervy creates simple yet elegant pieces. | $56. Pod 3. Colleen Hennessey’s handmade clay pieces are meant to be mixed and matched and used every day. | $52. Pod 4. Fill it with flowers or perch it on a shelf—either way, the MW Green Dot bowl is a winner. | $350, Patch NYC, Boston, patchnyc.com 5. A rinse-and-serve berry bowl.  | $30. Patch NYC

36  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Š2017 California Closet Company, Inc. All rights reserved. Franchises independently owned and operated. CALIF*876OK

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Elements

Made by Hand Carved

The inspiration for sculptor Annie Meyer’s collection of kitchen tools comes from her long association with the food world and her love of farming, cooking, and sharing meals. The collection ranges in price depending on the piece, and no two are alike. | Dorchester, Mass., anniemeyerstudio.com

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P O L H E M U S S AV E RY DA S I LVA

PHOTO : BRIAN VANDEN BRINK

A R C H I T E C T U R E & C O N S T R U C T I O N . M A S T E R F U L LY I N T E G R AT E D .

What makes an exceptional design and building experience? Find out at psdab.com/why

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Elements

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Made by Hand 2

3

4 Embroidered

5

1. Artist Carmella Carney (mother of Patch NYC co-owner Don Carney) pays homage to Miró in Bright Abstract I, 2013. | $450. Patch NYC

Woven

2. Artist Sidney Perry’s plaid pillows were created at Gateway Arts weaving studio, where Perry also crafts rag rugs. The toss pillows are part of a collection ranging in prices from $40–$60.  |  The Gateway Craft Store, Brookline, Mass. gatewayarts.org

Stitched

3. Alison Doucette works in a number of different media, but she includes hand-stitching in much of her art. Paul Revere House incorporates paint and fiber. | $400. The Gateway Craft Store

Pinched

4. Jobi Pottery’s pinch pots have been handmade since the 1950s. Each irregularly shaped bowl is unique, and they come in a host of colors. | $18. Truro, Mass., jobipottery.com

Crocheted

5. Good enough not to eat (but great to display) is the hand-crocheted Hot Dog. | $22, Patch NYC

40  New England Home | September–October 2017

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catherine truman architects truman-architects.com

857.285.2500

Photo Jane Messinger

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Elements

Made by Hand 1

2

3

Woven

1. The iconic basket-weave pattern takes on a vivid new life in the hands of Berlin-based Dutch designer Hella Jongerius. Her Multitone rug, designed for Danskina for Maharam, comes in two colorways (dark shown here). | $1,900– $4,500, depending on size. Design Within Reach, Cambridge, Mass., dwr.com

Braided and Knitted

2. Claire-Anne O’Brien’s knitted stool ($870) and 4. Mapi Millet’s Detroit stool ($810), both designed for Gan, are perfect for seating extra guests, resting tired feet, or just admiring, because they look so good. | Montage, Boston, montageweb.com

Woven and Dyed

3. Stash your stuff in the Ocean Blue basket set, handwoven of date palm dyed with indigo in Bangladesh. | $40. Ten Thousand Villages, Burlington, Vt., and various New England locations, tenthousandvillages.com/burlington

4

At this writing, Cheryl and Jeffrey are arranging ceramic pieces crafted by their children back in grade school. Fittingly, these pieces sit on a bookshelf in the Truro cottage previously owned by Mary Fassett and which the Katzes recently purchased.

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Photography by Michael Partenio


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Dan Cutrona

Where craftsmanship still counts...

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Artistry

The Lay of the Land

Rhode Island plein-air artist Nancy Friese captures the nuances of dreamy landscapes near and far.

Nancy Friese’s landscapes are more than • snapshots of inspiring locations. She uses the

term “composite” to describe her technique: a blending of her feelings, interpretations, and memories of a place. A self-described perceptual landscape artist, the Providence-based painter, drawer, and longtime faculty member of the Rhode Island School of Design works outdoors in what she calls an open-ended fashion over multiple sessions—sometimes taking a month, or even up to a couple of years—to gather the sum of her experiences into one piece. “I truly believe all landscapes are a composite,” Friese says, “unless you’re just copying a photograph. It’s the power of light, the power of place. The longer you’re out of doors looking at a site, the more color is revealed.” Friese’s talent spans mediums, from oil (on linen or canvas) to watercolor to etchings, each uniquely expressive. Oils, she says, are more physical. There’s

substance and texture to the paint, so you can touch the piece and feel the body of the work. Watercolors represent light and spirit; when you close your eyes and run your hand over the paper, the surface feels the same whether it’s painted or not. Having studied printmaking and painting at Yale University, the University of California, Berkeley, and the Art Academy of Cincinnati, Friese is, she says, “devoted to two dimensions and the virtual world that limitation can

ABOVE: Spring Arbor (2017), diptych, oil on linen, 48"H × 96"W. BELOW: August Trees (2015), diptych, watercolor on paper mounted on board, 40"H × 119"W.

| By Julie Dugdale | 46  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Artistry

“When I’m out there painting, people always stop to talk to me, because when do you ever see an artist doing art?”

create. For me, the drawing, painting, and printmaking feed seamlessly upon each other and give me avenues of focus.” As a plein-air artist, Friese works all over the world, from Japan to the countrysides of Europe to her farmstead in North Dakota—where she has spent twenty summers being inspired by the skies and open spaces. Passers-by in more well-trodden locations are often curious about her process. “When I’m out there painting, people always stop to talk to me, because when do you ever see an artist doing art?” Her process begins with color. “I get rid of the

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white ground and establish colors, from lights to darks, in the first rounds. I try not to bring in any lines in the beginning.” The image emerges in subsequent layers of colorassigning and detailing over continued visits to the location. “It’s very mechanical, in a way,” the artist says. It may be habitual, but her artistic process isn’t without challenges. The biggest? Finding that perfect combination of the representative and the abstract. “How can you walk that line?” Friese asks. “And can others see that? How do you remain structured yet free? That balance creates dynamic, or animated, spaces.” Pieces from her 2017 Arbor Views exhibition, with titles such as Summer Noon and Along the Stream, Photos courtesy of the artist and Cade Tompkins Projects

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BELOW: Along the Stream (2014–2017), oil on canvas, 30"H × 30"W. FACING PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Rim of Sunlight and Trees (2016–2017), diptych, oil on canvas, 50"H × 100"W; Avondale Farm Preserve (2007), oil on linen, 30"H × 30"W; After Thomas Moran Gate of Lodore (2011), color monotype, 22"H × 15"W; Way to the Sea (2012), watercolor on paper, 41"H × 41"W.

perfectly capture that edge with deliberate, yet seemingly spontaneous, colors and textures. It’s a “collection of views of trees and their places in our daily lives,” she says. “They stand beside us throughout each day, and stand for us in a way.” Friese’s work has been featured in more than 30 solo shows and 170 group exhibitions around the world, and is sought after by institutions, museums, and private collectors. She also shares space with some of the most distinguished artists in New England on the top floor of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, where a 144-inch three-panel work she painted in Japan is on display. Although Friese concentrates almost solely on nature these days, she’s no stranger to harder lines and edges. She painted for a residency program on the ninety-first floor of the North Tower in New York City, but lost all her cityscapes on 9/11. She was then commissioned to do a triptych of cityscapes capturing the skyline without the World Trade Center. Since then, she has turned almost exclusively to landscapes. “The longevity of a landscape is that it’s a philosophical space—one the viewer fills,” she says. “I like to think it’s eternal that people still love to stand in nature and be part of it. I love it if I’m alone at a site. No music, no other media. It’s really enjoyable to solve your own creative problems. You have your own little realm, but in the end it’s all for somebody else to see.”  EDITOR’S NOTE: Nancy Friese is represented by Cade Tompkins Projects, Providence, ­cadetompkins.com. To see more of her work, visit nancyfriese.com. September–October 2017 | New England Home  49

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Good Bones

Great Planes

Modern but certainly not cold, natural but hardly rustic, a Vermont getaway nestles contentedly into its mountain environs. was time to move. After more than a • Itdecade in their funky ski house in Vermont’s

Mad River Valley, the Swampscott, Massachusettsbased couple decided it was time to sell and build their very own dream home. As the wife explains, “We found a piece of land we fell in love with and said goodbye to our Brady Bunch house with its gold shag carpeting and see-through fireplace.” Enter Boston-based architect Colin Flavin. “The couple showed me the richly wooded, sloping, sixtyacre lot they had bought near Sugarbush ski resort

and explained they wanted a place that reflected— and blended in with—the beauty of the region,” he says. “I remember them saying what they didn’t want was ‘the romantic farmhouse look’ with lots of gables.” Taking his cue from the owners’ tastes and the lot itself, Flavin designed a modern, elegant, yet modest three-bedroom dwelling that is tucked neatly into the landscape. “We loved everything about Colin’s design,” says the wife. “We especially loved the way he used so many organic materials like stone, wood, and

Instead of hiding its structural components, this mountain home proudly displays them as a way of celebrating the building’s novel design. The materials—red cedar shingles, a durable membrane roof, and Douglas fir beams— will weather well and age naturally.

| Text by Robert Kiener | Photography by Nat Rea | 52  New England Home | September–October 2017

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CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Exposed steel

beams, concrete floors, and horizontal spruce paneling help anchor the home to its wooded lot. A massive fieldstone fireplace gives the open great room a warm feel. Tall, broad windows blur the indoor-outdoor line. The minimalist landscape architecture by Keith Wagner suits the modern house.

even steel, and the way the sloping roof lines blended in with the topography of the lot.” Flavin chose exterior materials that will weather well and age naturally: red cedar shingles with an oil finish, an Italian-made resin composite cladding, Douglas fir beams, and a roof made from a durable membrane that has a standing seam appearance and sheds snow easily. Instead of hiding the structure, the design celebrates it. “We knew our clients didn’t want a ‘look at me!’ house, but we did make an effort to make its structure visible,” Flavin says. For example, while roof beams are covered on the interior, they are left exposed on the exterior. Trim is minimal. Flavin used resin cladding to offset the wooden shingles and trim

“We knew our clients didn’t want a ‘look at me!’ house,” says Colin Flavin. to prevent the house from looking overtly rustic. This natural look continues inside with features like a massive fieldstone fireplace with a bluestone hearth, exposed steel beams, concrete floors, and lots of spruce and other locally sourced wood. Brendan O’Reilly, owner of Stowe-based Gristmill Builders, described the residence as a challenge and a delight to build. “Because there is a minimum of trim work, our work had to be exact,” he says. “We like the fact that our craftsmanship is on display. We love the way the house celebrates its materials and its structure.” While some owners may have cut down trees to open distant vistas, Flavin was thrilled to learn that his clients wanted to leave the lot as pristine as possible. “They are real stewards of the land and opted for more intimate views,” he says. Although there are

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Good Bones LEFT TO RIGHT: Sloping and overhanging roofs help the house blend into the landscape. A granite slab forms a bridge across a dry streambed. An enclosed porch lets the owners appreciate the outdoors all year.

potential distant dramatic panoramas to the north that would have involved removing trees, the house is largely oriented to the south, and most of the rooms, including a three-season, screened-in porch, look out onto more modest views. “We love the feeling that we are cozy and tucked away here, but that the home is also filled with light,” says the wife. The roofs slope up to the south to maximize passive solar heating in the

winter, and roof overhangs block harsh summer sun. Burlington-based landscape architect Keith Wagner describes his work on the home as “bringing the clarity of the architecture to the landscape.” Among his touches were a subtle redesigning of the bluestone-capped granite walls to align with the front facade, filling an existing stream with river rocks, and using a slab of stone as a bridge, all of which give the

I don’t divide architecture, landscape and gardening; to me they are one. - Luis Barragan

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grounds a simple, Japanese-inspired feel. Wagner used a lot of native ferns, grasses, river birch, and serviceberry trees. As he says, “We took our cue from the landscape and approached the house like it was a sculpture that Colin was inserting into the woodlands. We wanted to create a feeling of being nestled in.” As visitors approach, they are greeted by a Flavin

touch that has come to delight the owners. The front door is discreetly hidden (a nod to Frank Lloyd Wright) and topped by a waterfall/scupper that directs water from the main roof into a water garden. “It’s a small touch, but it is an elegant one that seems to be welcoming us home every time we arrive,” says the wife.  RESOURCES : For more information about this home, see page 232.

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In Our Backyard

Double Vision

With their line of sleek, sculptural mirrors, lighting, and furniture, Ben and Aja Blanc prove two creative heads are better than one. you live and work together in a creative • Ifindustry, inspiration can come when you least

expect it. Maybe you’re on the back deck coloring with your two daughters when you realize you’ve just sketched an idea worth pursuing, or perhaps you’re grabbing drinks at a dimly lit bar on the West Side of Providence when you suddenly pull out pen and paper. So it goes for husband and wife Ben and Aja Blanc, who merged talents officially in early 2015 to form their eponymous Providence-based boutique design studio, producing furniture, lighting, and objects. The couple met in grad school at the Rhode Island School of Design, but pursued separate tracks after school while dating long-distance. She, a museum studies major, headed to the Yale University Art Gallery to work with their collection and teach. He, a furniture design major, stayed behind to start a design studio, freelancing on the side. “When we started living together,” says Aja, “that’s when the design conversations began happening.” But it wasn’t until 2014, now married with a toddler and working at RISD, that “Aja came home one day and said, ‘I’m going to quit,’ ” remembers Ben. “That’s the moment there was a rigor brought to this studio. We knew that creatively we’d be better together.”

clockwise from

Joining forces meant a fresh start and a collaborative approach. When it comes to the design process, Aja explains, usually one of them will have the seed of an idea, the other runs with it, and then they engage in a lot of back and forth to revise and refine. They use their individual expertise to their collective advantage. “Ben’s background as a maker has him very involved with production. He knows how to make anything, it’s amazing!” she says. “My background in art history often comes into play during

top left: A ring of patinaed solid bronze supports the Atlas coffee table’s fully sealed glass enclosure. The Pillar side table, designed to highlight the beauty of the natural wood, is fabricated from lathe-turned solid white oak. The Apollo mirror, named for the Greek God of the Sun, comprises two half-circle mirrors joined by negative space and partnered with hand-spun, handpainted silk fiber.

| Text By Lisa H. Speidel | 60  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Westphalen Photography

129 Kingston Street, Boston, MA | 617.542.6060 | mgaarchitects.com

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In Our Backyard

“It’s exciting for us to see how interior designers put our work in different spaces and are able to transform our pieces. Our work is like the jewelry in the room,” says Ben Blanc. the conceptual research phase of designing—where I am placing our work within a context that helps us evolve the design.” Perhaps it’s no coincidence that much of the couple’s portfolio plays with “juxtaposition and partnering.” They tend to work with minimalist, monolithic forms and then add a level of warmth. Their Eos mirror, for example, not only contrasts the harder edges of a geometric form with the warmth of fiber, but also explores the relationship between the functional (mirror) and the nonfunctional (silk/mohair). With the rectangular Ida mirror, the Blancs probe partnering and light and reflection in a different way, by removing the mirroring on the bottom half. “It’s a subtle gesture that adds warmth and a horizon line, so now you’re aware of your environmental space,” says Aja.

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Similar principles are at work with the large-scale Ellipse table. “It’s monolithic, it’s formalistic, it’s steel, but at the same time, it’s an ellipse, and it’s blackened steel, which adds warmth,” says Ben. “Juxtaposition is happening in that design conversation.” There’s also a modern, sculptural quality to many of their designs. With the statement-making Moon light, the image of the moon is lit from within and enclosed in glass. Hung from the ceiling or wall-mounted, it at once acts as light, sculpture, and image. For materials, the Blancs skew classic: bronze, steel, marble, wood, and glass, and steer clear of applied color. “The color,” notes Ben “comes from the material.” Sourcing plays an important role in the process,

Half Moon mirror photo courtesy Bright Designlab. All other images courtesy Ben & Aja Blanc

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FACING PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: The evocative Moon light. The large-scale blackened steel Ellipse table. Hand-spun, hand-painted silk fiber hangs from the Half Moon mirror. The minimalist Barrel pendant light. The two halves of the Half Moon coffee table are placed together to create dynamic spacing in the center of the table. BELOW: Designers Aja and Ben Blanc.

too. The fiber they incorporate in their designs (a silk/wool/mohair blend) is hand-spun and hand-painted in Japan. The designers pride themselves on working with various manufacturers to achieve the best results; in fact, not one piece is solely made in house. The components and materials are shipped to their studio, where they construct the final pieces. This attention to detail coupled with

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a crystal-clear vision—“the objects we tend to gravitate toward have function, but not overriding function,” says Aja, “we don’t do dining tables or sofas, for example”—has brought the duo much success. They’re repped by galleries in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Manhattan. And their work has landed in various venues, from a pizza place in Austin, Texas, to a facial spa in Beverly Hills to a Victorian home in San Francisco. “We don’t like to be pigeon-holed,” says Ben. “It’s exciting for us to see how interior designers put our work in different spaces and are able to transform our pieces. Our work is like the jewelry in the room.” And as for that piece Aja started sketching on the back deck with her little girls? It’s currently in the design phase, part of a new collection of fiber mirrors that will be released by the end of the year.  Ben & Aja Blanc Providence, (323) 510-7121 benandajablanc.com

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Interior Design: Kathleen Hay Designs Photo by: Jane Beiles Photography

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Kitchens & Baths

Distinctive

Kitchen Views at National Lumber

Newton Kitchens & Design

The Inspired Bath

Sea-Dar Construction

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Eternal Marquina

Cosentino Center Boston osentino continues to drive the latest in quartz manufacturing technologies. Silestone® Eternal by Cosentino is a dazzling, new range of colors which pay homage to the most sought-after, exotic marbles in the natural stone sector. Aesthetics and functionality are fused together in a proposal designed for even the most demanding projects. Eternal Calacatta Gold. Made up of a white background through which elegant, wide gray highlights are interspersed with unexpected golden glints. Charcoal Soapstone. Inspired by the popular soapstone, this color has a blue-gray finish with powerful gray highlights. A spectacular creation,

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characterized by its rotundity, depth, and sense of movement. Eternal Marquina. Evocative of the beautiful Spanish Black Marquina marble, this creation presents a strong black background with convincing, intense white details and highlights that rise to the surface. The Eternal Collection is the first Silestone® Collection manufactured with N-Boost technology. Silestone® N-Boost achieves a greater intensity of color and an extraordinary surface brightness, and makes the cleaning and maintenance of Silestone® easier than ever, thanks to the water-repellent property of the material.

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Distinctive

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Cosentino Center Boston 120 Shawmut Drive, Canton, MA 02021 (508) 393-9600 silestone.com | dekton.com Special Marketing Section  69

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Crown Point Cabinetry amily owned and operated, Crown Point Cabinetry handcrafts the finest quality custom cabinetry for the entire home. Our unique approach of selling direct means that our in-house designers work firsthand with homeowners, architects, custom builders, and remodelers nationwide. Specializing in period style, including Arts and Crafts, Shaker, Victorian, and Early American, we also create outstanding designs in transitional, cottage, and contemporary construction.

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Cabinetry can be crafted from choices in lumber across a large range, including cherry, sapele, red oak, maple, quarter-sawn white oak, walnut, and pine. We also offer a special selection of reclaimed and old-growth lumber, including reclaimed chestnut, reclaimed hickory, old-growth heart pine, and reclaimed elm. Our smooth, beautiful finish completes the cabinetry in clear or a rich stain, or choose from a wide palette of paint colors by Sherwin-Williams or Genuine OldFashioned Milk Paint.

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Distinctive

Kitchens

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Crown Point Cabinetry 462 River Road Claremont, NH 03743 (800) 999-4994 crown-point.com

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Dream Kitchens or the last 27 years, Dream Kitchens has specialized in kitchen and bath design and remodeling. Dream Kitchens has earned more than 200 awards for best value and best design. Nina Hackel, president of the Nashua, New Hampshire–based company, and her five designers have a passion and creativity that haven’t cooled over the years. What sets Dream Kitchens apart from the rest? It’s more than just the ability to design beautiful kitchens; it’s the company’s pledge to increase storage and counter space by at least 30 percent. Hackel believes in creating spaces that make every multitasking parent’s life easier—imagine the television

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visible, the kids in view, and the dishes getting done, all at the same time. The designers at Dream Kitchens start each project with an in-depth client consultation. Clients then receive three unique designs, along with professional input on the pros and cons of each layout. The goal is to design a space that is both beautiful and user-friendly. “Our designers pride themselves on their ability to creatively solve challenges of budget, space, function, and style, to ultimately provide a dynamic new lifestyle for each client,” says Hackel. Dream Kitchens is committed to making your kitchen exceptional and ensuring that every client’s dream becomes a reality.

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Kichler Barrington sconce

Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery scape the Everyday Today’s on-the-go lifestyle can only be sustained with regular intervals of rest and rejuvenation. As you plan your next getaway, consider the possibilities of escaping to your own personal retreat each and every day. “Master bathrooms have transformed into a getaway for busy homeowners,” said Andrea Mongeau, Area Showroom Manager-New England for Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery. “With the right combination of products, you can create a comfortable and relaxing experience right in your home.” When selecting options for your personal retreat, consider these recommendations from the product experts at Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery. Farmhouse Modern style—To achieve a casual country aesthetic, consider neutral colors, living

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finishes, and natural materials. The farmhouse sink makes a great statement in the bath atop metal console legs and paired with a contemporary faucet and handles. Freestanding Tubs—Like a piece of art, a freestanding tub can be a beautiful focal point of the bathroom. Today’s modern tubs feature sleek lines, geometric shapes, and a wide variety of coordinating freestanding faucets and handshowers. The tub’s generous size provides the ultimate in allaround comfort and relaxation. Perfect finishes—Give your master bath a richer, more interesting feel by mixing materials to create a space that is uniquely yours. Pair faucets and fixtures in aged brass or dark finishes with clear glass accents in lighting. To select the right products for your bathroom escape, visit your local Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery or www.fergusonshowrooms.com.

