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Теги: magazine magazine new england home
Год: 2021
Текст
The Downsview cabinetry collection is custom crafted in North America and available exclusively through select kitchen design showrooms
For complete listing visit our website: www.downsviewkitchens.com
To experience the Collections
visit one of our flagship showrooms
DOWNSVIEW of BOSTON
One Design Center Place - Suite 241, Boston, MA
(857) 317-3320 www.downsviewofboston.com
DOWNSVIEW of DANIA
1 855 Griffin Road - Suite C212, Dania Beach, FL
(954) 927-1 100 www.downsviewofdania.com
DOWNSVIEW of JUNO
1 2800 U.S. Highway 1 - Suite 100, Juno Beach, FL
(561) 799-7700 www.downsviewofiuno.com
DOWNSVIEW
KITCHENS Г
AND FINE CUSTOM CABINETRY
DOWNSVIEW KITCHENS 2635 Rena Road, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada L4T 1G6 Telephone |905) 677-9354 © ©downsviewkitchens
PHOTOGRAPHY BY MICHAEL J. LEE
DAHER INTERIOR DESIGN
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224 CLARENDON STREET | BOSTON, MA | 617.236.0355 | DAHERINTERIORDESIGN.COM
AN AWARD-WINNING FULL SERVICE
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CELEBRATING 25 YEARS
Leslie Fine
INTERIORS, INC.
www.lesliefineinteriors.com
Please call us at 617-236-2286 to arrange a consultation | 224 Clarendon Street, Boston
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MEGAN LORENZ PHOTO
DESIGN YOUR BEST LIFE.
PHOTO: MICHAEL J. LEE
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& ' ‘ r .•” :Лл 4/ j
2021
Best of Houzz
Design
BESTS
BOSTON
HOME”
Landscape Architecture | Construction | Estate Care
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Technology
to Fit Your
Lifestyle
In city apartments like this luxe NYC
penthouse, space is at a premium, but that
doesn't mean comfort needs to be neglected.
Systems Design & Integration designed and
installed a fully automated Savant control system
so our client can operate their SDI-designed-
and-programmed Lutron Homeworks QS lighting
system, Lutron smart shades, whole house audio,
video, and security cameras, and Coastal Source
outdoor speakers from their phones, iPads,
dedicated touch pads, or a universal remote.
The penthouse's robust home network includes
wireless access points for further ease of use.
We were even able to design a perfectly sized,
fully ventilated AV rack to fit inside a closet,
completely out of sight. To elevate the family
room, a black-grain solid-wood frame custom
designed by Leon Speakers encases the TV and
the sound bar, hiding wires and seamlessly match-
ing the rest of the room for a streamlined look.
From sales, design, and prewire, to installation,
programming, and maintenance, SDI is here to
match your home's technology to your unique
lifestyle. Our projects span the country and
include primary residences and second homes.
We are a Homeworks QS Lutron Gold and Savant
Platinum dealer. Visit our new experience center
in Needham, Massachusetts, this fall.
robingaiinon i nteriors.com
The Mac Dowell C
ompany
scape
Architecture
TlieMacDowellCompany.com - Wjston, MA - 781.899-9393
September October
VOLUME 17. ISSUE NO. 1
Features
162 French
Connection
Designer Duncan Hughes
spins Parisian nostalgia into
an atelier-inspired Back Bay
apartment
176 Breathe Easy
A laid-back Martha’s
Vineyard guesthouse and
bam capture the many
layers of island life.
186 Second Act
A thoughtful renovation
rekindles the longtime
owners’ love for their
Newton home.
196 Out of
the Blue
A modem lake house
defies convention
by embracing its
environment
Cover photograph by Michael J. Lee
29
Scptcmber Oct()bcг
VOLUME 17. ISSUE NO. 1
/ lerc & There
45 Good Bones
A Maine retreat merges a regional
vernacular and a modem architectural
aesthetic.
57 Kitchens We Love
The freshest kitchens feature
materials, textures, and palettes rich
in personality.
80 Things We Love
Rejuvenate your home with product
introductions reflecting alluring craft
and creativity.
S8 Smith on Style
Editor at large Clinton Smith shares
the scoop on all things home.