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Distinctive

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Kichler Nadine sconce

DXV Oak Hill freestanding tub

DXV Oak Hill console sink

Manchester, NH 293 Abby Rd. (603) 669-8100

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Frank Webb Home n 1999, F. W. Webb Company, the Northeast’s largest plumbing and heating distributor, opened their first Frank Webb’s Bath Center showroom, offering friendly expertise to homeowners and the design community. Now with 38 showrooms in eight states, Frank Webb has evolved into much more than a bathroom resource. Recent customer research has been enlightening and the result is that Frank Webb’s Bath Center is now Frank Webb Home. Frank Webb Home showrooms are growing in size and product selection. Visitors will find not only an inspiring collection of the finest bath

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fixtures from the industry’s top brands, but also vanities and other storage solutions, countertop materials, and innovative bath accessories. The showrooms also present a wide selection of kitchen sinks and faucets, as well as bar sinks, disposals, and water purifiers, not to mention a growing portfolio of bathroom lighting. While the name has changed, customers still enjoy working displays to make product selection easier and a team of friendly, knowledgeable consultants who are never on commission. This ensures that customer needs are always the primary focus and exemplifies the Frank Webb Home motto: “We’re here to help.”

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Distinctive

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38 locations including South Boston, Needham and Bedford, MA frankwebb.com

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The Inspired Bath nspiration: Something that makes someone want to do something or that gives someone an idea about what to do or create. Inspiration is what you’ll find at The Inspired Bath kitchen and bath showroom. Our walls are lined with hundreds of products in a variety of styles from top manufacturers. Curated vignettes showcase contemporary, traditional, and transitional

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designs allowing you to visualize the products in a home environment. Walking through the showroom is the first step in the product selection process. Collaborating with our designers is where your plan evolves and becomes truly one-of-a-kind. Our experience working on new construction and renovation projects has made our team experts in identifying products that will fit your space, budget, and style. Come find your inspiration at The Inspired Bath.

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Distinctive

Kitchens

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The Inspired Bath 411 Waverley Oaks Road Suite 121 Waltham, MA 02452 (781) 472-2870 145 Faunce Corner Road
 North Dartmouth, MA 02747 (508) 997-5466 305 Oliphant Lane Middletown, RI 02842 (401) 846-8680 theinspiredbath.com Special Marketing Section  79

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Products by NKD:
 • All cabinetry
 • Custom rosewood mirror with built-in TV
 • Solid walnut shoji doors with opal glass
 • Reclaimed redwood live-edge shower bench photos by Greg Premru

Newton Kitchens & Design ith no limitations...that’s custom. Newton Kitchens & Design provides exceptional handcrafted cabinetry and furniture manufactured locally in Massachusetts. Our innovative designs range from contemporary to traditional and combine luxury with functionality. Our projects span from intimate galley kitchens engineered to maximize every inch of space to expansive living spaces with carefully selected materials that flow harmoniously throughout your home. Newton Kitchens & Design collaborates with many of Boston’s most respected architects, inte-

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rior designers, and builders to create unique spaces and one-of-a-kind pieces for discerning homeowners throughout New England and beyond. Our team starts with you! At every stage—from in-home consultation through design, build, and installation—Newton Kitchens & Design takes a hands-on approach to helping you create the perfect pieces for your kitchen, bathroom, or entertaining space. “I try to guide my clients to what they will love and want to come home to. I want them to be excited to spend time with friends and family in the spaces that I help create for their homes,” says craftsman Pierre Matta.

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244 Needham Street Newton, MA 02464 (617) 559-0003 newtonkd.com

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Sea-Dar Construction f you’re ready to design a kitchen or bathroombut don’t know where to begin, Sea-Dars online portfolio is a great place to start. From the simple to the sublime, Sea-Dar Construction’s work is sure to inspire. Sea-Dar is able to source unique combinations of wood, concrete, stone, and metal to create both contemporary and traditional looks. Odd angles, small spaces, and uniquely shaped rooms are no challenge for the award-winning contractor. Years of experience allow the company to consistently resolve renovation and new construction issues for its clients.

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Best known for its custom waterfront homes, luxurious condominiums, and historic brownstone residences, Sea-Dar has garnered a reputation for posh properties in Greater Boston, Cape Cod, and New York. A lavish collection of modern bathrooms and custom gourmet kitchens has earned Sea-Dar a long list of awards for everything from craftsmanship to construction safety. These awards speak directly to the company’s capabilities. To learn more about Sea-Dar Construction and view their inspirational portfolio, visit seadar.com or preview the firm’s projects on Houzz at www.houzz.com/pro/seadarconstruction.

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Architect: LDa Architects Interior Design: Vivian Hedges Interiors Photography: Eric Roth

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Photography: Eric Roth

580 Harrison Ave, Suite 4W Boston, MA 02118 (617) 423-0870 2957 Falmouth Road Osterville, MA 02655 (508) 419-7372 150 W. 30th Street, Suite 1300 New York, NY 10001 (212) 561-3374 seadar.com

Architect: Peter Breese Interior Design: Ann Gallagher Photography: Greg Premru

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a Blade of Grass LLC hether you’re having an intimate family dinner or a gathering of friends, cooking and dining outdoors adds something special to summertime memories. Besides the luxury gas grill, this outdoor kitchen designed by a Blade of Grass features many of the conveniences of cooking indoors, including a burner for boiling corn or lobsters, a refrigerator, and outlets. A single piece of custom-fabricated reclaimed redwood serves as a unique, seamless countertop, making clean-up a breeze. An adjacent covered dining area allows for comfortable meals, no matter the time of day. Through our design, installation, and maintenance services, a Blade of Grass cherishes the opportunity to provide our clients more reasons to be outside.

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9 Old County Road Sudbury, MA 01776 (508) 358-4500 abladeofgrass.com

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Shelly Harrison

Bertola Custom Homes & Remodeling ertola Custom Homes & Remodeling is a company focused on building, remodeling, and high-end finishing. We are dedicated to creating spaces that are beautiful and functional and that meet our exacting standards while remaining within our customers’ budgets. Our relationships with the area’s designers and with our trusted subcontractors ensure consistently high-quality work. When we take on your project, we’ll be involved in every phase of construction, from development of ideas to finishing touches, with the highest standard of quality and customer satisfaction. Our commitment, whether we are building a new home or remodeling an existing one, is to build trust with our clients and bring their dreams to reality. Text by Leila Petersen Almeida

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Bertola Custom Homes & Remodeling Waltham, MA 02453 (781) 975-1809 bertolacustom.com

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Main Street Kitchens at Botello’s n award-winning cabinet and design company, Main Street Kitchens at Botello Home Center consistently brings distinction to residential kitchens, baths, and interiors. Our kitchens have been selected as a “Kitchen of the Week” on Houzz (search Kitchen of the Week: A Cape Cod Classic) and have won BRICC gold awards for design excellence. We specialize in listening, and our projects are inspired by you and your lifestyle. A Main Street kitchen stands out. This is accomplished with superior service, installation, and a wide range of exceptional products to choose from. We invite you to visit our award-winning showroom.

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Main Street Kitchens at Botello Home Center 26 Bowdoin Road Mashpee, MA 02649 (508) 477-3132 ppuchol@botellolumber.com mainstreetbotellos.com

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Classic Kitchens & Interiors ith a 4,500-square-foot showroom in Hyannis and a dedicated team of certified designers and installers, Classic Kitchens & Interiors works with clients to realize their vision of a beautiful, unique, and functional kitchen, bath, built-in, closet, laundry room, office, or other storage solution. They partner with homeowners, architects, builders, and interior designers throughout Cape Cod, the islands, and southern New England. Since 1979, their focus has been on providing superior craftsmanship, an individualized approach to the design process, and state-of-theart cabinetry. The company is a 2017 Best of Boston Home and 2017 Best of Cape Cod Magazine winner.

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Classic Kitchens & Interiors 127 Airport Road Hyannis, MA 02601 (508) 775-3075 ckdcapecod.com   Special Marketing Section  87

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Patrick O’Malley

Cutting Edge Homes Architects + Builders e think differently. We are an awardwinning boutique firm, offering a single source for the architecture, engineering, construction, and interior design of your kitchen. Kitchen renovations are inconvenient —plain and simple, so we work hard to guarantee the integrity of your home while under construction. Our clients rave about our preconstruction coordination, and our attention to every single detail and deadline. We are known for custom homes, home remodels, and our passion for kitchens! The kitchen is the heart of the home, and we take pride in each project being unique, and customized to your desires.

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Cutting Edge Homes Architects + Builders Sean Cutting, President Wellesley | Chatham (508) 435-1280 thinkcuttingedge.com

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Cypress Design Co. ypress Design Co. is a boutique-style kitchen and bath showroom serving all of New England. We cater to the educated consumer by offering a flawless process for a project of any scale. Our design team’s expertise, experience, and attention to detail are surpassed by no one. We have enabled customers to go no further than our showroom to complete their entire project. Tucked away in a beautifully converted 100-yearold mill building outside of Providence, Rhode Island, Cypress Design Co. is a hidden gem among New England kitchen and bath design firms.

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Cypress Design Co. 15 Dexter Road East Providence, RI 02914 (401) 438-5105 cypressdesignco.com   Special Marketing Section  89

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Hampden Design + Construction ampden Design+Construction is an award-winning general contracting firm in Newton, Massachusetts. David Cohen, the principal owner, says, “Our goal at Hampden Design+Construction is to help homeowners create comfortable and beautiful additions, renovations, and custom homes. To ensure we never over-extend ourselves and compromise our commitment to quality, we limit the number of projects we take each year. This guarantees we can treat each project with the attention and respect that our customers expect and deserve.” Hampden Design+Construction has earned

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several distinctions including winning Boston Home’s “Dream Kitchen Contest” and being featured on This Old House.

Hampden Design+Construction PO Box 180 Newton, MA 02468 (617) 969-1112 hampdendesign.com

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Installations Plus, Inc. ince 1983, Installations Plus, Inc. has been transforming spaces. Our skilled team of installers works on both new projects and remodels, displaying quality workmanship in residential and commercial settings. With years of experience working with custom homebuilders, designers, and contractors, we specialize in kitchen, bath, foyer, sunroom, and patio projects involving ceramic, glass, and quarry tiles, as well as slate and marble. We invite you to explore our website to see some of our completed work. We look forward to making your vision a reality!

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Installations Plus, Inc. 131 Flanders Road Westborough, MA 01581 (774) 233-0210 installplusinc.com

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Kitchen Views at National Lumber hether currently planning a project, or dreaming of doing so, visit a Kitchen Views showroom at a National Lumber near you...Where the designers are pros, and the views are yours. You will love the results! Enjoy the transformation when you work with the talented designers at Kitchen Views. Share your visions and watch as they successfully lead you through the revitalization of any room in your house, exceeding your expectations. A staggering number of decisions must be made. Having a seasoned professional who understands your needs and aesthetic taste will help with your selections. Welcome to the beginning of a design journey...

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Showrooms in Newton, Mansfield, New Bedford, and Berlin, MA; and Warwick, RI Kitchen Views at National Lumber (508) DESIGNS kitchenviews.com

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Longfellow Design Build ongfellow Design Build is a premier custom architect and builder of new homes, kitchens, bathrooms, home additions, and historic renovations for a Cape Cod lifestyle. With a team of talented architects, kitchen and bath designers, and master craftsmen on permanent staff, Longfellow embraces a design-build philosophy that delivers a more efficient process that reduces risk, cost and time to complete. Visit one of Longfellow’s three “Main Street” design showrooms located in Falmouth, Osterville, and Chatham to see a wide variety of finishes, materials, and fixtures chosen specifically for our Cape Cod coastal climate and design sensibility. Whether you’re mulling over a new home project, or ready to go, schedule a no obligation, on-site consultation with a Longfellow architect or designer who will answer all your questions and maybe even have a few great ideas or words of advice specifically for your home.

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Longfellow Design Build Mark Bogosian, Owner mark@LongfellowDB.com Falmouth Showroom 367 Main St., Falmouth, (774) 255-1709 Chatham Showroom 578 Main St., Chatham, (508) 945-1710 Osterville Showroom 866 Main St., Osterville, (508) 428-3999 LongfellowDB.com   Special Marketing Section  93

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Moniques Bath Showroom, Inc. t Moniques Bath Showroom, a secondgeneration family business, we pride ourselves on our product knowledge and our commitment to superior customer service. We have received the Houzz Customer Service Award, the Decorative Plumbing & Hardware Association’s Showroom of the Year Award, and the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show’s Innovative Showroom of the Year Award. Whether you are a design professional or a homeowner, you will be treated with respect in our newly upgraded showroom. Because we display all of the top-brand decorative plumbing fixtures and hardware, as well as products exclusive to very few showrooms, Moniques is a must-visit in your kitchen and bath planning.

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Moniques Bath Showroom, Inc. 123 N. Beacon St. Watertown, MA 02472 (617) 923-1167 michael@moniquesbath.com moniquesbathshowroom.com

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Michael Partenio

Nancy Serafini Interior Design

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in more than 35 publications. Induction into the New England Design Hall of Fame in 2011 was the crowning feather in her cap.

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ancy Serafini Interior Design, a fullservice interior design firm, has been creating beautiful homes for more than 40 years. Kitchens are a specialty for Serafini and her team at NSID. Her work focuses on simplicity and organization in both the kitchen and bath, as well as demand for excellence in all facets of the process. The selection of cabinetry, plumbing fixtures, tile, and hardware sets an NSID design apart. Focusing on unique materials for countertops and lighting makes the company’s kitchens and baths stand out. Serafini has won many awards for residential kitchen design, and her work has been featured

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Nancy Serafini Interior Design P.O. Box 51597 Boston, MA 02250 (617) 413-3388 nancyserafini.com   Special Marketing Section  95

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Platemark Design latemark Design is a interior design firm for clients who desire exceptional personal residences. Platemark creates highly customized interior design solutions for luxury homes with a style that evokes an effortless, painterly quality—bold and adventurous yet always steeped in texture. Known for taking a clever approach to dreaming up refined and elegant homes, Platemark injects the unique and unexpected. We maintain that a home is for living in, and that the interior designer’s role is to address a client’s needs, wishes, and dreams. By advocating for our clients throughout the design-build process, Platemark ensures seamless turnkey design solutions.

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Platemark Design 45 Newbury Street № 503 Boston, MA 02116 (617) 487-4475 platemark.com

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Saltsman Brenzel, Inc. esigning, building, and renovating homes since 2000, Saltsman Brenzel integrates design and construction services from conception through occupancy. Every Saltsman Brenzel project receives the personal attention of both partners, Thomas Saltsman and Jason Brenzel, who together have nearly 50 years of experience building quality homes and custom cabinetry that are carefully designed and detailed for every individual client. Incorporating client participation with our own skills and experience throughout the process allows us to ensure that the final product is well designed, unique, and something that our clients are proud of and excited to call home.

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Saltsman Brenzel

Saltsman Brenzel, Inc. 535 Albany Street Boston, MA 02118 (617) 350-7883 saltsmanbrenzel.com   Special Marketing Section  97

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Splash Kitchen and Bath Showroom mmersive. Refreshing. That’s the experience at Splash’s new stateof-the art design center, which was completed in the summer of 2017. New England’s first boutique kitchen and bath showroom showcases the industry’s premier brands and coveted designs. Clients and trade professionals can peruse the latest in kitchen and bath design while exploring classic, transitional, eclectic, and contemporary styles. Functioning displays allow guests to consider the characteristics of vessels, faucets, fixtures, finishes, and accents that create a soothing, spa-like oasis. Splash would like to thank all clientele for their patience during the renovation process. The new showroom is well worth the wait.

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SPLASH Splash Kitchen and Bath Showroom 244 Needham Street Newton, MA 02464 (617) 209-3873 splashnewton.com

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Cold Outside... Warm Inside New in Electric, the Toasty Comfort of Runtal Radiators Can Now Be Enjoyed by All!

Wall Panels

Towel Radiators

Baseboards

has long been world-renowned as the premium manufacturer of Euro-style radiators for hot water and steam heating systems. We are pleased to introduce a Runtal Electric line that includes Wall Panel, Towel Radiator and Baseboard designs. Suitable for both retro-fit and new construction, Runtal Electric products provide a very efficient and comfortable radiant heat. They are an excellent source of primary or supplemental heat and a problem-solver for areas needing additional heat. They are attractive (available in over 100 colors), durable, quiet and easy to install. To view Runtal’s complete line of heating products, please visit our showroom in Haverhill, MA; M, T, W, F 9-5, TH 9-8 or by appointment and online at: www.runtalnorthamerica.com.

Our Showroom is located at: 187 Neck Road • Ward Hill, MA • 01835 (Haverhill) Tel: 1-800-526-2621

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Seaside Luxe Lifestyle COASTAL CHIC GIFTS & HOME DECOR

FINE ART & PHOTOGRAPHY

Tony Scar​petta

CUSTOM INTERIORS

Diana James, Principal 34 C Atlantic Avenue, Marblehead MA 781-990-5150 livingswellmarblehead.com

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Photography: Shelly Harrison

617-876-8286 www.shconstruction.com BEST OF BOSTON HOME 2017, 2016, 2015, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2008 / BEST OF BOSTON 2017, 2007

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Text by Fred Albert  Photography by Michael Partenio  Produced by Stacy Kunstel

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A lovingly remodeled Martha’s Vineyard home makes a congenial setting for a couple to welcome guests to the island that has captured their hearts.

The Greek Revival house retains its asymmetrical facade and clapboard face, but was raised three feet and paired with a new bedroom wing, at left. A terraced front yard hides the elevation change, while the classic picket fence disguises the retaining wall behind it.

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A vintage bench flanks the entry to the new bedroom wing. The beadboard ceiling is repeated throughout the interior for a cozy, nautical touch. FACING PAGE: Architect Patrick Ahearn borrowed space from the second floor to vault the great room ceiling, and added French doors to enhance the indoor/outdoor flow. Natural fibers in neutral colors help temper the formality of the owners’ English antiques.

Project Team Architecture: Patrick Ahearn Interior design: Cate Caruso, Studio C Builder: Gerret C. Conover, Conover Restorations Landscape design: Robbie Hutchison, Donaroma’s Nursery & Landscape Services

educed by Martha’s Vineyard’s salty breezes and serene lifestyle, a pair of West Coast executives started spending time on the island in 1990 and have been returning ever since. After building and selling a home on Chappaquiddick, the couple set their sights on one of Edgartown’s most fashionable streets, and began searching for their next sanctuary there. Six years later, they found what they were looking for. Built around 1840 by a retired ship’s captain, the Greek Revival– style house was conveniently located within the village, but on a spacious parcel of land overlooking picturesque wetlands and the beatific harbor beyond. “This particular property really spoke to us,” says the wife. But the house, she notes tactfully, “needed a lot of love.” That’s putting it mildly. “It was in pretty horrendous condition,” says contractor Gerret C. Conover of Conover Restorations. “Many would have torn it down.” The house featured a rabbit warren of small, disconnected rooms—only one of which, a back porch, took advantage of the view. The owners wanted spaces more attuned to modern living, so architect Patrick Ahearn reconfigured the interior, enlarging rooms and opening them to each other and the outdoors. He tore down the wall between the great room and the porch, transforming the latter into a dining room and exposing its views to the adjacent spaces. A constricting staircase in the foyer was moved to a different location, revealing views of the water the moment the front door opens. To give the great room more presence, Ahearn eliminated the guest bedrooms above it and vaulted the ceiling, lending the space a sense of grandeur that makes it a focal point within the newly open floor plan. Mahogany beadboard crowns the ceiling here and elsewhere, adding

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RIGHT: The open kitchen, which sits next to the great room, turns meal prep into a social affair. BELOW: The owners collect landscape paintings, like this nineteenth-century watercolor by Sydney Yard that hangs above the great room bar. FACING PAGE: Although it’s now used for dining, the old porch still retains its outdoorsy feel, with oversized windows that wrap the room in views.

warmth and an informal maritime touch; the same wood frames the doors and windows, as well. Reclaimed chestnut floors provide a ruddy foil to white walls throughout, while robust baseboards and applied wall moldings lend historical character to the reconfigured rooms. “We brought a lot of Greek Revival detail to the interior, even though we reimagined the volume and scale of the spaces,” says Ahearn. The great room’s feeble fireplace surround was replaced with a more substantial, historically appropriate design. French doors on either side lead to a new porch with an outdoor fireplace; the pool beyond is screened from the neighboring street by a dense hedge of arborvitae. The owners’ time on Martha’s Vineyard often centers around food, with friends and family pitching in to

lend a hand with meals. A new kitchen was installed alongside the great room, with nothing separating the two except a generous island lined with bar stools. The white cabinets are covered with thick slabs of gray Caesarstone, which continues up the wall behind the commercialstyle range. Sandblasted dragonflies and butterflies animate the pendant lights overhead. Looking ahead to their golden years, the owners wanted a master suite on the first floor, so Ahearn added a bedroom wing to the east side of the house. The new structure faithfully replicates the original home’s Greek Revival detailing (minus its quirky asymmetry), but is set back from it, in deference to its predecessor. The bedroom’s vaulted ceiling accommodates a grand Palladian window

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across from the bed, so the owners can wake to the view. A George Smith lounge chair nestles into an alcove at the end of the room, where French doors overlook a Zen garden blanketed with groundcovers. “It’s less of a garden to sit in, and more to look out and see,” says landscape designer Robbie Hutchison of Donaroma’s Nursery & Landscape Services. The owners came to the project with a sizeable collection of nineteenth-century English antiques, acquired over years of

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“Instead of using Persian rugs and traditional patterns, I used mostly natural wovens with jute, wool, and grasscloth,” says designer Cate Caruso. “It’s formal living, but not really formal living.” browsing through shops in London and the Cotswolds. “If you have a home in New England, a lot of those pieces work very well,” explains the wife. “They’re easy to live with and timeless—especially for this type of architecture.” To keep all those antiques from making the house feel too formal, interior designer Cate Caruso juxtaposed them with natural fibers, neutral colors, and just a whisper of pattern. “Instead of using Persian rugs and traditional pat-

terns, I used mostly natural wovens with jute, wool, grasscloth, and other fibers that are much more casual,” Caruso says. “It’s formal living, but not really formal living.” Accent colors were limited to oldschool shades like sage, rust, rose, and lavender. “We didn’t want it to be overtly blue and white, or something that is common for a seaside home,” the designer notes. “The space reads mostly neutral, but if you look closely at the details, you

CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: A first-floor master suite was added onto the side of the house, with vaulted ceilings, half-height paneling, and French doors that open onto a Zen garden. One of two guest bedrooms in the newly expanded basement. Applied wall moldings pair with Carrara marble in the master bath, instilling an air of bygone elegance.

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“You can’t really describe Martha’s Vineyard to someone who hasn’t experienced it before,” says the wife. “It’s like stepping back in time.”

see color in so many different ways—from art, from accents, from upholstery.” To add living spaces in the basement, Ahearn was obliged to raise the original house three feet, so it complied with new FEMA guidelines. Before any of the additions were built, the house was hoisted up on pilings while an expanded basement was excavated underneath. The new space includes a pair of guest suites for the owners’ grown children and a game room that opens onto a patio. With its living area more than doubled, the house has become a magnet for family gatherings, providing ample space for both communal activities and time apart. Once the house was set atop its new, higher foundation, Ahearn and Hutchison had to come up with a way to disguise the elevation change—which was complicated by the fact that the house sits less than twenty feet from the street. The front yard was terraced and planted with lush mounds of Japanese maple, boxwood, holly, and Hinoki cypress, concealing the foundation in a buoyant blanket of green. A prim picket fence hides the retaining wall underneath.

Now retired, the owners divide their time between Florida and Edgartown— although the latter is never very far from their hearts. “You can’t really describe Martha’s Vineyard to someone who hasn’t experienced it before,” says the wife. “It’s like stepping back in time. Nothing much changes. We grew attached to it, and it never left us.”

CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE LEFT: A round window offers views from the shower. The house overlooks Edgartown Harbor. The expanded basement was faced with brick to break up the rear elevation. The pool, framed in bluestone and adjoining a new covered porch with an outdoor fireplace, also enjoys a harbor vista.

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A copper witch weathervane—a nod to the owners’ affection for The Wizard of Oz—tops the carriage house. The building’s first floor houses a collection of vintage cars, while the second floor holds living quarters. The nine-foot-tall doors open to a bluestone patio to create an indooroutdoor entertainment area.

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Garage Chic

With a vintage car collection below and a stylish apartment above, a coastal Rhode Island carriage house is a modern take on the traditional. Text by Bob Curley  \\ Photography by Nat Rea  \\ Produced by Karin Lidbeck Brent

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A folly designed by architect Mary Brewster in the broad corridor of lawn and garden between the carriage and main houses makes a charming spot to take in the views of Narragansett Bay’s East Passage and the Claiborne Pell Newport Bridge.

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Project Team Architecture: Mary Dorsey Brewster, Brewster Thornton Group Architects Interior design: Wendi Dicely-Scalora, taste Builder: Pariseault Builders

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Sometimes, a building has a way of returning to its natural center. Carriage houses, for example, have always been versatile structures, often serving the dual purpose of storing horse-drawn carriages and housing the staff needed to care for both animals and conveyances. Traditionally, they’ve also been generally viewed as a masculine domain—the “man cave” of the horse-andbuggy era, if you like. In function and form, a 3,300-square-foot carriage house added to a waterfront Jamestown, Rhode Island, mini-estate ticks off both of these boxes. On the ground level is storage for the husband’s collection of vintage and practical vehicles, including MG and Mustang convertibles and a small fleet of mopeds for cruising around the island. Upstairs, a space originally intended as a guest house has been

reimagined as an apartment for the owners’ adult son and given an undeniably masculine feel. Located on Narragansett Bay’s East Passage and with a postcard view of the Claiborne Pell Newport Bridge, the manor house on the property dates back only to 2006. In 2013, the owners acquired an adjoining lot as well as a second lot just inland. The plan: build a home for their daughter across the street and add a carriage house on the now-merged waterfront lots, leaving ample space between the two buildings so that the daughter’s home would retain its own magnificent vistas. Like the main home, the carriage house is, as architect Mary Dorsey Brewster explains, designed to showcase the property’s many views, including

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ABOVE: The apartment’s open floor plan allows light to spill in from the patio on the west end of the carriage house. Urban contemporary furnishings against shiplap walls are a nod to both city and sea. RIGHT: A cushy custom sectional sofa and an Asianinspired wet bar encourage guests to linger.

the bay and the docks, the gazebo, the lawn, and the neighboring house. A pair of nine-foot-tall doors is the most immediately striking feature of the smaller structure. “We were looking to do a true carriage house, with a living area on the second floor, and doors scaled to give it an authentic feel,” Brewster, a partner at the Providence-based Brewster Thornton Group Architects, explains.

Set on an industrial sliding track, the bi-fold doors swing open fifteen feet wide, allowing access to the cars but also creating an indoor-outdoor entertaining space that the owners use for the annual Fourth of July party they throw on the paved terrace between the carriage house and the landscaped gardens fronting the manor house. Visitors who venture inside and beyond the garage September–October 2017 | New England Home  117

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with its whimsical decor of automotive and rock-androll memorabilia will find a fitness room equipped with a treadmill, weight bench, punching bag, and an exercise bike—all set before an angled trio of windows with championship views of the bay. A small bath surprises with a built-in sauna, and a stairway braced by a leather-wrapped handrail—meant to evoke the feel of gripping the steering wheel on an old race car—leads to the living quarters upstairs. From the exterior, the manor and carriage houses are virtual twins, decorated in a conventionally coastal shingle style and set on a banded foundation of Corinthian granite. V-grooved paneling, copperclad roofs, and even matching porches help bind together the two structures. Architecturally, “the owner likes angles and dynamic shapes, so we stayed away from static compositions,” says Brewster, but the overall feel is classic New England. Inside, the two buildings have a completely different feel. While the interior decor of the main house is Mediterranean in style, the carriage house’s living quarters are decidedly urban—all clean lines, uncluttered by ship models, rope-wound lamps, or really anything even remotely “beachy.” Modern as it is, however, the living space does give a nod to its island environment. The blend of coastal and contemporary is best captured by the shiplap walls, lightly stained to reveal grain patterns reminiscent of a boat hull, but seamlessly terminating at aluminum reveals at each window and door, a match conceived by the Jamestown-based interior design firm taste. Sliding doors open onto a patio

“As a firm we design coastal homes, so to do something modern on the coast was a nice change, refreshing and fun,” says designer Wendi Dicely-Scalora. TOP: With its granite counter and glossy backsplash, the buffet strikes a posh note. BOTTOM: A glass and metal penny-round mosaic tile forms the kitchen’s backsplash. FACING PAGE: An oversize window offers views to the gardens and main house from the dining table, with additional illumination provided by a pair of Duplo pendant lights. September–October 2017 | New England Home  119

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ABOVE: The master bath’s rainfall chromatherapy shower is reflected in the mosaic-framed mirror above the sleek vanity. RIGHT: Pendant lights and leather panels behind the platform bed lend a masculine aspect the master bedroom.

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with wicker furniture placed on floating bluestone flooring. Even here, open cable railings provide an offsetting hint of modernity. “As a firm we design coastal homes, so to do something modern on the coast was a nice change, refreshing and fun,” says designer Wendi Dicely-Scalora. Dark custom cabinets with sleek aluminum pulls inhabit the kitchen, buffet, and concrete-topped wet bar, and a glass-topped Brueton dining set that wouldn’t be out of place in a Manhattan apartment aligns with a custom, circle-top window set directly above the carriage-house doors. A Lucius 140 gas fireplace, glass on three sides and lined with white beach stones, divides the dining space from the living room, where a gray sofa and white lacquered coffee table on

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in due time, when the apartment reverts to a guest house, visitors will be delighted to discover this sunny and unexpected space, stylishly carried off, by the shore. chrome feet sits on the dark-stained white-oak flooring that runs throughout the apartment. Light from the cupola—another example of form meeting function—spills down into the space between the dining room and the kitchen, the latter equipped with Thermador appliances—some hidden behind maple doors shop-stained to match the custom cabinetry— and with work surfaces covered by Calacatta Bluette honed-marble countertops. Sleeping quarters are tucked into the back of the building, but ample natural sunlight from three windows helps offset the heavy feel of the master bedroom’s leather-clad swivel chairs and platform

bed backed by a wall-size Spinneybeck leatherpaneled headboard. Large-format Italian tile and a chromatherapy shower, by contrast, make the master bath intrinsically light and bright. As a bachelor pad, the carriage house has all the comforts of home and then some, especially with Mom and Dad just steps away, a sister across the street, and a third sibling also nearby in Jamestown. And in due time, when the apartment reverts to a guest house, visitors will be delighted to discover this sunny and unexpected space, stylishly carried off, by the shore.

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sailing

smooth

The dining room’s velvet-covered wing chairs provide a luxe counterpoint to the vintage violin maker’s table and textural pendant light. FACING PAGE: The living room is contemporary in feel, now that the old brick hearth has been replaced by a sleek stone surround. Easy-care slipcovered A stem-to-stern chairs flank a cocktail table of grassclothan and brass. makeoverblack turns old

Cape Cod saltbox into a retreat with timeless cottage style.

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smooth sailing

A stem-to-stern makeover turns an old Cape Cod saltbox into a retreat with timeless cottage style.

Text by Maria LaPiana   Photography by Michael J. Lee   Produced by Stacy Kunstel

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iving a home the nautical treatment is a delicate maneuver. One too many anchors or portholes and you’ll most certainly go overboard. A nautical theme done well is as thoughtful and subtle as it is tongue-in-cheek. It’s authentic, informed—and unexpected. ¶ Step into this summery home on Cape Cod for a fresh take on the maritime theme. To wit: the wooden planks on the floor

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The living room adopts a nautical air without being too obvious. The windows in the room’s new bumpout bathe the space in natural light. The breezy shades can be rolled up and fastened with rope, while shutters offer flexible privacy control at the room’s front window.

Project Team Architecture: Peter McDonald, Peter McDonald Architect Interior architecture and design: Lisa Tharp, Lisa Tharp Design Builder: Clay Wilkins, Wilkins Construction Landscape design: Phil Cheney, Cheney Landscape Design

of the master bath’s indoor/outdoor shower were upcycled from the Coney Island boardwalk. The sweeping renovation of the old saltbox in Eastham, Massachusetts, was captained by interior designer Lisa Tharp of Boston, who drew inspiration from sailboat building traditions and the Cape’s relaxed vernacular. Architect Peter McDonald executed a modern vision for the exterior and collaborated with Tharp on reinventing the existing space. September–October 2017 | New England Home  125

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The overarching theme of the project is “the luxury of simplicity,” which Lisa Tharp defines as “having all that you need, when and where you need it, and nothing more.” Contractor Clay Wilkins of Chatham, who is more traditional craftsman than builder, did much of the work himself. Outside, landscape designer Phil Cheney of South Yarmouth met the challenges of a flood plain and salt marsh with style. The clients, whose primary residence is in New Jersey, wanted to preserve the original saltbox structure while making it look as though it had been

thoughtfully added onto over time. “It was just built too well to tear down,” McDonald says. For the exterior, the architect chose familiar, low-maintenance cedar shingles and a cedar roof with white trim, in a nod to the Cape’s iconic look. The project consisted of undoing years of inconsistent remodeling, adding more space, taking away the fussy formality of the home, and creating ways to connect with the outdoors. Because the owners wanted to use the home intermittently with minimal disruption, the work took place in two phases over three years. In the end, the home’s footprint was changed appreciably; the house went from 1,700 square feet, including the garage, to 3,125 square feet of living space. A labyrinth of small rooms was opened up and modernized, the garage became a master suite with vaulted ceiling, and an engaging loft space was created on the second floor. A new ell at the rear added a bright, open kitchen, a dining room, screened porch, mudroom, laundry room, and one of the home’s two outdoor showers. Tharp calls the overarching theme of the project “the luxury of simplicity,” which she defines as “having all that you need, when and where you need it, and nothing more.” Both designer and architect agree that the new kitchen changed the way the family experiences the entire house, with its vaulted ceiling, teak ridge beam, and clerestory windows for maximum natural light. “I do kitchen clerestory windows a lot. I can’t help it,” McDonald admits. “I think you should be

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The screened porch is furnished with comfy sofas and tea-height tables for casual eating and reading, making it a favorite gathering spot. FACING PAGE, TOP: The kitchen was designed with an eye toward functionality and good looks, with yacht-inspired lighting and counters of teak and holly woods. FACING PAGE, BOTTOM: The kitchen opens to the light-filled dining room.

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CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The master bath’s indoor shower connects to its outdoor counterpart. A view of the new ell that maximizes indoor and outdoor space at the back of the house. A second outdoor shower has an open rafter roof and walkway to kitchen deck. One of two matching vanities in the master bath; the wire bases are former flower displays.

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able to cook during the day and see what you’re doing without turning on the lights.” Tharp selected a mix of classic materials (teak and holly boat-decking for the counters) and modern (Neolith on the massive island). She hid the appliances, save the La Cornue range. A table fashioned from a violinmaker’s old workbench is the centerpiece of the adjoining dining room, where French doors frame views of the marsh, so the homeowners can serve up ambience with every meal. The main traffic lane from the front door to the rest of the house runs through the living room, where an old brick fireplace with a large raised hearth was replaced with a simple, smooth fireplace surround. Tharp and McDonald collaborated on the design of a window nook bump-out long enough to accommodate two twin mattresses placed end to end. Transforming the sense of light and space in the room, it fast became a favorite lounging place. Another popular “away space” is the second-floor loft, with its comfy lounge chairs, cool midcentury settee, big-screen TV, and chalkboard wall. Slipcovered in light linen, the daybed is a cozy spot adorned with a wall of layered vintage book pages and ephemera. It’s an area that invites repose, daydreaming, and of course, reading. September–October 2017 | New England Home  129

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An immensely versatile space, the loft/family room sits at the top of the stairs on the second floor. The chrome and wicker settee was found on Nantucket. Designer Lisa Tharp papered the daybed alcove wall with book pages and ephemera to inspire daydreaming.

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“I shared a photograph with my clients of a 12-meter class sailboat built in 1936. It became the jumping-off point for the materials palette throughout the house,” says Tharp.

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Tharp designed the master bedroom’s custom canopy bed with a subtle reference to boat dock cleats. New ceiling rafters and planking throughout add airiness and authenticity. FACING PAGE, TOP: The guest bedroom is a rich mix of textures with its navy grasscloth backdrop, embroidered pillows, and bed linens. FACING PAGE, BOTTOM: In the master dressing room, a ten-foot antique apothecary chest offers storage and vintage charm.

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Quiet accents of pale grays, blues, and warmer tones reflect the salt marshes outside while keeping things serene. French doors off the master suite open to the spectacular salt marshes that seem to stretch for miles. Massive barn doors separate the master bedroom from the dressing room and bath. To shut out noise from the road in what used to be the garage, McDonald flanked the front-facing windows with exterior barn doors that close for optional privacy. The suite’s most unusual feature has to be the shower that opens to . . . a shower. “I wanted to blur the lines between inside and out,” says Tharp, so the interior

shower with waterproof, chalky, pool-plaster walls is separated from the outdoor shower only by a weatherproof glass door. Installation of the integrated slider between the two showers was a challenge, says McDonald, but the result was well worth the effort. Tharp’s choice of materials was inspired by those found on classic yachts. “Early on I shared a photograph with my clients of the Bloodhound, a 12-meter class sailboat built in 1936. It has a beautiful white mahogany and teak hull with glorious canvas sails; it became the jumping-off point for the materials palette throughout the house,” she says. Quiet accents of pale grays, blues, and warmer tones reflect the salt marshes outside while keeping things serene. Beyond those boardwalk planks, there are subtle nautical touches throughout the home. In the master bedroom, breezy striped shades unfurl by untying a simple rope, like a sail. In the powder room, lights were fashioned from an old fishing basket, and vintage canoe chairs were used as shelving in the laundry room. In the kitchen, pendant lamps recall tall ship masts, map light sconces evoke charting a nautical course, and a pair of marine salvage portholes are set into the pantry door. The yachtinspired custom counter chairs were made by Richard Wrightman of New York, a brilliant craftsman of campaign furniture. It’s that level of sophistication and attention to detail that takes this uncommon nautical treatment from cliché to clever.  RESOURCES : For more information about this home, see page 232. September–October 2017 | New England Home  133

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Polished to Perfection A nineteenth-century home takes on a new air of quiet sophistication that matches its owners’ modern sensibilities and showcases their collection of contemporary art. Text by Megan Fulweiler  ● Interior photography by Laura Moss  ● Produced by Kyle Hoepner 134  New England Home | September–October 2017

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● Modern steel doors in the foyer and the passageway to the kitchen are, says designer Manuel de Santaren, “a nod to some of the architectural details we saw in Belgium during a shopping trip for furnishings and antiquities.”

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G

orgeous nineteenth-century houses line up elbow to elbow in this tony part of Boston. Trees grown thick in the waist dot small manicured lawns, and hydrangeas wave around stone foundations that have heard the rumble of horsedrawn wagons. This three-story

Project Team Architecture: Adolfo Perez Interior design: Manuel de Santaren Builder: S+H Construction Landscape architecture: Matthew Cunningham

beauty tucked behind a tidy picket fence exudes the stateliness so characteristic of its neighborhood. Project supervisor Dan McLaughlin of S+H Construction has witnessed two full-throttle transformations of the house. Five years ago, he spearheaded— in accordance with the constraints of the historic district—a meticulous update of the building inside and out. The house was gutted “down to its bones,” McLaughlin says, and reassembled for a couple who favored elaborate details and lush wallcoverings. This time around, he and his team were called back for a different approach. New owners were looking for an edited aesthetic to fit their refined style.

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“They were after longer sight lines, clean geometries, and beautiful materials,” McLaughlin says. Creating an environment to showcase their art collection was also a priority. While, at the project’s start, the rooms were opulent, today’s ambience is as pared down and elegant as a well-concocted martini. Even the garden has switched gears, incorporating, as landscape architect Matthew Cunningham explains, “contemporary elements that echo the interiors.” Architect Adolfo Perez and interior designer Manuel de Santaren were recruited to turn the house around. It was a new collaboration for the pair, but one that proved so successful they might well join forces again in the future. Perez is known for his skill at blending contemporary features with quality craftsmanship. And de Santaren is recognized for his knowledge of art as well as his design abilities. He

A sitting area in the living room is a minimalist’s dream with its 1930s Jules Leleu chairs. The Santa Teresa wool window sheers hail from Muse Bespoke in Chicago, de Santaren’s sister’s company. The living room’s hearthside sitting area provides a prominent place for a painting from the owners’ collection. A vignette in the foyer foreshadows the home’s refined aesthetic.

● CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE:

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● LEFT: The custom dining table is made from reclaimed American walnut. Below: In the study, de Santaren teams a desk of his design with a vintage Dunbar chair he nabbed on 1stdibs. A bounty of built-in cabinetry provides a display area for treasures as well as books. FACING PAGE: The study’s vintage Arne Norell chairs, discovered in Antwerp, give the owners a perfect perch for contemplating their eye-catching light sculpture.

co-chairs the Guggenheim Museum’s Photography Council and is president of the board of the Cisneros Fontanals Arts Foundation, headquartered in Miami. Perez and de Santaren launched a series of lifeenhancing maneuvers, including demolishing walls to expand the kitchen, reorganizing the master suite, and rehabbing the baths. Busy articulations and wallcoverings were removed, but many of the handsome moldings and door casings were maintained. “It was necessary to preserve those so that the house didn’t scream modern,” Perez explains. Indeed, a smooth choreography of old and new such as this leaves no room for anything jarring. The recessed lighting designed by Perez lends prominence to specific artworks without drawing attention to itself. The steel doors that have been added to the foyer look perfectly at home. And minus loud colors and fabrics, the rooms feel timeless and serene. To better create what de Santaren refers to as a “blank canvas” for art, walls throughout the public areas are creamy white—a striking contrast to the freshly stained dark floors and staircase. Not just a house where art predominates, however, de Santaren has made each room artful. The contents of the living room, for example, read like

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ONCE A PLANT-FILLED CONSERVATORY, THE BREAKTAST NOOK HAS BEEN RECAST. BELGIAN LIMESTONE REPLACES YESTERDAY’S PORTUGUESE FLOOR TILES, AND GONE IS THE MAHOGaNY WOODWORK.

the catalog for a noteworthy exhibit. One sitting area holds Leleu chairs from the 1930s and an Eric Schmitt cocktail table. At the room’s opposite end, where Perez has framed the hearth in Crema Luna marble, sit chairs by Jean-Michel Frank, an eighteenth-century Chinese scholar’s table, and twin Ico Parisi cabinets. The accessories hail from Axel Vervoordt in Belgium. And the rug? “It’s the most prominent piece,” says de Santaren. Designed by Paris-based artist Miguel Cisterna, it was inspired by the undulating pattern of pebbles in a Japanese garden. The seductive library across the hall was completely restructured and given a fresh focus. In addition to beefing up the moldings, Perez added a series of built-ins and swept away an existing fireplace to provide a niche for a riveting light sculpture by Anish Kapoor. When the sculpture requires a change of bulbs, the bookcases Perez cleverly devised to sit on castors swivel to allow entry from the back. The art is the room’s centerpiece, but the luminous woodwork—fumed eucalyptus rather than mahogany—maintains what de Santaren calls “a sense of classicism.”

● ABOVE: Architect Adolfo Perez designed the kitchen’s steel hood and the shelf beneath it to boost efficiency. Corian boxes—one a knife holder, the other a nest for oils and vinegars—support the latter. LEFT: The powder room features a Corian sink, also designed by Perez, backed with Fantasy Black Quartzite. FACING PAGE: The designer used ivory leather to re-cover the vintage chairs that surround the breakfast room’s table from Axel Vervoordt in Belgium.

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The owners wanted spaces that would allow for different activities and feel “vibrant, clean, and composed,” says landscape architect Matthew Cunningham. His program includes a fountain (left), a pergola-covered dining area (above), and a sitting area (below). Reclaimed granite pavers tie together the spaces. Minimalist elements mix with traditional plantings for what Cunningham calls “a unique mix of old and new.”

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Exterior photos courtesy of Matthew Cunningham

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“I love beautiful, but function is also key,” says Perez, who is known for his skill at blending contemporary features with quality craftmanship.

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Not to be outdone, the dining room sports a six-arm chandelier by Achille Salvagni. The leather upholstered chairs are from J. Robert Scott, while the slick table and sumptuous rug are de Santaren’s designs. The woven wool and silk sheer curtain fabric—pale as porcelain—is from Muse Bespoke. Even the kitchen’s smart rebirth suits the understated program. “I love beautiful, but function is also key,” says Perez. To that end, he fitted the cerused oak cabinets with recessed pulls to enhance their practicality. The Imperial Danby stone countertops and counter-to-ceiling backsplash are as long-lasting as they are handsome. The owners take morning coffee at the generous island (above which de Santaren has mounted light fixtures wrapped in black leather) or ferry their cups into the adjacent breakfast area. Once a plant-filled conservatory as Victorian as a valentine, the nook has been recast. Belgian limestone replaces yesterday’s Portuguese floor tiles, and gone is the mahog● Custom bedding from Muse Bespoke adds another luxurious layer to the upholstered bed in the master suite. FACING PAGE: Discreet LED lighting helps underscore the master bath’s quality craftsmanship, which includes a double vanity spanning the entire length of the wall and a stone-backed sculptural tub.

any woodwork. Instead, de Santaren clad the oasis in a paint color he devised and calls Dutch River Mud. The quiet hue makes a fine partner for leaded transoms (original to the house) as well as an iconic Ingo Maurer light fixture floating above a custom table ringed with vintage Arne Jacobsen chairs. The private spaces are as intriguing as the public rooms. For the master suite, Perez designed a freestanding wall to separate the couple’s sleeping quarters from their dressing room with its dyed Japanese Iroko veneers and bath. The smart division amplifies the room’s serene mood, as does the enveloping, pearly-colored bed and sumptuous silk/cashmere carpet. De Santaren pulled his soothing palette of gray, taupe, and sea-green tones from the striking Namibia White stone backing the couple’s tub. “The slabs are book-matched so the pattern is unbroken,” Perez points out. In the end, no matter where you look, Perez and de Santaren’s sophisticated synchronization never falters. From kitchen passageway to moody powder room, the two are consistently in step. The result is a glorious house that not only underscores the owners’ impeccable taste, but also pays homage to good design.  RESOURCES : For more information about this home, see page 232. Septmber–October 2017 | New England Home  145

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design Text by Paula M. Bodah

A half-dozen kitchens and baths where form and function happily cohabitate.

CREDITS Architecture: Christopher Dallmus, Design Associates Interior design: Karen Newman, Pentimento Interiors Builder: Howard Brothers Builders Photography: John Gruen Producer: Stacy Kunstel

History Lesson The 1920s house—a brick-front Georgian • built for Babson College founder Roger

Babson—had undergone any number of metamorphoses by the time its current owners took possession. Today’s renovation brought the Wellesley, Massachusetts, house back to its original majesty, although, of course, it now holds every twenty-

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first-century amenity, including a spacious kitchen that opens to the family room. Designer Karen Newman’s goal was a kitchen that works for a modern family but nods to the architectural history of the house. Reclaimed walnut barn board forms the island, and Newman notes that it has been oiled but not sealed for a sense of age. Records showed that home’s original kitchen had brass hardware, so Newman added brass drawer and cabinet pulls

that will develop a patina with use and time. Hidden details, like the walnut that lines every drawer, further the sense of authenticity. Storage options abound, from the tall closed cabinets and the glassfront cabinets, many of which have an extra closed cubby at the top, to the drawers beneath the sitting area’s two window seats. The family’s inherited oriental rugs and simple roman shades in a Ralph Lauren stripe add a warm touch of color. September–October 2017 | New England Home  147

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design

Open for Business

The kitchen in this Newton, • Massachusetts, condominium was

ready for a stylish new look. Designer Robin Gannon took things a giant step further, reimagining the space from top to bottom and side to side. One wall came down entirely, boosting flow between the kitchen and the family room. An exterior wall with a predictable window-centeredover-sink configuration now holds twin windows that flank the stainless-steel stove and hood. Textured tile in a neutral color stretches up to the ceiling, and trios of floating walnut shelves at each corner add visual interest. Gannon converted a sitting area into a chic wet bar with storage below and a pair of mirrored cabinets above. The creamy-colored cabinetry and honed Danby marble counters are warmed by the deep blue-gray of the island, Dash & Albert rugs in a zippy stripe, the wet bar’s wall of hand-painted Ann Sacks tile, and antique brass hardware. Another touch that’s both good-looking and highly functional is the unique floating walnut table that turns one end of the island into a casual dining spot.

CREDITS Architectural and interior design: Robin Gannon, Robin Gannon Interiors Builder: Claude Sangiolo, Casa Sangiolo Photography: John Gruen Producer: Stacy Kunstel

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design

CREDITS Architecture and interior design: David Hacin and Matthew Woodward, Hacin + Associates Kitchen design: Rosemary Porto, Poggenpohl Boston Builder: Chris Monaco, Monaco Johnson Group Photography: Sarah ­Winchester Producer: Kyle Hoepner

Modern Makeover

Hacin and his husband, Tim Grafft, • David had different reasons for remodeling the

kitchen in their Boston condominium. Hacin felt it was time to give the space a look that suited his preference for minimalist, cubist design. Grafft, who is the cook in the house, wanted to ramp up

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the kitchen’s efficiency and functionality. Working closely with Rosemary Porto of Poggenpohl Boston, the couple were able to fulfill their dual desires. The kitchen is largely open to the main living space, so Hacin brought in the gray, taupe, and white palette from the rest of the home. The main horizontal volume consists of sleek, hardware-free, taupe-colored cabinetry topped with a counter of seamless white

Corian. The Corian also runs up the walls and across the ceiling, framing the large-format porcelain tile of the backsplash. Vertical volumes of charcoal gray, a bold counterpoint to the white and taupe, conceal storage, including a system of refrigerated drawers and cabinets next to the wine holder. The gas cooktop was replaced with an induction cooktop, which when not in use can serve as additional counter space. September–October 2017 | New England Home  151

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design

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Coastal Chic •

A white kitchen, like this one in the North Shore town of Swampscott, Massachusetts, feels clean, efficient, and restful. Look more closely, though, and you’ll notice the subtle drama achieved by interior designer Anita Clark and kitchen designer Barbara Baratz. Baratz, who was with Venegas and Company at the time and has since gone off on her own, opted for upper cabinets with a substantial molding that echoes Clark’s choice of deep molding on the ceiling.

Glass panes at the top of the cabinets keep the feeling light while adding a decorative touch. A hammered metal hood and backsplash of subway tile with a brushed finish supply textural interest. The island’s elevated dining counter serves the dual purpose of offering a better glimpse of the ocean through the broad window and keeping kitchen messes hidden—an important detail given the home’s open floorplan. The airy space is grounded by a floor of white oak stained a gentle gray that evokes a piece of driftwood and honors the home’s waterfront location.

CREDITS Architecture: James Velleco, Grazado Velleco Architects Interior architecture and design: Anita Clark, Anita Clark Design Kitchen design: Barbara Baratz, Barbara Baratz Design Builder: Bruce Paradise, Paradise Construction Photography: Michael J. Lee

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design

A Room with a View Turning the master bathroom in • this home in Stowe, Vermont, into

the spa-like retreat it is today was a true exercise in collaboration for architect Milford Cushman, builder Shapleigh Smith, and designer Carol Flanagan. The house has enviable mountain views, but this second-floor bath was located in a low-ceilinged dormer with a window set too low to take advantage of the vistas. The three pros agreed the first order of business was raising the roofline, a change that turned the dark, cramped quarters instantly spacious and light filled. The vanity—whose marble top and open shelving keep it feeling airy—tucks into a niche backed with horizontal cladding. The cove ceiling above holds a hidden strip of light for soft illumination. An open shower, outfitted in glass and

ceramic mosaic tile for what Flanagan calls “a bit of bling,” occupies the opposite wall, while the freestanding tub sits in front of the large new window with its perfectly centered mountain view. The final touch that gives the space its serene look and feel, is the soothing palette of pale gray and soft white.

CREDITS Architectural design: Milford Cushman, Cushman Design Group Interior design: Carol Flanagan, Carol ­Flanagan Interior Design Builder: Shapleigh Smith, Patterson & Smith Construction Photography: Susan Teare

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Special Focus:

Kitchen & Bath Design

Spa Treatment

the outside, the home is • aFrom classic Shingle-style dwelling that

CREDITS Architecture: Karen B. Kempton Interior design: Liz Stiving-Nichols and Liane Thomas, Martha’s Vineyard Interior Design Builder: Eastward Companies Photography: Eric Roth

fits right in with its Cape Cod neighbors. Inside, as the master bath illustrates, things take a more transitional turn. To create this tranquil space, designers Liane Thomas and Liz Stiving-Nichols removed several partition walls, giving them an unbroken expanse that enhances the room’s flow. Pale gray walls—some painted and others clad in oversize porcelain tiles, provide the soothing backdrop for a contemporary freestanding Toto tub with a walnut sur-

round. An adjacent Caesarstone vanity has a long trough sink and a combination of open shelving and walnut drawers. A spacious shower with an accent wall of textured white tile tucks in under the sloping ceiling. Accessory pieces offer a bit of modern drama; floating Robern mirrored medicine cabinets are offset by contemporary sconces from Circa Lighting, and above the tub hangs a whimsical chandelier of resin bubbles from Oly Studio. The tub stretches before a bank of four windows looking out over a bucolic view of a wooded yard.  RESOURCES: For information about the professionals, see page 232.

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Erin Gates

Join Our Eighth Annual Celebration!

Interior Design

Meet this year’s winners at a special event on September 14.

Nina Farmer Interior Design

See page 178 for details.

• Text by Erin Marvin • Portraits by Bruce Rogovin • Rugs courtesy of Landry & Arcari Rugs and Carpeting

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This Season’s Rising Stars

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fall brings cooler weather, colorful foliage, and pumpkin-spice lattes, but there’s no better sign of the season than New England Home’s annual “5 Under 40” awards. Each September, the New England design community comes together to honor five rising stars in residential design—all of whom are under the age of forty—and celebrate good taste in high style at autumn’s most memorable soiree. Style comes naturally to this year’s winners, a group of talented women that includes an interior designer who is also a New York Times bestselling author; a textile designer whose tastefully elegant collections are created through a unique mixed-media technique; an interior designer with a strong focus on interior architecture and creative use of materials; an architect whose design inspiration sits at the confluence of art and science; and an interior designer who effortlessly mixes vintage and modern, an aesthetic mirrored in her line of custom furniture. Congratulations to 2017’s “5 Under 40” award winners: interior designer Erin Gates, textile designer Ellisha Alexina, interior designer Kristina Crestin, architect Maggie Mink, and interior designer Nina Farmer. Read more about these gifted young creatives and see examples of their work starting on page 166. Challenged with the task of selecting this year’s winners from a large pool of impressive talent were J.B. Clancy of Albert, Righter & Tittmann Architects, Kristine Irving of Koo de Kir Architectural Interiors, Doug Jones of LeBlanc Jones Landscape Architects, and Gerald Pomeroy of Gerald Pomeroy Interiors, with New England Home’s editor-in-chief, Kyle Hoepner, moderating the judging process. The eighth annual “5 Under 40” awards celebra-

tion will take place on September 14, 2017, at Landry & Arcari Rugs & Carpeting in Boston’s Back Bay. This chic space sets the tone for what will be an unforgettable evening with an awards ceremony, cocktail party, and always-lively auction. Up for bid are five bespoke wool-and-silk rugs designed by this year’s winners and brought to life through the dexterous skill of Landry & Arcari’s weavers in Nepal. Celebrity guest Jenny Johnson is back as auctioneer, and looking to top last year’s record-setting bids. Proceeds from the auction will benefit the Cambridge, Massachusetts, charity Barakat, which provides educational opportunities to women and girls in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Don’t miss your chance to celebrate our community’s rising young stars and start the fall season off in style!

Above: The 2016 winners. Left: A rapt crowd gathers for the rug auction. Below, left: Auctioneer Jenny Johnson. Below, right: Bidding was fast and furious.

the 2017 Judges The 2017 selection committee members (from left to right): J.B. Clancy, Gerald Pomeroy, Kristine Irving, and Doug Jones with New England Home’s editorin-chief Kyle Hoepner, who coordinated the judging.

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Party photos by Tara Carvalho

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(1) A crowd of previous winners, judges, sponsors, family, and friends gathers to watch as the winners are announced (2) 2017 winners Maggie Mink and Kristina Crestin, New England Home’s Stacy Kunstel, and 2017 winners Ellisha Alexina and Erin Gates (3) Ken Gurley of Landry & Arcari and Mia Buchsbaum of Barakat, the charity that benefits from the proceeds of the September 14 rug auction (4) Courtney Jones of sponsor Karastan (5) Sponsor Gary Rousseau of Herrick & White with Lindsey Nardolillo and Isabel Brewster of Nina Farmer Interiors (6) Kristina Crestin of Kristina Crestin Design stands proudly with her rug inspiration (7) 2017 winner Ellisha Alexina with sponsor Mark Hutker of Hutker Architects (8) Katie Bundy and 2017 winner Erin Gates of Erin Gates Design with sponsor Nancy Sorensen of Back Bay Shutter (9) Sponsor Jim Youngblood of Youngblood Builders with 2017 winner Maggie Mink of Marcus Gleysteen Architects (10) 2017 judge J.B. Clancy of Albert, Righter & Tittmann Architects, New England Home’s Stacy Kunstel, and Kristina Crestin

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Ellisha Alexina Specialty Design

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As artistic as her collections may be, Ellisha Alexina was initially drawn to textiles for their practicality. “I come from a painting background, but wanted to have a more useful reason to paint,” she explains. “I liked the utilitarian aspect of textiles.” Utilitarian may not be the first word one associates with Alexina’s beautiful collections of bespoke textiles. The designer uses a unique mixed-media technique that blends polychromatic screen-printing and hand-painting to bring her designs to life. Yard by yard, Alexina personally develops each new pattern and creates custom colors. Everything is handmade and, because of this, no two yards are exactly alike; color variations throughout the repeated design make for an unforgettable watercolor effect. Her textiles lend themselves beautifully to draperies, pillows, bedding, lampshades, and even wallcoverings. She especially enjoys working with local designers to bring their ideas to life. Alexina’s textiles represent the artist’s love of color mixing and problem solving, as well as her interest in ancient textiles. Her third and newest collection, Gobi, is inspired by the colors of the Gobi Desert and harkens back to her roots in color mixing. She calls Gobi her strongest collec-

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tion to date. Its hues are bolder and patterns more geometric, and in these new designs Alexina plays with color throughout the pattern to, in turn, create pattern with color. “I did my earlier collections when I was younger, so the colors were lighter,” she says. “Now I know who I am as a textile designer, so I’m not shy about the structure of the pattern or the colors I’m using.” Her newfound confidence is sure to contribute to exciting new collections in the years to come. Top and bottom courtesy Ellisha Alexina

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Kristina Crestin Interior Design

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Interior designer Kristina Crestin’s effervescent personality—most recently seen on season thirty-five of This Old House—belies a serious focus on creating holistic spaces that best fit her clients’ lifestyles. “I don’t just decorate and figure out the flow and function and furnishings,” she says. “I think about how to pull the entire project together.” The thoughtful use of millwork is one of the elements she employs for a finished, integrated effect. This strong

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focus on interior architecture was honed during a number of years at Siemasko + Verbridge. The renowned firm’s project-driven approach spoke to Crestin’s innate sense of organization and linear way of thinking, and she quickly worked her way up from intern to senior interior project manager/designer. Armed with technical acumen and an eye for detail, Crestin started her own firm in 2009 and now manages a team of four. Her work has already been recognized by more than a dozen industry awards and has been featured in a number of media outlets including Better Homes & Gardens – Kitchen & Bath Ideas, New England Home, Boston Magazine Home, Northshore Magazine, elledecor. com, and houzz.com. In addition to her continuing focus on interior architecture, the other major hallmark of Crestin’s work can be seen in her creative use of materials: vintage screen doors repurposed for the kitchen pantry; large retro bottles wired for lighting; black pipe fittings reimagined as safety rails for a loft bed. (She also admits to an obsession with turquoise, though assures her clients they don’t have to live in a sea of blue—unless they want to, of course.) “Even until five years ago I was still finding myself as a designer,” she says. “Now I know who I am and what I can do.” Top and bottom, Jared Kuzia

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Nina Farmer Interior Design

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There is a certain harmony to Nina Farmer’s interiors: a balance of modern and historic infused with a careful mix of texture and color. Look closely and you’ll see a touch of nostalgia, a bit of whimsy. Even in her poshest Beacon Hill projects, nothing feels too precious. Rooms are beautiful but welcoming spaces that perfectly suit her clients’ needs. “I have always been drawn to beautiful aesthetic things,” says Farmer. “Not just the interior world, but art, architecture, fashion—anything that has a strong visual sense.” While she designs interiors that are sophisticated and timeless, they often have an unexpected twist: powder room walls wrapped in marbleized wallpaper; a custom mirrored mantel that hides a TV; a Sputnik chandelier hanging from a classic etched-glass ceiling; upholstered leather walls with nailhead trim. “I love to experiment with different materials you might not expect,” Farmer says. She brings this same out-of-the-box approach to her line of custom furniture, Gallery NF. This bespoke collection of “vintage pieces with a mod-

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ern touch” include a tufted sofa, a dining table of wood and metal, and upholstered chairs, all of which can be fully customized. Always on the lookout for new ideas, Farmer often seeks inspiration from her travels. One trip to India led to custom block-printed fabrics for a Beacon Hill townhouse, another to marble-patterned floors modeled after the Lake Palace Hotel in Udaipur. A recent family trip to Greece is reflected in her mythology-inspired rug for the “5 Under 40” awards celebration. “I love to have interiors that feel worldly and feel curated through travel, even if my clients aren’t the ones able to do it,” she says. Top: Eric Roth; bottom, Eric Piasecki

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Erin Gates Interior Design

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To say that Erin Gates knows a thing or two about style would be an understatement. Ten years ago, Gates started her now-iconic Elements of Style blog, which became the impetus for a successful interior design business, a New York Times bestseller (with a second book on the way), and an eponymous line of affordable home ­accessories. Today, Gates still writes each post herself (three a week) and the blog gets more than half a million views each month. Thanks to the blog’s popularity, she gets interior design requests from all over: recent projects include a vacation home in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, a ski house in Stowe, Vermont, and a nursery in San Francisco, California. Other than an inherent stylishness, Gates’s interiors don’t adhere to a particular approach. She tries not to repeat elements, ensuring that each space is unique. “My goal is always to make people’s homes look like a lovely version of themselves,” she says. Her designs are indeed lovely, and with such constant pressure to produce, it’s lucky that

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she finds inspiration all around: in the work of her peers, through magazines, on social media, while traveling, and even from the past. “I think a lot of people are drawing from historical influences in design, and looking back at traditional roots in decoration,” she says. Gates is also looking forward, at work on her second book and about to release her latest collection of pillows, lighting, picture frames, throws, and other home accessories—all priced under $150—for Elements by Erin Gates. “I wanted to look at trends and things we’re doing for higher-end clients, and translate them to something anyone can afford to put in their house,” she says. Top and bottom: Michael J Lee

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Maggie Mink Architecture

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A combined love of art, science, and math initially led Maggie Mink to the field of architecture, and it’s this blend of intellect and ingenuity that contributes to her ongoing success. “On a daily basis I get to be an artist, scientist, and anthropologist all at once,” she says. Mink practices her craft as a senior associate with Marcus Gleysteen Architects. The small Boston-based firm is run much like a studio, with collaboration at the core of every project. There is also a strong emphasis on drawing things by hand. “What we do with clients is not a verbal thing,” says Mink. “We’re trying to create spaces and evoke emotions and frame views, so it’s important to be able to communicate visually.” Communication and collaboration extend to each client, whose feedback fuels new ideas for the custom homes Mink and her fellow architects create. This focus on each client’s cultural tastes, interests, and circumstances is the reason why the firm produces such a prolific range of styles. Mink’s work stretches across New England and beyond, and movement between traditional and modern sometimes happens within a single home: a Shingle-style exterior may conceal modern white planes contrasted by wood and steel;

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a contemporary glass facade could reveal traces of more traditional millwork inside. If there is a consistent visual cue to the work of Mink and Marcus Gleysteen Architects, it is a focus on livability. “We really think about how people will live in the house,” says Mink, “not just how it will look in our portfolio.” Even so, Mink’s portfolio undeniably contributes to more beautiful visual language. Top and bottom: Marcus Gleysteen

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Rugs to be auctioned at the awards celebration

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Kristina Crestin

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Landry & Arcari’s Jeffrey Arcari and son Oliver offered support and guidance as the 2017 honorees worked on their rug designs.

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These “5 Under 40” winners may be the future of New England’s design community, but that doesn’t mean they don’t value the past. In fact, many of this year’s winners drew inspiration from history when designing their custom rugs. “It was surprising to see this year’s designs lean more toward the traditional and transitional,” says Landry & Arcari’s in-house designer Eric Brissette, who has worked closely with each year’s “5 Under 40” winners on their rug designs since the event’s inception in 2010. “In the past, the rugs have been very modern.” Interior designer Erin Gates looked to the intricacy of vintage Khotan rugs as well as a variety of antique figures such as medallions, pomegranate vines, and Chinese patterns. Greek myths spoke to interior designer Nina Farmer, who based her labyrinth design around the legend of King Minos and the Minotaur. Textile designer Ellisha Alexina found her muse in a phoenix motif and the life lessons often woven into oriental rugs. “The phoenix is about growth and moving forward, and I liked what that stood for,” says Alexina. (The phoenix also inspired a print in her new collection, Gobi, which debuted on May 1.) Interior designer Kristina Crestin found the task of designing a rug with no specific space or client in mind an interesting challenge. Ultimately, she looked inward for inspiration, infusing her personal passions for being near the water, fishing, and the color turquoise into a design that is meant to reflect a sense of tranquility in today’s chaotic world. Architect Maggie Mink began her rug design with research, exploring both the natural world and the textiles of Anni Albers to help inform her decisions around composition, Winners with rugs and Jeffrey Arcari photos by Bruce Rogovin.

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Creativity for a Cause

Erin Gates

Maggie Mink

Landry & Arcari works with weavers in Nepal, who translate the designs into rugs of silk and wool. It takes two weavers about three months, handtying every knot, to finish each rug.

proportion, and color. “This was the first rug I’d ever designed, so I wanted to make an impact,” she says. “I enjoy working with the winners—especially the ones who do not have much experience with rugs—and watching how their designs evolve throughout the process,” says Brissette. “It can be difficult to start with a blank canvas and not have a specific concept in mind, but the results are never disappointing.” The winners were given two weeks to design their rugs—a timeframe Mink called “both thrilling and agonizing”—and the designs were then brought to life, knot by knot, by Landry & Arcari’s skilled Tibetan weavers in Kathmandu, Nepal. This year’s rugs are handwoven with wool yarns that are blended with silk, and some feature areas of 100 percent silk pile. Each five-foot-by-eight-foot rug takes two weavers approximately three months to produce. The completed rugs will be unveiled at our “5 Under 40” awards ceremony in Boston on September 14, and auctioned off to benefit the Cambridge-based charity Barakat. Don’t miss your chance to own a piece of modern history. Rug manufacturing photos courtesy Landry & Arcari. Schoolgirls photo courtesy of Barakat

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The custom rugs designed by the “5 Under 40” award winners are more than a challenge in creativity: each year the rugs are auctioned off to raise funds for Barakat, an organization dedicated to providing exemplary basic education in Afghanistan and Pakistan, particularly for girls and women. To date, the New England design community has raised more than $107,000 for the charity by bidding on these beautiful, one-ofa-kind creations. This year, funds from the “5 Under 40” rug auction will go toward a new scholarship that allows Afghan girls the opportunity to pursue higher education. “We’ve seen that, even when parents are supportive of their girls finishing high school, oftentimes that’s about as far as it goes because they can’t afford to send the girls to college or university,” says Barakat’s Mia Buchsbaum. “The idea of the scholarship fund is to help make going to university less cost-prohibitive so that girls can get closer to reaching their dreams.” And these girls are dreaming big: the current recipients are two young women studying to be doctors at Kabul University. Each year, Barakat serves more than 3,000 women and children through traditional schools, at-home literacy programs, and evening classes. For more information, please visit barakatworld.org.

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Let’s Celebrate New England’s Finest Emerging Design Talent! Thursday, September 14, 2017

Join us to honor the winners of the eighth annual "5 Under 40" awards, raise a glass to exceptional design at the season’s best cocktail party, and bid on five one-of-akind rugs designed by the winners as they are auctioned off for a great cause.* • Rug Preview 6:00 PM • Awards Ceremony & Rug Auction 6:30 PM • Cocktail Party 7:30 PM • The Galleria at 333 Stuart Street | Boston • Tickets $75 online | $100 (cash only) at the door nehomemag.com/5-under-40/tickets *All proceeds from the auction will benefit Barakat, Inc., a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based charity that works to strengthen education and literacy in Central and South Asia.

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•Perspectives New England Design Considered From Every Angle

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Do the Math

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Geometric rugs bring style and symmetry to any room.

1. Tranquility, K. Powers & Company  | Needham Heights, Mass., kpowers.com 2. Stoclet, Steven King Decorative Carpets  | Boston Design Center, skcarpets.com 3. 156036 - Contemporary Collection, Dover Rug | Boston, Natick, and Burlington, Mass., doverrug.com 4. June, Angela Adams | Portland, Maine, angelaadams.com

| edited by lynda Simonton |

5. Geodesic Micro Hooked Rug by Dash &

Albert, Colony Rug Company | Hanover, Mass., colonyrug.com 6. Modelo, Landry & Arcari Rugs & Carpeting  | Boston, Salem, and Framingham, Mass., landryandarcari.com 7. Chiesa Yellow by Suzanne Sharp, The Rug Company | Boston, therugcompany.com September–October 2017 | New England Home  183

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Perspectives

Style Scheme

Calla mobile by John Pomp

“This light fixture is a total showstopper. Each piece of glass is made by hand and all are completely unique.” | Studio 534, Boston Design Center, s5boston.com

Surfaces

(A) Katie Ridder Red Moon Flower wallpaper  | Holland & Sherry, Studio 534 B

(B) Peter Fasano Hamilton velvet in salmon | Charles Spada, Boston Design Center, charlesspada.com C

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Ted Muehling candlesticks in burnished gold

(C) Mallorca rug in natural | Merida, Boston Design Center, meridastudio.com

Galli Rossi china by Richard Ginori

“These are an amazing item to collect! They help break up the look of an expansive table.” | E.R. Butler & Co., Boston, erbutler.com

“Richard Ginori makes the most beautiful china. This pattern is delicate and striking with its hand-painted design and gold edge.”  | Shreve, Crump & Low, Boston and Chestnut Hill, Mass., shrevecrumpandlow.com

Barbara dining chair by Schumacher

Rue Irving dining table by Keith Fritz

“This chair has a great shape, and the fully upholstered body of the chair shows off fabric nicely.” | Boston Design Center, fschumacher.com

“This table has a classic look, yet feels modern. It has great versatility and really makes a style statement.” | M-Geough, Boston Design Center, m-geough.com

Dining Drama

Annsley McAleer creates a sleek and sophisticated dining room ready for fall entertaining. Annsley Interiors, Boston, (617) 266-1426, annsleyinteriors.com

| edited by lynda simonton |  184  New England Home | September–October 2017

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BOSTON | 617.266.1710

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7/26/17 3:03 PM


Perspectives

Five Questions

Brad Smith, president of Audio Video Design, on the fast-changing world of home technology.

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How has home technology changed from the days when it was mostly security related? We’ve come so far! Today’s home technology can integrate everything in a home from lighting to security to heating to music/video and more. The concept “The Internet of Things,” which refers to everything being online or interconnected, is becoming a reality. At some point almost everything in

your home you interact with, from a refrigerator to a washing machine to your lighting, will have inexpensive intelligence so you can operate it automatically. Appliances will constantly diagnose themselves to ensure they work properly. With coming advances in artificial intelligence, the sky is the limit; almost anything in the home that you think of can be interconnected.

| Interview by Robert Kiener | Photography by john soares | 186  New England Home | September–October 2017

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All of us at Hark+Osborne Interior Design love recommending Wayne Southworth and the amazing staff at MWI Fiber-Shield because they always make us look good to our clients. The protection and durability that their stain protection offers for the furniture and carpets on all of our projects is a must! Their follow-up care is also spectacular and our clients always thank us later for recommending them. We have seen an entire glass of red wine spill that covered an Italian white linen sofa come out with no trace of the accident. What better proof is that? The reasonable cost for the fabric treatment is worth every dollar!

Jeffrey Osborne & Amanda Hark principals, Hark+Osborne Interior Design, Boston

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Perspectives:

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Five Questions

What is a recent example of home technology that has changed the way we live? Take, for example, lighting control and automatic shade systems. You can program your lights to come on when you wake up at, say, 20 percent, to light your hallways, then 50 percent later, and then dim them as the light from outside gets brighter. In the evening, your outside landscaping lights will come on according to the time of year. You can also program your lights by themes, such as “dining” or “entertainment” so you don’t have to adjust each light separately. Likewise, by automating your window shades, you can protect furniture or carpets from fading without having to manually adjust each and every shade in your home. It is incredibly convenient.

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What is the most common mistake people make when buying home technology? Choosing price over quality. The worst

thing to do is to have to re-do a system you are not happy with. One home I worked on cost more than $100,000 just to fix and replace the previous work. This was largely because the installer put in a system that no longer was being serviced; even the keyboards were proprietary, and everything went dead. We work with companies that we are confident will be around a long time. It’s okay if your phone becomes obsolete but not the system that runs your home. You should expect to upgrade a home technology system every five years or so, but not have to totally replace it.

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There have been a lot of developments in systems that can be controlled remotely. Is this now pretty standard? It’s wrong to think that everything should be wireless and app-based. We can do amazing things with apps on our phones. For example, I can go on my phone and look at cameras all over my vacation home in the Berkshires, unlock the door, turn on music, do anything. But when I am there and my phone is in its charger in the bedroom and I am downstairs and

want to turn on my television, I don’t want to have to run upstairs to go get my phone. I want to be able to use a remote control that’s on the coffee table. Or you don’t want guests to have to download an app to operate the television or the lights. Apps are great, but they are not for everything.

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What major trends are you seeing in home technology? The trend of more things in the home being interconnected will continue, and technology will come down in price. Dedicated home theaters are popular. One trend we see is that the outdoors is becoming more of a room. We are installing a lot of electronics outside, and not just music. Outdoor WiFi access points are popular. We also install outdoor televisions that are completely weatherproof—waterproof, sun proof, reflection free—and can stay out all year long. These are great for patios, barbecue areas, and spas. Everyone can now watch the big game outside! | Audio Video Design, Westwood, Mass., (617) 965-4600, and Osterville, Mass., (508) 428-1435, avdesigns.com

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(888) 494-2542 | wickhamhardwood.com 188  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Perspectives

What Makes It Work

A sophisticated interplay of colors, rhythms, and shapes ensures that this Massachusetts dining room is not only elegant, but lively, too.

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A split color palette of cool blues and warmer browns and yellows is sparked with black-andwhite graphics.

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Vintage cane-back side chairs, with their energizing arcs, mediate between the simple dining table and the shapely glass shades of a customized Canopy Designs chandelier.

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Geometric medallions in Madeline Weinrib’s Samosa carpet harmonize with the bone inlay of two Indian-inspired chairs and the tape that edges the room’s curtains.

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Similar curves are picked up in the fish-scale pattern of the Feather Fan wallpaper from Cole & Son and the “ears” of the Indian chairs.

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Project Team

Kate Maloney and Thiara Borges, Kate Maloney Interior Design | Somerville, Massachusetts, (617) 764-1054, kmid.co

| By Kyle Hoepner | Photograph by Sean Litchfield | 190  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Sean Litchfield Photography

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Trade Notes By Paula M. Bodah

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1) Designer Lisa Tharp in her new digs on Boston’s Newbury Street. 2) A contemporary house by architects Dan Hisel and Katie Flynn. 3) Molteni&C brings its Dada kitchen line to its new Boston showroom. 4) Architect John MacDonald and interior designer Shelby Simes have joined creative forces.

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A shared design sensibility and a shared philosophy about the role of their profession have led Dan Hisel and Katie Flynn to band together to form Hisel Flynn Architects. The two describe themselves as optimists who believe every project they work on should have a positive impact on its surroundings. On the residential side, they design new homes as well as sensitive renovations, while on the commercial side, they aim to bring adventurous design to urban projects. Nonprofit clients deserve great design, too, and to that end the firm waives a portion of its fees.  I  Arlington, Mass., hiselflynn.com

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As Boston designer Duncan Hughes gets ready to launch his furniture collection for Dowel, he’s looking forward to introducing a smart new line that presents a twist on familiar forms. Due out this fall, his pieces blend the femininity of 1940s French furniture with the masculine warmth of midcentury American furniture for a look he calls simple, lean, and elegant.  I  Boston, duncanhughes.com, www. dowel.furniture

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People who love the sleek, sophisticated elegance of Molteni&C’s furniture will be delighted to learn that the showroom has reopened in a new, 1,000-square-foot space on Harrison Avenue in Boston’s stylish SoWa district. The company will also debut Dada kitchens, a Molteni Group brand,

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at this location for the first time in Boston. In addition to its kitchen line, the showroom features Molteni&C’s wardrobes and walk-in closets as well as both new and iconic pieces for the living and dining rooms.  I  Boston, moltenigroup.com

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Designer Lisa Tharp has a new outlook on life—or at least the outdoors—since recently opening her studio on Boston’s Newbury Street. From the sunny third-floor space in the Back Bay that stands as the headquarters of Lisa Tharp Interior Architecture + Design, she and her staff find inspiration in the sights, sounds, and energy of the street below. “I treasure my morning walk down the leafy mall of Commonwealth Avenue,” she says, “imagining the city planners, architects, designers, artists, builders, and patrons who came before, with gratitude for the gifts they gave this incredible city.”  I  Boston, lisatharp.com

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Architect John MacDonald of Morehouse MacDonald and Associates and interior designer Shelby Simes of Sterling Design Interiors have combined their talents often over

the past twenty-five years. So it makes perfect sense that they would join forces to make the collaboration official. MacDonald’s clients often say they’d like to be able to use one source for both architecture and interior design, the architect says, and the success he and Simes have enjoyed together over the years makes the new joint venture a win for them and their clients.  I Lexington, Mass., morehousemacdonald.com Hisel Flynn house rendering by Hatch Studio

8/10/17 11:04 AM


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8/8/17 5:09 PM


Trade Notes

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A collaboration that gives clients more of a one-stop experience is in the works for Dover Rug & Home, as the Natick, Massachusetts, company welcomes interior designer Deborah Smith-Martin to offer window-treatment and design services. With three decades of experience as a master seamstress, decorator, and designer, Smith-Martin, who owns Curtains Up & Decor in Ashland, Massachusetts, will be able to give Dover’s customers a more complete experience.  I  Natick, Mass., doverrug.com

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Back in 1977, Steve Herrick and Ken White joined forces to start a woodworking shop in Herrick’s garage. Today,

Herrick & White Architectural Woodworkers comprises more than 100 craftspeople creating fine cabinetry, furniture, architectural woodwork, and millwork in a 50,000-square-foot facility in Cumberland, Rhode Island. Beyond the fine quality of its work, keys to the company’s forty years of success include a robust apprenticeship program to keep the trade vital and involvement in numerous philanthropic programs in the community.  I  Cumberland, R.I., herrick-white.com

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Happy 150th anniversary to the Boston Society of Architects. The organization—one of the oldest chapters of the American Institute of Architects—may be venerable, but it’s hardly stuck in the past. Among its activities this sesquicentennial year, the group has launched the new AIA Guide to Boston as a mobile app for the first time. A time-line exhibit that celebrates the BSA’s history and looks to the future will run in the BSA Space on Congress Street through the rest of this year.  I  Boston, architects.org/bsaspace

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overseas. Tours of Paris grew into expeditions to fourteen countries in Europe and Asia. Those of us stateside can rejoice now, because the company is, at long last, expanding to our own shores, with a program of tours in New York and New England. Destinations in our 1) Herrick & White Architectural Woodworkers principals Steve corner of the country include Brannigan, Ken Bertram, and Gary Rousseau. 2) Marjorie (Jorie) Anderson and her team. 3) Architect Patrick Ahearn. 4 ) Ted Newport, the Berkshires, and Clark of the Northeastern University Center for Family Busithe Brimfield Antique Show. ness, Aaron Polhemus, and Michael Cecere of sponsor Gray, New Englanders wanting to Gray & Gray Certified Public Accountants. travel farther afield can join a host of tours in New York City and environs. Boston-area artist Marjorie Anderson   I  antiquesdiva.com has opened Jorie Designs Gallery & Gifts. Paintings by a number of Cape Cod-based Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders is MetroWest artists in a variety of media join Anderson’s own colorful abstract used to garnering awards for the fine acrylics on the gallery’s walls, while the homes they design and build, but the boutique features functional art such as firm’s partners were especially pleased silver jewelry, ceramics, and fun things recently when they were honored with a for the home like pillows and other 2017 Massachusetts Family Business of interior accents. Anderson has also the Year Award. Technically, the firm is turned a space in a nearby building into dual-family, notes Peter Polhemus who the Lumina Satellite Gallery, where she founded the firm in 1996 (in partnership curates revolving exhibits of work by with Len Savery, who has since retired). regional artists.  I  Marlborough, Mass., Husband and wife architects John and Sharon DaSilva came on board soon joriedesigns.com after, and in 2005, Peter’s son Aaron Polhemus joined the firm. Today, the two As A.J. Rose Carpets & Flooring Polhemus generations and John DaSilva celebrates its fortieth anniversary this are the company’s principals.  year, the company is shaking things up by purchasing Williston Weaves. The I  East Harwich, Mass., psdab.com Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, Williston Weaves developed a reputaArchitect Patrick Ahearn has a tion over twenty-five years as a leader double fistful of new awards. He was in interior flooring, and John and A.J. recently voted Best Architectural and/or Boyajian are excited to add the brand to Residential Design Company at the 2017 the A.J. Rose family of showrooms. The Best of the Vineyard Awards (an honor three other Massachusetts showrooms he has taken home four years in a row, work with both designers and homeownnow). And, at Build’s 2017 Architecture ers, while the Williston Weaves showAwards, the trade publication named room will be to-the-trade only.  I  Natick, Ahearn’s company as the Best Full-Service Architecture Firm in New England. Burlington, Saugus, and Newton Upper One of Ahearn’s projects, the restoration Falls, Mass., ajrosecarpets.com of a 1860s Cape Cod captain’s house, also garnered an award for Best New England For nine years, Toma Clark Haines, Residential Design Project.  I  Boston and a.k.a. The Antiques Diva, has been offering customized antique-buying tours Edgartown, Mass., patrickahearn.com

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Kevin Cradock Builders

Custom Building \ Renovation \ Millwork 617-524-2405 \ cradockbuilders.com \ Boston, MA

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Design Life

edited by Tess Woods

Networking Event

Cape & Islands

Cape & Islands Networking Event at C.H. Newton

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C.H. Newton Builders hosted a grand party to celebrate our annual edition of New England Home Cape & Islands. Hundreds of members of the New England Home family gathered at the company’s spacious Falmouth headquarters for inspiration, delicious tidbits, and cocktails. A silent auction of wonderful items donated by our generous advertisers raised money to benefit the Boys & Girls Club of Cape Cod.

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| 1 . Barbara Connolly of Gardens by Barbara Connolly, Linda Newton of C.H. Newton Builders, Paul Grover of Robert Paul Properties, and Mark Hutker of Hutker Architects | 2. Nathan and Olesia Adams of Cataumet Sawmill, Jess Bodamer of Double Knot Home, and Tom Adams of Cataumet Sawmill | 3 . Liz Stiving-Nichols of Martha’s Vineyard Interior Design and New England Home’s Kathy Bush-Dutton | 4. John Callinan of 84 Lumber, Mike Fetterman and Jack Stevenson of Mid-Cape Home Centers, and Ted Cooper of 84 Lumber | 5 . Ken Bertram of Herrick & White, John DaSilva of Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders, Jennifer Driscoll of Broadview Marketing, and Alison Farias of Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders | 6. New England Home’s Robin Schubel, Bert Czuchra of The Tilery, and Brian and Laura Urban of Urban Design Interiors | 7 . Martin Boris of Sullivan and Associates Architects and Christopher Saad of Audio Concepts | 8. Ryan Newton of C.H. Newton Builders with Seth Wilkinson and Caitrin Higgins of Wilkinson Ecological Design | 9 . Rob and Betsie Bramhall of Rob Bramhall Architects | 10. David Newton of C.H. Newton Builders with Jim Cappuccino and Matthew Schiffer of Hutker Architects | 11 . David Brookes of brookes + hill custom builders with Chris Boucher and Alex Woodbury of My Estate Concierge

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Photography by Tara Carvalho

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K yl e J Cal dwe l l

RYAN ASSOCIATES LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING waltham, ma | www.ryan-assoc.com | 781-314-0401

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Design Life Networking Event

Networking Event at Marvin at 7 Tide

New England Home welcomed friends and clients to enjoy a summer evening of live music, hors d’oeuvres, and networking, while experiencing the latest in window and door technology. Marvin at 7 Tide in Boston’s Seaport district opened its showroom doors to host this lovely event in celebration of our July–August 2017 issue.

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| 1 . Cheryl and David Andreozzi of Andreozzi Architects with Naomi Mancha of A.W. Hastings | 2 . Summer Ursomarso and Liz Sommer of A.W. Hastings   | 3 . Rob Bagshaw of Stark, Craig Tevolitz of Platemark Design, and Jon Moss of Installations Plus | 4 . Doreen Le May Madden of Lux Lighting Design and Al Lagueux of Century Furniture | 5 . Michael D’Angelo of Michael D’Angelo Landscape Architecture | 6 . Barbara Bradlee Hunter of Marvin at 7 Tide thanks the crowd  | 7 . New England Home’s Lynda Simonton, Kelly Rogers of Kelly Rogers Interiors, and New England Home’s Paula Bodah | 8 . Ted Toran and Peter Griffin of FBN Construction | 9 . Edward Gaffney, Colby Mauke, and Michael Cahn of Patrick Ahearn Architect | 10 . Raffle winner Susan Roe of Kevin Cradock Builders and Hayley Purcell of Marvin at 7 Tide | 11 . Angel and Alex Centeno of Systems Design & Integration | 12 . Olesia and Nathan Adams of Cataumet Sawmill and Beezee Honan of Designer Bath

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Photography by Allan Dines

8/11/17 11:15 AM


ERIC ROTH photography

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5/23/17 4:39 pM


Design Life Nantucket by Design

For the second year in a row, the Nantucket Historical Association’s Nantucket by Design festival has taken the beloved Massachusetts island by storm with a variety of fabulous events over several days, including a VIP cocktail party, an all-star design panel, a grand gathering at the “Oldest House,” and a design luncheon sponsored by New England Home.

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| 1. Gary McBournie, Bill Richards, and New England Home’s Kyle Hoepner | 2. Guests are welcomed to the Design VIP Cocktail Party | 3. Carolyn Schaefer and Katie Scialabba | 4. 2017 Design Luncheon keynote speakers Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch of Roman and Williams | 5. Clinton Smith greets guests at the Design VIP Cocktail Party | 6. Stacey Bewkes shows off her party photos to Billy Ceglia and Danielle Rollins | 7. The team from Magellan Jets, presenting sponsor of Nantucket by Design | 8. Maureen Bousa and Hilary Gustafsson | 9. New England Home’s Kyle Hoepner, Kathy Bush-Dutton, and Stacy Kunstel

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Photography: Brian Sager (4,8,9), Lindsay Scouras (1,2,3,5,6,7)

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JOHN HESSION, ADVANCED DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY

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Design Life Take a Seat Gala

The New England Chapter of the International Furnishings and Design Association held its third annual Take a Seat gala and charity auction at the Royale Nightclub in Boston, featuring chairs designed by local architects, builders, and craftsmen. The chairs were auctioned, totaling more than $22,000 to benefit local charities Friends of the Children-Boston, The Lyceum Fellowship, and The Women’s Institute for Housing and Economic Development.

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| 1. Julia Vandal and 4 Julie Bangert | 2. The party had a Cirque du Soleil theme, with performances by the Boston Circus Guild | 3. Jessie Hughes, Lauren Carter, Ashleigh Sanicola, and Courtney Mussell | 4. Leslie Fine  | 5. Murat Oztermiyeci and Deb Matook | 6. Former WCVB anchor Susan Wornick emceed the evening

Divine Design Center Opening

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Divine Design Center threw an opening party to celebrate its new 8,000-square-foot Boston space. Owner and principal designer Mariette Barsoum and her husband, Magued Barsoum, were thrilled to have the movers and shakers of the design industry tour the showroom and take a turn in the photo booth.

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| 1. Scott Conto, Sarah Goldflust, Amir Ilin, Alex Albiol, and Jose Montañés | 2. Anna Orfanides, Mariette Barsoum, and Luc Globensky | 3. Michael Hanna, Oranit Garibi, and Shimon Garibi | 4. Jeet Shahani and Magued Barsoum | 5. Bettina Herman, Andrea Santanonio, and Luc Globensky | 6. Bettina Herman, Madison Silvers, and Thomas Grossteiner

Take A Seat Gala photography by Jonathan Johnson Divine Design Center Opening photography: Conner Bowen (1,3,4), Jessica Delaney (5), Jonathan Johnson (2,6)

8/11/17 11:16 AM


Interior Design by Nina Farmer Photography by Eric Roth

A Showroom with Extraordinary Resources

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Design Life Designer Bath SHINE Awards

Designer Bath and Salem Plumbing Supply hosted its annual Designers SHINE Awards. The evening included a panel discussion moderated by New England Home’s Kyle Hoepner. Mary Michael O’Hare of MMO Designs, winner of the Overall Excellence in Design Award, received a gift card to Designer Bath, plus a photoshoot of her winning space by Eric Roth, to run in an upcoming issue New England Home. 2

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| 1. Mindy Sevinor, Anna Orfanides, 4 and Jason Sevinor | 2. Michelle Ritchie and Mary Michael O’Hare  | 3. New England Home’s David Simone with Kristina Crestin | 4. New England Home’s Kyle Hoepner with Laura Brooks and Brendan Cannon | 5. Mini bottles of champagne served as the evening’s festive party favors

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Photography by Andrew Swaine

Prospect Hill

Antiques & Home Furnishings Art Gallery Add Style and Character To Your Home Custom Dining Tables & Furniture Quality Antiques & Handcrafted Reproductions Wicker & Outdoor Garden Furniture Lamps, Mirrors & Rugs Simon Pearce Glassware

P.O. Box 383 | 247 Prospect Hill Road | Georges Mills, NH 03751 Open Daily 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. or by appointment

603.763.9676 | www.prospecthillantiques.com

The Gallery at Prospect Hill Featuring: Peter Batchelder • Ron Brown • J. Koron Vicki Koron • T.M. Nicholas • Tom Pirozzoli Ken Schuster • Marilyn F. Wendling

208  New England Home | September–October 2017

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Maggie Mink Architecture

Ellisha Alexina

Specialty Design: Textiles

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Nina Farmer Interior Design

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Kristina Crestin Interior Design

Join us to honor the winners of the eighth annual 5 Under 40 awards, raise a glass to exceptional design at the season’s best cocktail party, and bid on five one-of-a-kind rugs designed by the winners as they are auctioned off for a great cause. All auction proceeds will go to Barakat, a charity that strengthens education and literacy in Central and South Asia.

The Galleria at 333 Stuart Street, Boston | Event Starts at 6:00 Tickets $75 in advance | $100 at the door (cash only) Tickets now on sale at nehomemag.com/5-under-40/tickets

AWARDS

S IG N AT U RE S P O N S O R S

PRE S E N TI N G S P O N S O R

AWA RD S p onso r

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Boston’s First Boston’ First Dines by Design Event Dine by Design Event

Featured Designers Featured Designers

Heading Home Heading Home To Dinner To Dinner

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12TH THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14TH 2017

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12TH THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14TH 2017

Boston Design Center, Fifth Floor Boston Design Center, Fifth Floor

Thursday, October 12: Cocktail Party Kickoff + Thursday, October 12: Cocktail Party + New England Design HallKickoff of Fame England Design of Fame 2017 InducteeNew Announcement 5:00Hall - 9:00 p.m. 2017 Inductee Announcement 5:00 - 9:00 p.m. Friday, October 13: View the designs Friday, October 13:12:00 View -the designs (open to public) 5:00 p.m. (open to public) 12:00 - 5:00 p.m. Saturday, October 14: Evening Dinner Party Saturday, Evening onOctober featured 14: tables 7:00 -Dinner 11:00 Party p.m. on featured tables 7:00 - 11:00 p.m.

Heading Home Heading Home ForTo more info + tickets,* Dinner For more info + tickets,* To Dinner visit HH2D.eventbrite.com

Tables Tables

Cecelia Walker Charles Spada Cecelia Walker Debbe CharlesDaley Spada Dennis Duffy Debbe Daley Elizabeth Benedict Dennis Duffy Eric Haydel Elizabeth Benedict Frank D. Hodge Eric Haydel Kalah Frank Talancy D. Hodge Kate KalahMaloney Talancy Kate Patterson Maloney Katie Rosenfeld Kate Patterson Kristen Paton Katie Rosenfeld Kristen Rivoli Paton Mally KristenSkok Rivoli Megan Pesce Mally Skok Meredith Bohn Megan Pesce Pamela Copeman Meredith Bohn Phoebe Lovejoy Pamela Copeman Renee PhoebeRucci Lovejoy Renee Rucci

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12TH THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14TH 2017

visit HH2D.eventbrite.com

TH THURSDAY, OCTOBER THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14TH 2017 *Proceeds to benefit Heading12 Home, a non-profit organization that re-houses and provides supported pathway to self-sufficiency for young families. *Proceeds to benefita Heading Home, a non-profit organization that re-houses

and provides a supported pathway to self-sufficiency for young families.

#HH2Dinner #HH2Dinner

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

Bar carts Bar carts

Alexandra Aquadro Allison Marrison Alexandra Aquadro Devon Allison Coyne Marrison Fiona DevonKennedy Coyne Holly Fiona Joe Kennedy Jacqueline Holly Joe Becker Jill Najinigier Jacqueline Becker Julia Wood Jill Najinigier Julie Julia Ann WoodCovino Justine Sterling Julie Ann Covino Kate Coughlin Justine Sterling Kelly Rogers Kate Coughlin Kim KellyMacumber Rogers Laurie Gorelick Kim Macumber Lawrence Powers Laurie Gorelick Linda HoltPowers Lawrence Michael J. Lee Linda Holt Michelle Michael J.Cortizo Lee Rachel Dunham Michelle Cortizo Rachel Reider Dunham Sarah RachelWinchester Reider Susan Burt Sarah Winchester Vani SusanSayeed Burt Wendy Ditcham Vani Sayeed Wendy Ditcham

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH

PICTuRED TABLE DISPLAy CouRTESy oF MARC HALL DESIGN PICTuRED TABLE DISPLAy CouRTESy oF MARC HALL DESIGN

Notes: • “Heading Home To Dinner” is in Warnock Pro Semibold Notes: • Green is PMS 15-0343 Greenery • “Heading Home To Dinner” is in Warnock Pro Semibold C=53, M=13, Y=93, K=0 •HeadingHome-SO17-revised2.indd Green is PMS 15-0343 Greenery 5 R=136, G=177, B=74 C=53, M=13, Y=93, K=0 HeadingHome-SO17-revised2.indd 5 HHD.indd 1 R=136, G=177, B=74

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Calendar

edited by lynda Simonton

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1 1) Anila Quayyum Agha’s intriguing installation, All the Flowers Are For Me, at the Peabody Essex Museum 2) The Shelburne Museum explores America’s unwavering love of sugar in Sweet Tooth: The Art of Dessert. 3) Go treasure hunting at the Brimfield Antique Show

SEPTEMBER All the Flowers Are for Me Through December 3 Anila Quayyum Agha creates a sculptural chamber of light and shadow influenced by Persian and Turkish architecture, textiles, and paintings. Agha was motivated to create her art installation by being excluded from mosques in her home country of Pakistan. I Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass., (978) 745-9500, pem.org Brimfield Antique Show September 5–10 Ready to find a treasure? Mark your calendar for the fall Brimfield Antique Show. Considered one of the best and biggest antique and flea markets in the country, the show has been a source for everything from everyday treasures to fine antiques for more than 50 years. Show hours and admission vary depending on field and venue location. I Brimfield, Mass., brimfieldshow.org Garden Conservancy Open Days Gardens at the Clock Barn September 9 This charming country garden has been a labor of love for its owners for 30 years. Highlights of the garden include a drying barn dating back to 1790, extensive vegetable gardens, a fairy garden, a greenhouse, wood-

New England Home’s “5 Under 40” Awards September 14

This event celebrates the 2017 “5 Under 40” honorees, who have been selected as tomorrow’s design stars. Savor small bites and cocktails, catch up with friends and colleagues in the design industry, and bid on spectacular custom rugs designed by the honorees. Proceeds from the rug auction, featuring celebrity auctioneer Jenny Johnson, will benefit Barakat, a charity working to strengthen education and literacy in Central and South Asia.  I 6 p.m. Tickets $75 in advance, $100 (cash only) at the door. Landry & Arcari Rugs and Carpeting’s Boston showroom, nehomemag.com I see page 160

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3 land gardens, and much more. There will be familyfriendly activities throughout the day, so bring the kids and enjoy an afternoon exploring this delightful garden. I 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $7. Carlisle, Mass., gardenconservancy.org Codman Estate Fine Arts & Crafts Festival September 9 The historic Codman Estate welcomes guests to tour the property and shop at an extensive fine-crafts fair. Now in its 35th year, the annual event features more than 100 artisans working in pottery, photography, jewelry, glass, fiber art, metalworking, and folk art. There will also be music, food, and tours of the estate. I 10 a.m.–4 p.m. Free to Historic New England members, $5 for nonmembers. Lincoln, Mass., (617) 994-5914, historicnewengland.org You Can’t Spell Martha’s Vineyard Without ART Party September 9 Mix and mingle with Martha’s Vineyard artists at this annual fundraising event. A private home will be the setting for enjoying appetizers, cocktails, and great art. The artists’ work will be on display and for sale. A percentage of the sale proceeds will benefit the Martha’s Vineyard Museum. I 5:30 p.m. $150, reservations required. Edgartown, (508) 627-4441, ext. 123, mvmuseum.org Evening at Gropius House September 15 Walter Gropius’s innovative lighting plan can be seen during this evening event at his architecturally influential home. Guests will enjoy a slideshow, tour, and light refreshments. I 7 p.m.–9 p.m. $30 Historic New England members, $40 nonmembers. Lincoln, Mass., (781) 259-8098, historicnewengland.org (1) Courtesy Peabody Essex Museum, (2) Courtesy Shoe Bakery/Shelburne Museum

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Calendar Living with Your Old House September 16 This one-day workshop is designed to help you maintain and preserve your older home. Learn about how to repair your home, select period-appropriate paint colors, and establish a maintenance schedule. Presented in partnership with the Preservation Education Institute/ Historic Windsor, and Historic New England. I 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $20 for Historic New England, Henry Sheldon Museum, PEI/ HWI members, $30 non-members, registration required. Windsor Welcome Center, Windsor, Vt., historicnewengland.org Newport Mansions Wine & Food Festival September 21–24 Enjoy fabulous food and wines from around the world at The Elms, Rosecliff, and Marble House mansions. The annual event features some of the region’s most preeminent chefs, extensive wine tastings, cooking demonstrations, and more. A variety of ticket packages are available. I Newport, R.I., (401) 847-1000, newportmansions.org Provincetown Art Association and Museum’s Fall Special Consignment Auction September 23 The museum’s annual fall auction features artwork by deceased artists who lived, studied, or worked on Cape Cod. The works will be available for preview September 8–23. Bidding will be live, but the museum will also accommodate absentee bids and phone bidding. Proceeds benefit the museum’s cultural and educational initiatives. I 7 p.m. Free. Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, Mass., (508) 4871750, paam.org Sweet Tooth: The Art of Dessert September 23–February 18, 2018 America’s unwavering love of sweets and desserts is explored in this multimedia exhibition featuring delectable confections. I Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, Vt., (802) 985-3346, shelburnemuseum.org Vermont Fine Furniture and Woodworking Festival September 23–24 Meet the artisans behind some of Vermont’s finely handcrafted furniture, accessories, jewelry, and toys at this annual event. The show takes place in conjunction with the Forest Festival at the nearby Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park, so you can enjoy beautiful Vermont during fall foliage season. I 10 a.m.–5 p.m. $14 adults, $13 seniors, $8 children 5–13, $4 children 3–4. Billings Farm & Museum, Woodstock, Vt., vermontwoodfestival.org

with art and artisans during this upscale art fair. More than 100 Rhode Island School of Design students and alumni display and sell their artwork, including furniture, home accessories, ceramics, prints, photographs, textiles, and more. I 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Providence, (401) 277-4931, risdalumnisales.com

Golden Ball Tavern Museum Antiques Show September 30 The Golden Ball Tavern Museum’s Annual Outdoor Antiques Show celebrates its 50th year. One hundred select dealers will be on hand, and area residents have donated vintage furniture and decorative items to be sold. A preview party in the barn on Friday, September 29, includes cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and early access to the selection of donated items. Proceeds from this event support the Golden Ball Tavern, a museum and educational resource for schools and for students of the history of architecture and the decorative arts.  I 9 a.m.–4 p.m. Early admission (7 a.m.) $25, regular admission $7, price includes museum admittance. Weston, Mass., (781) 894-1751, goldenballtavern.org

OCTOBER Introduction to New England Furniture October 4, 11, 18, 25, and November 1 This five-part series led by senior curator Nancy Carlisle introduces furniture made and used in New England from the 17th to the mid-19th centuries. The class will focus on regional style, craftsmanship, technology, and more. Pieces from the Historic New England collection will also be explored. I 2 p.m.–4 p.m. $50 Historic New England members and students, $75 nonmembers. Historic New England Haverhill Facility, Haverhill, Mass., historicnewengland.org Provincetown Art Association and Museum’s Annual Gala October 7 This elegant dinner gala draws more than 300 people to honor a distinguished supporter of Provincetown arts and renowned artists for lifetime achievement. The evening kicks off with a cocktail reception under a tent at the Bas Relief Park, then moves to Town Hall for dinner, presentations, and dancing. Proceeds help underwrite the museum’s exhibitions. See website for details. I Provincetown, (508) 487-1750, paam.org RISD Craft October 7 Providence’s Benefit Street comes alive

Lakes Region Parade of Homes October 7–9 Thinking of building or renovating a home? The parade presents the best of builders, developers, tradesmen, and remodelers in New Hampshire’s Lakes Region. The open-house event showcases new, custom, remodeled, and model homes. This is a great opportunity to meet with area professionals and gather inspiration for your own upcoming projects. Proceeds from the event benefit Greater Lakes Region Children’s Auction.  I 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $10 for all three days and all homes. (603) 387-1817, lakesregionparadeofhomes.com Boston Design Market October 11–12 The Boston Design Center opens its doors for the annual Boston Design Market. Showrooms throughout the Innovation and Design Building host product launches, panel discussions, open houses, workshops, trunk shows, pop-up bookshops, and more. It’s a great opportunity to learn what’s new and connect with others in the design community.  I Visit the website for a full event schedule, bostondesign.com

Junior League of Boston Show House October 7–November 5

Boston’s iconic Junior League Show House is back for a 46th time with a roster of the area’s notable interior designers transforming the 1853 William Flagg Homer House in Belmont, Massachusetts. Every Wednesday the designers will be on hand to answer questions and interact with visitors.  I $ 40, Wednesday and Thursday 10 a.m.–8 p.m.; Friday, Saturday, and Sunday 10 a.m.–5 p.m., bostonshowhouse.org

214  New England Home | September–October 2017

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STILL BLOOMING AUTUMN 2017

PARTERREGARDEN.COM

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Calendar

Heading Home to Dinner October 12–14

This inaugural design and dine event showcases tabletops and bar carts by designers and other creatives. The event kicks off on October 12 with a cocktail party at the Boston Innovation and Design Building featuring New England Home’s announcement of the 2017 inductees into the New England Design Hall of Fame. The tables and carts can be viewed on October 13. The festivities are capped off with a dinner celebration on October 14. I Proceeds support Heading Home, an agency that helps families transitioning from homelessness to permanent housing. headinghometodinner.org

sullivan + associates A R C H I T E C T S

Chandelier SM-Ch-906

martha’s vineyard | boston sullivanassociatesarchitects.com

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Authentic Designs West Rupert, Vermont 05776 • 800 844-9416 www.AuthenticDesigns.com

PRISM Awards October 12 The PRISM Awards are hosted by the Builders and Remodelers Association of Greater Boston and celebrate the finest projects and outstanding achievements of builders, architects, designers, and other professionals in the home building industry. I Sheraton Boston Hotel, (781) 890-2101, prism-awards.com Boston International Fine Art Show October 19–22 This fine art show, now in its 21st year, features historic and contemporary art. An October 19 gala kicks off the show, which presents art from galleries located throughout the United States and the world and includes guest speakers, panel discussions, dealer booth talks, and more. I Show Friday 1 p.m.–8 p.m., Saturday 11 a.m.–8 p.m., Sunday 11 a.m.–5 p.m. $15. The Cyclorama at the Boston Center for the Arts, Boston, (617) 363-0405, fineartboston.com Martha’s Vineyard Food & Wine Festival October 19–22 Enjoy four fabulous days of eating and drinking at this annual festival for wine and food enthusiasts that celebrates the rich tradition of fishing and farming on Martha’s Vineyard. Nationally renowned chefs will create dishes with local ingredients, and wine and spirit purveyors from around the globe will be on hand. I See website for details and ticket packages, mvfoodandwine.com  EDITOR’S NOTE: Events are subject to change. Please confirm details with event organizer prior to your visit.

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New In The Showrooms

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1. Bird Watching Set your drinks on coasters, designed by Parisian artist Nathalie Lete, featuring delightful Eskimo curlews, Caspian plovers, and more. | K. Colette, Portland, Maine, kcolette.com

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2. French Lessons Designer Barbara Elza Hirsch drew on the influence of her French heritage for her new Bois et Couleur Collection for Dowel Furniture, offering a comprehensive array of home furnishings. | Elza B. Design, Concord, Mass., www.dowel.furniture 3. Scentsational Restoration Hardware’s chic Vendôme chandelier gets its sparkle from hexagonal crystal shades inspired by faceted perfume bottles. | Boston, restorationhardware.com

4. En Vogue Cumar ups the stone game with its new Linea Couture collection, which uses exotic materials like semi-precious stones, amethysts, petrified wood, and quartzes. | Cumar, Everett, Mass., cumar.com 5. Anglo File Blithfield, known for its elegant fabrics, launches the Winthrop collection showcasing traditional English jacquards in fresh colorways | Lee Jofa, Boston Design Center, leejofa.com 6. French Connection This French painted iron and tole console from the 1940s brings chic European style and a statement-making silhouette to your foyer or dining room. | Charles Spada, Boston Design Center, charlesspada.com

| edited by lynda Simonton | 218  New England Home | September–October 2017

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25 YEARS

CELEBRATING A QUARTER CENTURY OF CREATING SPACES THAT SURPRISE, DELIGHT AND INSPIRE

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1. Fashion Forward Roche Bobois tapped Japanese fashion icon Kenzo Takada for its latest designer collection. These ceramics are just one example of the bold color and pattern Takada brings to the brand. | Boston, roche-bobois.com

4. Deco Revival Michael Berman revisits the Art Deco era in his glamorous wallpaper collection for Fromental that introduces patterns and silhouettes inspired by the 1920s, ’30s, and ’40s. | Studio 534, Boston Design Center, s5boston.com

2. Nailed It! The bespoke furniture-making tradition is alive and well at Los Angeles-based Erinn V. Design Group. The Harpaz cabinet can be made with a variety of finishes and detailing. | M-Geough, Boston Design Center, m-geough.com

5. Numbers Game Punch up the curb appeal of your home with midcentury-modern house numbers designed by Richard Neutra. | Design Within Reach, Cambridge, Mass., dwr.com

3. Share the Luv Nordic minimalism meets timeless sophistication in Duravit’s new Luv series imagined by Danish designer Cecilie Manz. | Spritzo – The Portland Group, various New England locations, theportlandgroup.com

6. Kinetic Energy Embrace your inner scientist with Worlds Away’s new Molecular table lamp—a striking fixture with a tangle of stems and spheres. | Hudson, Boston, hudsonboston.com

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Premier Properties By maria L a piana

An Arts & Crafts Gem

Living History On Nantucket ant living and dining areas, five bedrooms, and a well-appointed kitchen. The interior is textbook Arts & Crafts. It’s extraordinary for A Rare Find its millwork and exceptional details—from cherry-framed ROOMS: 17 light fixtures and built-ins to 5 BEDROOMS 5 FULL BATHS mortise-and-tenon joinery, from inlaid 1 HALF BATH wood flooring to stonemasonry. Like 6,443 SQ. FT. any authentic Arts & Crafts–inspired The number-one claim for Hanover, New Hampshire, $3,995,000 home, it melds functionality with fine is that it is home to Dartmouth College. With that craftsmanship, but distinction comes a certain sophistication and cultural it’s luxurious, too, edge. But Hanover is located in the scenic Upper thanks to features Valley, along the Connecticut River, so it’s a natural like a greenhouse beauty, too. It offers numerous outdoor adventures, addition with plus all the charms of a classic New England town. the look and feel This Hanover home has more than location going for of an elegant it, but we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention that it sits ­conservatory. on the quiet, prestigious Rope Ferry Road, surrounded Duly Noted: by a golf course, pond, and nature preserve, all within The property is strolling distance of Dartmouth. Clad in white clapsometimes referred boards and capped by an architectural shingle roof, to as a “mini Monet the home on a stunning three-quarter-acre lot was garden.” The landdesigned by Vermont architect David Sellers and completed in 2002. It features an open plan with pleas| Continued on page 231

An Arts & Crafts Gem

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An Arts & Crafts Gem photos by Lars Blackmore; A Rare Find photos by Anne Day; Living History on Nantucket photos by Jeff Allen

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HISTORYWAS PRESERVED WarWick, rhode island 14:04 hours

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W H E R E E XC E L L E NC E L I V E S

WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS This custom luxurious & sleek open concept smart home features 11-room, elevator, state-of-the art systems, Poggenpohl kitchen, screened porch, lush grounds and 3-car garage. $9,490,000

NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS Distinctive brick Georgian estate privately set on 2.6 acres. Impeccable interior, magnificent grounds, elevator, pool, patio, tennis court, & carriage house w/ 5-car garage. $8,500,000

Represented by: Deborah M. Gordon & Carole Milott, Sales Associates D. 617.974.0404 | C. 617.721.0499

Represented by: Jayne Bennett Friedberg, Sales Associate C. 617.899.2111

CHESTNUT HILL, MASSACHUSETTS Private, 1 + acre estate in Olde Chestnut Hill, accessed by private driveway features grand living spaces, well-appointed kitchen, impressive master suite, and English Boxwood Gardens. $6,850,000

NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS Magnificent 1890 Victorian home offering timeless design.15 rooms, beamed ceiling, 5 fireplaces, gorgeous kitchen, 7 bedrooms, roof deck, wine room, and carriage house. $5,500,000

Represented by: Deborah M. Gordon, Sales Associate C. 617.974.0404

Represented by: Maxine Burtman & Mitchel Bernstein, Sales Associates MB. 617.818.2447 | MB. 617.645.1360

WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS Gorgeous Brick Front Colonial estate in the desirable Weston Country Club, with 17 rooms, 5 bedrooms, open floor plan, custom kitchen, patio, plus finished 3rd floor and lower level playroom. $4,850,000

WESTON, MASSACHUSETTS Stunning New Construction! Spectacular 15 rooms, 6 bedrooms custom designer home. Open floor plan, gourmet kitchen, large family room and a luxurious master suite. Gorgeous landscaped lot. $3,799,000

Represented by: Kathryn Alphas-Richlen, Sales Associate C. 781.507.1650

Represented by: Kathryn Alphas-Richlen, Sales Associate C. 781.507.1650

COLDWELLBANKERLUXURY.COM

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GLOUCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Exquisite shingle-style estate overlooking the Magnolia coastline with open layout, 11 rooms, oceanfront deck, custom kitchen, 3 bedroom suites, home theater, and patio. $3,475,000

SOUTH END, BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS New Penthouse duplex in Union Park with 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, chef’s kitchen, rear deck, full service roof deck, gas fireplace, 3 exposures & 2 rental garage spaces. $3,425,000

Represented by: Scott Smith, Sales Associate C. 617.750.2793

Represented by: Rob Kilgore & Alexandra Conigliaro, Sales Associates R. 617.504.7814 | A. 508.380.2231

MARBLEHEAD, MASSACHUSETTS Ocean & Island views! Classic turn of the century with state-of-the-art luxury, 5 bedroom, 5 ensuite bathrooms Peach’s Point seaside home with Association dock, beach, neighboring moorings. $3,299,000

WINCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS In a mature estate setting and resplendent in architectural detail, this sixbedroom Colonial Revival masterpiece was designed, inside and out, with family life in mind. $2,950,000

Represented by: Mary Stewart, Broker Sales Associate & Heather Kaznoski, Sales Associate M. 781.820.5676 | H. 781.576.9288

Represented by: Jonathan P. Radford, Sales Associate C. 617.335.1010

NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS Renovated Colonial Revival home with formal and informal rooms, 3 levels, built-ins, classic details, gourmet kitchen, 5 bedrooms, garage with workshop, patio, and pool. $2,950,000

MARBLEHEAD, MASSACHUSETTS Marblehead Neck home with ocean views. Formal rooms, open kitchen/family room, 4+ bedrooms, den, 2 fireplaces, master suite, wrap around porch and beautiful grounds. $2,695,000

Represented by: Deborah M. Gordon & Jayne Bennett Friedberg, Sales Associates D. 617.974.0404 | J. 617.899.2111

Represented by: Mary Stewart, Broker Sales Associate & Heather Kaznoski, Sales Associate M. 781.820.5676 | H. 781.576.9288

C O L D W E L L B A N K E R R ES I D E N T I A L B R O K E R AG E ©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Global Luxury and the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury logo service marks are registered or pending registrations owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 144204NE-7/17

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W H E R E E XC E L L E NC E L I V E S

CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS Custom Stone and Shingle Estate set on 2.16 acres offering 5 bedrooms, gourmet kitchen, walls of windows, soaring ceilings, gazebo, patio, and pergola. $2,575,000

NEEDHAM, MASSACHUSETTS Magnificent custom estate in coveted neighborhood, 12 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 4 fireplaces, rich architectural details, exquisite master suite with balcony, lush grounds & pool. $2,495,000

Represented by: Judy Boland, Sales Associate C. 978.407.0146

Represented by: Roger Komins, Sales Associate C. 617.510.1100

MARBLEHEAD, MASSACHUSETTS Renovated mid-century modern residence offering 10 rooms, 4 bedrooms, fireplace, open layout, chef’s kitchen, cathedral ceilings, redesigned grounds, and 2-car garage. $2,395,000

CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS Classic New England Colonial with 12 rooms, rich architectural details, custom built-ins, 4 fireplaces, 5 bedrooms, cherry kitchen, 3-car garage, and 5-star energy rating. $2,190,000

Represented by: Jude Toner & John Toner, Sales Associates JT: 781.704.6592 | JT. 781.704.6593

Represented by: Judy Boland, Sales Associate C. 978.407.0146

ESSEX, MASSACHUSETTS Exquisite shingle-style home set on 8.2 acres with cathedral living room, granite fireplace, 4 bedrooms, updated baths, 2 garages, chef’s kitchen, and rooftop tower. $1,950,000

DUXBURY, MASSACHUSETTS Rare, 19th Century Coastal Architecture home offering 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 11 ft. ceilings, updated kitchen and master bath, wrap-around porch, boathouse, plus deeded beach rights. $1,597,000

Represented by: Scott Smith, Sales Associate C. 617.750.2793

Represented by: Chris Swem, Sales Associate C. 781.561.5163

COLDWELLBANKERLUXURY.COM

C O L D W E L L B A N K E R R ES I D E N T I A L B R O K E R AG E

©2017 Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage. All Rights Reserved. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage fully supports the principles of the Fair Housing Act and the Equal Opportunity Act. Operated by a subsidiary of NRT LLC. Coldwell Banker, the Coldwell Banker Logo, Coldwell Banker Global Luxury and the Coldwell Banker Global Luxury logo service marks are registered or pending registrations owned by Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC. 144204NE-7/17

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RandallRealtors.com

T he R andall F amily

KinlinGrover.com

oF

C ompanies

Connecticut | Rhode Island | Massachusetts

PAGE TAFT

Mystic, CT

$1,999,000 Dennisport, MA

Stunning Colonial constructed in 1861 in the Italian Villa style. Private dock, direct access to the Sound, and a commanding Mystic River view.

Mystic Office

$1,460,000 Madison, CT

In this new complex of lovely stand alone condos this property sits on the waterfront with incredible views of the ocean in every direction.

$1,350,000

Charming year round or vacation home build in 1935 in the heart of Middle Beach, just steps from East Wharf Beach and bords Fence Creek.

860.572.9099 South Yarmouth Office 508.775.5200 Madison Office

203.245.1593

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Chester, CT

$1,150,000 West Hyannisport, MA

Craftsmanship and luxury finishes define this country French home. Open floor plan, high ceilings & formal living room with cast stone mantle.

Essex Office

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$925,000 Westerly, RI

Waterfront great views of Nantucket sound and Hyannis Port Golf course. Charming home with open floor plan Sunny kitchen opens into dining area.

860.767.5390 Osterville Office

$699,500

To be built by Meridian Custom Homes, The Wickford. Custom 2 story home with attached 2 car garage. 4 bedrooms 2.5 bathrooms.

508.420.1130 Watch Hill Office

401.258.7684

8/8/17 5:04 PM


What it means to “Experience the J Barrett Difference”

Our Website Makes It Easy The J Barrett & Company website is your “go-to” when you are looking for a new home. Our site offers easy and concise searches for the most current listings throughout the North Shore and Massachusetts that includes weekly Open Houses and community information right on our homepage. Whether it’s a first-time home, ocean front residence, equestrian property or investment opportunity, the J Barrett & Company website has everything you are looking for.

www.jbarrettrealty.com www.nsmoves.com

Prides Crossing Offered at $6,700,000 Paine Avenue Premier Residence on Beverly’s Gold Coast. Ocean panoramas from Beverly to Marblehead Harbor. 2.8-acre oceanfront property, southern exposure, deck. Fully renovated residence.

Beverly Farms Offered at $3,995,000 Waterfront Oasis. 4 acres with beach frontage, freshwater pond and in-ground pool next to sprawling fields. Mesmerizing views from this southfacing 5-bedroom, 7-bath home. A true sanctuary!

Essex Offered at $1,680,000 1684 John Burnham House. Expanded Saltbox with ell and library addition. 16 rooms. 9+ acres on Chebacco Lake. 2 bedroom rental cottage, large barn, outbuildings, gardens.

Hamilton Offered at $1,450,000 Amazing 3 bedroom Colonial home featuring a gourmet kitchen, 1st level master suite, office and sunroom overlooking the 10 acres of professionally landscaped gardens and lawns.

Hamilton Offered at $1,225,000 Lovely Colonial on 4 acres. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. Fireplaced Family Room has vaulted ceiling. Finished walk-out lower level, exercise and media rooms, hot tub room. In-ground heated pool.

Middleton Starting at $1,100,000 New luxury townhouse construction. Estates on the Green overlooking the Fernroft Country Club Golf Course. Open floor plan, 1st floor Master Suite, private deck, finished basement. 3 car garage.

George Needham

Kristal Pooler

Alle Cutler

e.d. dick group

“Experience the J Barrett Difference” isn’t just our motto – it’s our promise.

& C O M PA N Y

Find us on : JBarrettRealtyNorthShore

Deb Vivian

Anne LeBlanc-Snyder

Prides Crossing 978.922.2700 • Marblehead 781.631.9800 • Beverly 978.922.3683 Manchester-by-the-Sea 978.526.8555 • Gloucester 978.282.1315 • Ipswich 978.356.3444

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The North Shore’s Premier Real Estate Agency

Manchester $2,950,000 Desirable Eaglehead residence with commanding ocean views. Waterfront Contemporary sited on bluff. Ocean-side expansive windows. 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. Short distance to town and Singing Beach.

Holly Fabyan

Boxford Offered at $1,825,000 Exceptional design atop of a hill convenient to town. 5 bedrooms, 4.5 bathrooms. Set on 2.25 acres, featuring professionally landscaped yards and lush gardens.

John Adams

& C O M PA N Y

Beverly Farms Offered at $1,695,000 Stately Colonial on 1.3 acres convenient to West Beach, ocean, commuter rail and Village. Features breakfast room, pantry, updated kitchen. Pool, garage, French doors, and period details.

Mimi Pruett

Manchester Offered at $1,325,000 Well-appointed Contemporary. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. Soapstone entry, hardwood floors. All-Viking remodeled kitchen. 1st floor en suite bedroom, 2nd floor master suite. 3rd floor library.

Wenham Offered at $1,295,000 Rare offering! Stately Shingle style 5-bedroom, 3.5-bath home. Fully redesigned, renovated. Charm, character plus today’s amenities. Dramatic family room, chef’s kitchen, screened porch.

Marblehead Neck Offered at $1,228,000 Charming 4-bedroom, 2-bath Cottage Style home. Fireplaced living & dining rooms. Family room, country kitchen, 3-season porch, deck. Master suite has marble bath. 2014 roof, hot water tank.

Gloucester Offered at $989,000 Sweeping water views of Ipswich Bay to York, ME. Gorgeous down-to-the-studs 2012-2014 renovation plus additions, updated systems. 4 bedrooms, 3 full/2 half baths. Roof deck, fenced yard.

Essex Offered at $899,000 Saltbox Colonial abuts Cogswell’s Grant. 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. Substantial 2008/09 renovation included flooring, siding, windows, roof, furnace, electric, plumbing. Remodeled kitchen. Barn.

Lynnfield Offered at $859,900 Picture-Perfect Garrison 4-bedroom, 3.5-bath Colonial in Walnut Hill. Fully updated. Huge family room open to granite kitchen. 4-season sun room, deck. Finished Lower Level. Off Route 128.

Emily McPherson

Felicia Trupiano

Deb Evans

Julia Virden

The Cressy Team

The Lopes Bridge Group

www.jbarrettrealty.com J Barrett & Company, LLC supports the principles of both the Fair Housing and the Equal Opportunity Acts.

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MARION, MASSAChuSEttS

8/17/07

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Wareham Waterfront Contemporary

PINEY POINT WATERFRONT

CONVERSE POINT WATERFRONT

Rare Offering! 2.24 acre waterfront property with 239 feet of sandy beach located on Sippican’s outer harbor in Marion’s ultra-private enclave, Converse Point. Homes on this highly desired peninsula of land rarely become available, making this a unique opportunity to build your dream home or to restore the current home to its glory. Ownership of this magnificent property includes deeded rights to use of Converse Point pier, beach and tennis court. Moorings are also available. A true gem that must not be overlooked! 75 Moorings Road, Marion, Massachusetts

Exclusively listed at $2,750,000

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Sprawling waterfront compound with private dock and beach located in the This ContemporaryPiney home,Point set onneighborhood. over 13 acres in Set on 2.1 East Wareham, offers gorgeous waterviews of Shell Point Bay acres overlooking Buzzard’s Bay, this and surrounding marsh. Built in 1989, its 3,250 square feet lovely sq. ft. home the perfect space forbaths, generainclude first 5800 floor master suite, 3offers additional bedrooms, 3-1/2 tionsroom, of families gather, offering a main residence with laundry formal to dining room, den with gas fireplace, attached guestwith house. rareand property also offers and an large living room gas This fireplace spectacular views. two Modern kitchentwo includes Thermador kitchens, livinggranite spaces,countertops, three-season room, asovens, well as a and Sub-Zero refrigerator. complete large finishedDirect dedicated exercise room,Also 2 car garage,with and boathouse. walk-out deck, patio, and carassociation garage access tobasement, the waterwrap-around and very close proximity to3the with unfinished rooms above. Alarm system, generator, beach club, tennis court, and dock for deep-water access. central vacuum, outdoor shower, and workshop. 37 Pineyadds Point Road, Marion, Massachusetts Professional landscaping to this private, serene home.

Exclusively listed at $3,999,000 Exclusively listed at $1,600,000 Converse Company Realtors 166 Front Street, P.O. Box 416 Marion, Massachusetts 02738 Tel: 508-748-0200 | Fax: 508-748-2337

WWW.CONVERSECOMPANYREALTORS.COM

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Premier Properties

Continued from page 222 |

scape is sculptural and artfully designed, the flower beds brimming with beautiful blooms. Low stone walls and a five-tiered terrace add visual interest and afford privacy. Manicured boxwoods flourish throughout, while mature specimen trees call to mind an enchanting arboretum. Contact: Celina Barton, John Bertolami, Big Green Real Estate, Hanover, N.H., (603) 643-3942, twentyropeferry.com, MLS# 4634420

A Rare Find

Addison Mizner was a self-taught architect whose revival of Mediterranean and Spanish Colonial architecture left an indelible stamp on South Florida in the 1920s. This house in Colebrook, Connecticut, is the only remaining residence designed by Mizner north of the Mason-Dixon Line. Rock Hall, as it is known, was built in 1912 for Jerome Alexandre, scion of the Alexandre Steamship Company. The meticulously restored, nearly 10,000-square-foot manor house sits on twenty-two-plus acres. It is replete with original architectural details—among them stained- and leadedglass windows, beamed ceilings, and chestnut-paneled walls. A restoration was executed with reverence and authenticity in 2005. New mechanical systems were installed throughout, along with period-appropriate fixtures, custom finishes, and wallcoverings. In 2010, Rock Hall was listed on ROOMS: 18 the National Register of Historic Places. 8 BEDROOMS 5 FULL BATHS Today the home’s first floor features a 1 HALF BATH stunning great hall—with a striking, 9,600 SQ. FT. solid poured-concrete fireplace surround $1,750,000 and mantel—a formal dining room, library, spectacular sun porch, and a chef ’s kitchen with a butler’s pantry and a working, all-wood walk-in refrigerator. A quartet of en suite bedrooms with fireplaces graces the second floor. And on the third floor you’ll find a spacious game room, exercise room, period movie theater, and an exquisite, open-plan guest suite. The property includes an orchard, mature perennial gardens, an in-ground pool with pool house, a stone summer house, tennis courts, and walking trails. Duly Noted: Although Mizner would ultimately be made famous for his grand warm-weather residences, he was very much in tune with New England when he designed Rock Hall. He used native Connecticut field-

stone and stucco on the facade, and added leaded-glass windows to frame views of one of Connecticut’s largest private collections of specimen trees. Contact: Thomas McGowan, Harney Real Estate, Salisbury, Conn., (860) 435-2200, harneyre.com, MLS# L10078524

Living History on Nantucket

Noteworthy on more than a few fronts, this beauty on Nantucket is widely believed to be one of the best examples of 1830s Greek Revival architecture on the island. It was built by a successful whaling captain, Charles Grant, and it shows. Its traditionally narrow facade, ionic columns, and pediment entry are a few of the home’s distinctive details that are still intact today. Built in 1835, the residence sits on a tidy lot with neatly trimmed mature landscaping and has everything you’d want in an “in-town” home. It’s been called “the granddaddy of the neighborhood.” The interior features three main floors of family living space, as well as an apartment on the lower level. A spacious entry opens to a formal sitting room that leads to a formal dining room that connects to a big kitchen with a mudroom. There are three bedrooms on the second floor: a large bedroom that faces the street off the main landing, a second bedroom with sitting room, and a smaller bedroom with access to an expansive deck in back. Take the back stairs from the second floor to a ROOMS: 12 roomy open space, a full bath, and a deck 6 BEDROOMS 5 FULL BATHS offering views of Nantucket Sound. In 1 HALF BATH addition, there are three bedrooms, two 4,560 SQ. FT. baths, and a kitchenette in the finished $5,495,000 basement. Just a few of the splendid details: original wide-plank floorboards, wooden beams, a grand curved staircase, and multiple fireplaces crafted from New Zealand marble. Duly Noted: The whaling industry generated great wealth and prosperity in the mid-nineteenth century on Nantucket. And with it came a new sensibility, a style of architecture that represented a departure from the common Quaker homes that dotted the island. In his fifty-six years at sea, Captain Charles Grant (1814-1906) brought home more barrels of oil than any other Nantucket whaling captain, so he was one of the few who could afford such a stately home. Contact: Cam Gammill, Fisher Real Estate, Nantucket, Mass., (508) 332-9149, fishernantucket. com, MLS# 21712845  September–October 2017 | New England Home  231

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Resources

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

GOOD BONES: GREAT PLANES PAGES 52–57

Architecture: Colin Flavin, Flavin Architects, Boston, (617) 227-6717, flavinarchitects.com Builder: Brendan O’Reilly, Gristmill Builders, Waterbury Center, Vt., (802) 882-8410, gristmillbuilders.com Landscape design: Keith Wagner, Wagner Hodgson Landscape Architecture, Burlington, Vt., (802) 8640010, wagnerhodgson.com Page 54: Mah Jong sofas from Roche Bobois, roche-bobois.com

STATE OF GRACE PAGES 102–111

Architecture: Patrick Ahearn, Patrick Ahearn Architect, Boston, (617) 266-1710, patrickahearn.com Interior design: Cate Caruso, STUDIO C, New York City, (646) 717-4153, studiocid.com Builder: Gerret C. Conover, Conover Restorations, Edgartown, Mass., (508) 627-1617 Interior millwork: Anderson & McQuaid, Cambridge, Mass., (617) 876-3250, andersonmcquaid.com Cabinetmaker: Triple Crown Cabinet & Millwork, Sandwich, Mass., (508) 833-6500, triplecrowncabinetandmillwork.com Landscape design: Robbie Hutchison, Donaroma’s Nursery & Landscape Services, Edgartown, Mass., (508) 627-3036, donaromas.com Swimming pool consultant: Koby Kirwin, Exteriors by Koby Kirwin, Naples, Fla., (239) 2874195, kobykirwin.com Upholstery workroom: Versailles Drapery & Upholstery, Long Island City, N.Y., (210) 533-2059, versaillesdrapery.com Upholstered furniture fabrication: Jonas, New York City, (212) 691-2777, jonasworkroom.com Page 105: Sofas from George Smith, georgesmith. com, with Claremont fabric, claremontfurnishing.com; chandelier from Charles Edwards, charles​edwards. com; area rug from Beauvais, beauvaiscarpets. com; Flooded Grasslands painting over fireplace by Tarjan, tarjanstudio.com; floor lamp from Vaughan, vaughandesigns.com. Page 106: Dining table and chairs from Dessin Fournir, dessinfournir.com. Page 107: Cabinets by Triple Crown Cabinet & Millwork; counters and backsplash from Caesarstone, caesarstoneus.com; bar stools designed by STUDIO C with Rogers & Goffigon fabric, rogersandgoffigon. com; pendant lights from Charles Edwards; bar cabinet from Dessin Fournir. Pages 108–109: Guestroom bed from Dmitriy & Co., dmitriyco.com; sconces and floor lamp from Vaughan; chair from George Smith; master bed from Savoir Beds, savoirbeds.com, with Rose Tarlow upholstery, rosetarlow.com; area rug and nightstands from Holland & Sherry, hollandandsherry.com; nightstand lamps from Illumé, illumenyc.com; lounge chair and ottomans from George Smith; bench fabricated by Jonas. Page 110: Patio furniture from Sutherland, sutherlandfurniture.com, with fabric by Sunbrella, sunbrella. com; windows from JB Sash & Door, jbsash.com; exterior doors and shutters from Atlantic Premium Shutters, atlanticpremiumshutters.com.

GARAGE CHIC PAGES 112–121

Architecture: Mary Dorsey Brewster, Brewster Thornton Group Architects, Providence, R.I., (401) 861-1600, brewsterthornton.com Interior design: Wendi Dicely-Scalora, taste, Jamestown, R.I., (401) 423-3639, tastedesigninc.com Builder: Pariseault Builders, Warwick, R.I., (401) 7380524, pariseault.com Interior millwork: Jutras Woodworking, Greenville, R.I., (401) 949-8101, justraswoodworking.com Landscape contractor: Bel Terra Landscaping, Cranston, R.I., (401) 826-6660 Audio-Video design and installation: Sound FX, West Warwick, R.I., (401) 623-8090, soundfxonline.com Page 112: Trafalgar wall-mounted lanterns from Hinkley, hinkleylighting.com; garage doors and pulls from Doug Mockett and Co., mockett.com. Pages 116–117: Area rug by Concepts International through Rustigian Rugs, rustigianrugs.com; D’Urso swivel lounge chair from Hive Modern, hivemodern. com; sectional from PJ Bergeron, pjbergeron.com, with fabric from Brentano; console behind sectional from Brueton, brueton.com; bar backsplash tile from Stonesource, stonesource.com; calacatta counter from Quality Tile, qualitytileri.com; satin nickel faucet from Blanco, blanco.faucetdirect.com. Pages 118–119: Buffet wall tile from Stonesource; buffet countertop marble from Quality Tile; dining table and benches from Brueton; Milo Baughman dining armchairs from Design Within Reach, dwr. com; Duplo pendant light by Vibia, landing.vibia.com; kitchen countertop from Quality Tile; counter stools from Brueton; refrigerator, microwave drawer, range hood, and dishwasher from Thermador, thermador. com; backsplash glass mosaic tile from Hill and Harbor Tile, hillharbourtile.com. Pages 120–121: Master bath sink from Kohler, kohler.com; shower tile from Hill and Harbor Tile; backsplash tile from Waterworks, waterworks.com; faucet, shower heads, towel bar, tissue holder, robe hook all from Kohler; master bedroom pendant lights from Design Within Reach; swivel chair from Lee Industries, leeindustries.com; leather-paneled wall by Jutras Woodworking; area rug from Rustigian Rugs.

SMOOTH SAILING PAGES 122–133

Architecture: Peter McDonald, Peter McDonald Architect, N. Eastham, Mass., (508) 240-0843, capecodarch.com Interior design: Lisa Tharp, Lisa Tharp Interior Architecture + Design, Boston, (978) 505-1310, lisatharp.com Builder: Clay Wilkins, Wilkins Construction, Chatham, Mass., (508) 241-0234, wilkinsconstructionllc.com Landscape design: Phil Cheney, Cheney Landscape Design, South Yarmouth, Mass., (508) 394-1373, cheneylandscapedesign.com Page 122: Violinmaker’s table by Jeff Soderbergh Custom Sustainable Furnishings, jeffsoderbergh.com; wing chairs by Ferrell Mittman, ef-lm.com through The Martin Group, martingroupinc.com, with fabric by TDC, thedesignconnection.us; side chair fabric from Libeco linens, libeco.com, through Jack + Toba, jackandtoba.com, fabricated by Susan’s Workroom, susansworkroom.com; pendant light by Jeffrey Alan Marks for Palecek, palacek.com; draperies by Acorn Design Center, acorndesigncenter.com, with fabric by Pindler, pindler.com. Pages 123–125: Chairs by Lee Industries, lee​

industries.com; coffee table from Bungalow Classic, bungalowclassic.com; Rocky Shore, Mohegan painting over fireplace by Roy Parkinson through Powers Gallery, powersgallery.com; rug from Merida, merida​ studio.com; floor lamps from Modhaus, ­modhaus. com; rope console from Bungalow Classic; table lamps from Bliss Home & Design, blisshome​and​ design.com; folding bench from Bungalow Classic; window seat cushion fabric from Pindler, fabricated by Susan’s Workroom; pillows by Betsy Griffin Sewing and Quilting, betsygriffin.com; window shade fabric by Schumacher, fschumacher.com, fabricated by Acorn Design Center. Page 126: Teak countertops by Carpenter & MacNeille Architects and Builders, ­carpentermac​ neille.com; island countertop from Neolith, neolith. com; range from La Cornue, lacornueusa.com; faucet from Kohler, kohler.com; Gwenwood island pendants by Darryl Carter for Urban Electric, urbanelectricco. com; counter chairs from Richard Wrightman; richardwrightman.com; photo above range from Coastal Nantucket, coastalnantucket.com. Page 127: Sofas from Mainly Baskets, mainly​baskets. com, with cushion fabric by Pindler, fabricated by Susan’s Workroom; coffee table from Delicious Designs; chair from Nantucket Looms, nantucket​ looms.com. Page 128: Reclaimed-wood shower floors and vanity tops by Jeff Soderbergh Custom Sustainable Furnishings; vanity bases from Winston Flowers, winstonflowers.com; faucet from Barber Wilsons & Co., barwil.co.uk; sconces by Thomas O’Brien for Visual Comfort, visualcomfortlightinglights.com; roman shade fabric by Kravet, kravet.com, fabricated by Acorn Design Center. Pages 130–131: Daybed and fabric by Cisco Brothers, ciscobrothers.com; pillow fabrics by Kravet, fabricated by Acorn Design Center; settee from Coastal Nantucket; lounge chairs from Lisa Tharp Collection; console from Delicious Designs, delicious​ designshome.com; rugs from Dash & Albert, dashand​ albert.annieselke.com; vintage book papers from Thoreauly Antiques, thoreaulyantiques.com; goggles from Nesting on Main, nestingonmain.com. Page 133: Interior barn doors from Portland Architectural Salvage, portlandsalvage.com; canopy bed from Lisa Tharp Collection, lisatharp.com, crafted by Steve Manning, manningscabinetshop.com; lantern and bedding from Lisa Tharp Collection; settee from Cisco Brothers; bedside tables from Bradshaw Kirchofer, bradshawkirchofer.com; area rug from Williston Weaves/A.J. Rose Carpet & Flooring, ajrose. com; guestroom wallpaper from Phillip Jeffries, phillipjeffries.com; night table from Noir, noirfurniturela.com.

POLISHED TO PERFECTION PAGES 134–145

Architecture: Adolfo Perez, Adolfo Perez Architect, Newton Centre, Mass., (617) 527-7442, adolfoperez.com Interior design: Manuel de Santaren, Boston, (617) 330-6998, manueldesantaren.com Builder: S+H Construction, Cambridge, Mass., (617) 876-8286, shconstruction.com Landscape design: Matthew Cunningham, Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design, Stoneham, Mass., (617) 583-5826, matthew-cunningham.com Landscape contractor: Martin Lucyk, Martin Lucyk Landscape Construction, Maynard, Mass., (617) 6106898, martinlucyk.com Steel fabricator: Paradis MetalWorks, Attleboro Falls, Mass., (508) 316-3312, paradismetalworks.com

232  New England Home | September–October 2017

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oriental | contemporary | vintage

Resources Fabricator for reclaimed granite paving: Stone Farm, Monroe, Conn., and Newburyport, Mass., (877) 977-0004 Fountain consultant: Sean Cudmore, Pond Creations by Sean, Marlborough, Mass., (508) 561-4670, pondcreationsbysean.com Garden management and maintenance: The Garden Concierge, Sudbury, Mass., (978) 261-5192, thegardenconcierge.com Interior millwork: Kochman Reidt + Haigh Cabinetmakers, Stoughton, Mass., (781) 573-1500, cabinetmakers.com Cabinetmakers: Kochman Reidt + Haigh Cabinetmakers and Michael Humphries Woodworking, Northfield, Mass., (413) 498-0018, michaelhumphries.com Woodwork finishes: Wayne Towle Master Refinishing & Restoration, Needham, Mass., (781) 449-1313, waynetowle.com

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

Pages 134–135: Sconces and console table designed by Manuel de Santaren; accessories and antiquities from Axel Vervoordt, axel-vervoordt.com. Pages 136–137: Chairs by Jean Michel Frank through 1stdibs, 1stdibs.com; chenille chair fabric from Studio Four, studiofournyc.com; eighteenth-century Chinese cocktail table from Eskenazi, eskenazi.co.uk; cabinets by Ico Parisi through Maison Gerard, maison​ gerard.com; sofa and lounge chairs fabricated by Dmitry & Company, dmitriyco.com, with linen fabric from Studio Four; accessories from Axel Vervoordt; sofa from Muse Bespoke with Loro Piana fabric through Charles Spada; toss pillow fabrication by Eliot Wright Workroom, ewworkroom.com; Loro Piana pillow fabric through Charles Spada; embroidered pillow fabric by Miguel Cisterna through Maison Gerard; Leleu chairs through Maison Gerard; lamps from Herve van der Straeten, vanderstraeten.fr; end tables by Manuel de Santaren; cocktail table by Eric Schmitt through Pucci, ralphpucci.net. Page 138: Desk designed by Manuel de Santaren; area rug designed by Manuel de Santaren through Studio Four; vintage Dunbar desk chair from 1stdibs; desk lamp from Bernd Goeckler, bgoecklerantiques. com; ottoman from J. Robert Scott, jrobertscott.com; chaise fabric from Loro Piana through Charles Spada, fabricated by Dmitriy & Company; wool/silk curtain fabric from Muse Bespoke, muse-bespoke.com; accessories from Axel Vervoordt through Webster & Company, webstercompany.com. Page 139: Dining room chandelier by Achille Salvagni through Maison Gerard; dining table and cabinets designed by Manuel de Santaren; dining chair fabrication by J. Robert Scott with leather from Webster & Company; carpet designed by Manuel de Santaren from Studio Four; Santa Teresa woven wool/silk sheer curtain fabric from Muse Bespoke. Page 140: Sink, vanity, and mirror designed by Adolfo Perez; fittings, fixtures, and mirrors from Designer Bath, designerbath.com; table from Axel Vervoordt; wallpaper from Phillip Jeffries, phillipjeffries.com; Cirrus channel light from Edge Lighting, edgelighting.com. Page 141: Pendant light from Ingo Maurer, ingo-maurer.com; table from Axel Vervoordt; dining chairs from 1stdibs, in ivory leather from Webster & Company; sconce by Manuel de Santaren. Pages 142–143: Outdoor furniture from Casa Outdoor Boston, casaoutdoorboston.com. Page 144: Vanity designed by Adolfo Perez; fittings

and fixtures from Designer Bath. Page 145: Bed fabricated by Dmitry & Company with linen from Studio Four; bedding from Muse Bespoke; carpet from Studio Four; bedside tables from J. Robert Scott; bedside lamps from Axel Vervoordt; Roman shades from Studio Four.

SPECIAL FOCUS: KITCHENS AND BATHS PAGES 146–157

History Lesson: Pages 146–147 Architecture: Christopher Dallmus, Design Associates, Cambridge, Mass., (617) 661-9082, design-associates.com Interior design: Karen Newman, Pentimento Interiors, Newton, Mass., (617) 840-4204, pentimentointeriors.com Builder: Howard Brothers Builders, Westwood, Mass., (781) 326-1409, howardbrothersbuilders.com Cabinetry: Ian Mentasti, Modern Heritage, Rowley, Mass., (781) 534-9200, modernheritage.com Open for Business: Pages 148–149 Architectural and interior design: Robin Gannon, Robin Gannon Interiors, Lexington, Mass., (781) 862-0466, robingannoninteriors.com Builder: Claude Sangiolo, Casa Sangiolo, Auburndale, Mass., (617) 964-5112

Modern Makeover: Pages 150–151 Architecture and interior design: David Hacin and Matthew Woodward, Hacin + Associates, Boston, (617) 426-0077, hacin.com Kitchen design: Rosemary Porto, Poggenpohl Boston, Boston, (617) 236-5253, poggenpohl.com Builder: Chris Monaco, Monaco Johnson Group, Salem, Mass., (978) 745-0606, monaco-johnson.com Lighting: Reflex Lighting, Boston, (617) 269-4510, reflexlighting.com Coastal Chic: Pages 152–153 Architecture: James Velleco, Grazado Velleco Architects, Marblehead, (781) 631-4949, grazadovelleco.com Interior architecture and design: Anita Clark, Anita Clark Design, Salem, Mass., (978) 741-1134, anitaclarkdesign.com Kitchen design: Barbara Baratz, Chestnut Hill, Mass., (781) 308-1423 Cabinetry: Venegas and Company, Boston, (617) 4398800, venegasandcompany.com Builder: Bruce Paradise, Paradise Construction, Swampscott, Mass., (781) 599-1360 A Room with a View: Pages 154–155 Architectural design: Milford Cushman, Stowe, Vt., (802) 253-2169, cushmandesign.com Interior design: Carol Flanagan, Carol Flanagan Interior Design, Greenwich, Conn., (203) 769-1869, carolflanagandesign.com Builder: Patterson & Smith Construction, Stowe, Vt., (802) 253-3757, pattersonandsmith.com Spa Treatment: Pages 156–157 Architecture: Karen B. Kempton, West Barnstable, Mass., (508) 362-3447, karenkempton.com Interior design: Liz Stiving-Nichols and Liane Thomas, Martha’s Vineyard Interior Design, Vineyard Haven, Mass., (508) 687-9555, marthasvineyard​ interiordesign.com Builder: Eastward Companies, Chatham, Mass., (508) 945-2300, eastwardco.com Vanity and tub surround: Bruce Fraser, B.R. Fraser Woodwork, Sandwich, Mass., (508) 477-7505

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Ad Index

A guide to the products and professionals in this issue’s featured homes a Blade of Grass 84 A.J. Rose Carpets & Flooring 193 Ann Sacks 158 Audio Video Design 210 Authentic Designs 216 Back Bay Shutter Co., Inc. 173 Bertola Custom Homes & Remodeling 85 Bisousweet Confections 167 Boston International Fine Art Show 239 Boston Stone Restoration 194 Bradford’s Rug Gallery 234 C.H. Newton Builders, Inc. 29 California Closets 37 Catamount Builders 51 Catherine Truman Architects 41 Chip Webster Architecture 219 Clarke Distributors 159 Classic Kitchens & Interiors 87 Coldwell Banker Previews International 224–226 Colony Rug Company, Inc. 221 The Converse Company Realtors 230 Cosentino N.A. 68–69 Crown Point Cabinetry 70–71 Cumar, Inc. 59 Cutting Edge Homes 88 Cypress Design 89 Daher Interior Design 1 Dan Gordon Landscape Architects 19 Davis Frame Company 194 DiMauro Architects 49 Dover Rug & Home 47 Downsview Kitchens 66 Dream Kitchens 72–73 Elms Interior Design 12–13 Fagan Door 219 Falcetti Pianos 213 FBN Construction Co., LLC back cover Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting 74–75 Flavin Architects 17 Frank Webb’s Bath Center 76–77 Garage Headquarters 210 Gregorian Oriental Rugs 180 Gregory Lombardi Design 169 Hampden Design+Construction 90 Heading Home to Dinner 211 Herrick & White Architectural Millwork 171 Hutker Architects 24–25 The Inspired Bath 78–79 Installations Plus, Inc. 91 Institute of Classical Architecture & Art (Bulfinch Awards) 236 International Builders, Inc. 45 J Barrett & Company Real Estate 228–229 Jamestown LP/Boston Design Center 27 Janine Dowling Design, Inc. 32 Jennifer Palumbo, Inc. 53 The Junior League of Boston 235 JW Construction, Inc. 182 Kenneth Vona Construction, Inc. 2–3 Kevin Cradock Builders, Inc. 199 Kinlin Grover 227 Kistler and Knapp Builders, Inc. 192 Kitchen Views at National Lumber 92 Landry & Arcari Rugs and Carpeting 163 LDa Architecture & Interiors 191 LeBlanc Jones Landscape Architects, Inc. 64 Leslie Fine Interiors, Inc. 8–9 Living Swell 100 Local Flow Logistics 63 Longfellow Design Build 93 M–Geough Company, Inc. 18 The MacDowell Company, Inc. 189

Main Street Kitchens at Botello Home Center 86 Marine Home Center 28 Martha’s Vineyard Interior Design 221 Marvin Windows and Doors 33 Merida 197 MGa | Marcus Gleysteen Architects 61 Mid-Cape Home Centers 215 Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams 16 Moniques Bath Showroom 94 Morehouse MacDonald & Associates, Inc. 14–15 Mott & Chace Sotheby’s International Realty 223 Mougalian Rugs 217 MWI Fiber–Shield 187 Nancy Serafini Interior Design 95 Newton Kitchens & Design 80–81 Nicole A. Hogarty Designs 34 Ogunquit Playhouse 236 Parterre Garden Services 215 Patrick Ahearn Architect, LLC 185 PEAK Event Services 230 Pellettieri Associates, Inc. 181 Platemark Design 96 Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects Builders 39 Portico Brewing 167 Prospect Hill Antiques 208 Rachel Reider Interiors, Inc. 43 Roche Bobois 4–5 Room & Board 20 Roomscapes Luxury Design Center 50 Runtal North America, Inc. 99 Ryan Associates 201 S+H Construction 101 Salem Plumbing Supply Designer Bath 55 Sally Weston Associates 205 Saltsman Brenzel Design Construction 97 Sea-Dar Construction 82–83 Sewfine 65 Shope Reno Wharton 58 Simon Pearce 179 Somerset Home 63 Splash Kitchen and Bath Showroom 98 Stark Carpet  inside front cover Studio A Design 23 Sudbury Design Group, Inc. 10–11 sullivan + associates architects 216 Systems Design & Integration, Inc. 217 The Tilery at Trees Place 30 Thread 44 TMS Architects 6–7 Tyler & Sash 207 Ugol Woodworks, LLC 233 Upstate Door, Inc. 233 Valor Fireplaces 195 Walpole Outdoors 213 Wayne Towle Master Finishing & Restoration 203 Wickham Hardwood Flooring 188 Wiggly Bridge Distillery 165 Wolfers inside back cover Woodmeister Master Builders 31 Youngblood Builders, Inc. 175 ZEN Associates, Inc. 56–57

New England Home, September–October 2017, Volume 13, Number 1 © 2017 by New England Home Magazine, LLC. All rights reserved. Permission to reprint or quote excerpts granted by written request only. New England Home (USPS 024-096) is published 6 times a year (JAN, MAR, MAY, JULY, SEP, NOV) by New England Home Magazine, LLC, 530 Harrison Ave, Ste 302, Boston, MA 02118, (617) 938-3991. Periodical postage paid at Boston, MA, and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to New England Home, PO Box 5034, Brentwood, TN 37024. For change of address include old address as well as new address with both zip codes. Allow four to six weeks for change of address to become effective. Please include current mailing label when writing about your subscription.

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Sketch Pad

Design Ideas in the Making

my firm, we design both architec• At ture and decoration as one organic

whole, because that’s how we see it. For me, conceptualizing a house always starts with sketches; I am old-school that way. I draw the “macro” to the “micro”—every detail is carefully considered, as you will see in these sketches for the master bedroom of an ongoing project of ours in New Hampshire. I love to draw, and take great pleasure in the process.  | Thomas Henry Egan III, Evolve Residential, Boston, (617) 424-0003, evolveresidential.com

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Experience the best Today’s discerning homeowners, interior designers, architects and builders select Wolfers, New England’s premier lighting, motorized shade and complete smart home integration company as their go-to resource. Experience the difference – from our selection of the most sought-after lighting brands, such as Hubbardton Forge, to the latest in LED technology – and work with our expert consultants, who will help bring your ideas to light.

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