90 Special Spaces
A new garden folly conceals a
grand library atop an otherworldly
nymphaeum.
100 5 Under 40
Meet the talented young design
professionals who make up our
twelfth annual slate of winners.
The Good Life
210 On the Market
A few perfect places for
fall leaf peeping.
224 The Scene
A look back at a host
of design-related events.
232 Last Look
Grade and New Ravenna
partner on a collection
of mosaics.
Special A larkcting
Section
129 Distinctive
Kitchens and
Baths
tn Every Issue
34 Editor’s Note
218 Design Dispatches
226 Resources
Advertiser Index
3<>
Michael J. Lee Photography
м
MANDARINA
INTERIOR DESIGN STUDIO
MandarinaStudio.net | 617.297.1495
WELCOME HOME...
THE PLACE
CREATING A
MODERN HOME.
Our 8,000-square-foot showroom
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including TEAM 7, LEICHT, Rolf-Benz,
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2 BATTERY WHARF, BOSTON, MA 02109
617-443-0700 | DIVINEDESIGNCENTER.COM
Welcome
re you ready?
This fall marks a return to events,
and our season opener, the annual
5 Under 40 Awards celebration, pulls
out all the stops with a new venue—
the recently restored, historic
SoWa Power Station—in the SoWa Art +
Design District, our own ‘hood. I’ve had
my eye on this building for years,
and I can’t wait to see so many of you
and properly fete not only our 2021
winners but the class of 2020 as well.
You can read all about this year’s inductees on page 100.
Soon after, in October, the Luxury Home Design Summit makes the
most of autumn on the Cape as we gather at the Chatham Bars Inn for
long-overdue networking and an in-person exchange of ideas. And
that’s not all: after a year hiatus, the New England Design Hall of Fame
is back with a gala at the InterContinental Boston to honor new
inductees on November 11.
And that’s just us! There are plenty more design-industry events
rolling out this fall—for designers and design enthusiasts alike—and
thank goodness for that because when creatives get together, the
resulting frisson can change lives. Take, for example, a special group
effort fourteen years in the making: as I write this in July, Tommy’s Place,
envisioned by founder Tim O’Connell as a dream vacation home for
families with kids fighting cancer, has just welcomed its first guests.
Professionals from every corner of the residential-design community—
with an assist from interiors maven and HGTV personality
Taniya Nayak—lent their various talent, expertise, and time to craft
this unique kid-centric getaway in Falmouth, Massachusetts, complete
with vibrantly themed guest rooms, indoor and outdoor recreation
space, and an after-hours lounge for the grown-ups.
See you out there, friends.
P.S.
When the SoWa Power Station
was built in 1892, it was the
largest electrical power plant in
the world—and a source of civic
pride for Bostonians living in
the “Hub of the Universe.”
The Central Power Station, as
it was known at the time, was
designed to power the first unified
transportation company in the
country (later the MBTA) and
built to endure functionally as
well as aesthetically. But rapid
advances in technology outpaced
the CPS, and by 1912, it was
no longer needed. The huge triple-
eaved engine room was used to
house old street cars, and, over
the years, gradually fell into
decay. However, the steel-truss
construction and two-foot-thick
walls were still strong when
GTI Properties bought the parcel
of land from the MBT?\ in 1999,
and eventually the time was right
for a full restoration.
JENNA TALBOTT
@jennatalbott
top to BOTTOM: The SoWa Power
Station circa 1940 and today.
In Print
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call 800-765-1225
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Portrait by Jessica Delaney. Power station photographs courtesy of Historic New England (top) and GTI Properties (bottom)
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Meaghan O'Neill, Debra Judge Silber
Contributing Photographers
Allegra Anderson. Trent Bell.
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Read McKendree, Dan Nystedt.
Hannah Osofsky. Greg Premru, Nat Rea.
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Editorial Submissions
Designers, architects, builders, and
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edit@neh omemag.com.
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DESIGN DISCOVERIES FROM AROUND NEW ENGLAND
COASTAL CONNECTION
A Maine retreat merges a regional vernacular and a modern
architectural aesthetic, by lisa h. speidel
Photography by Trent Bell
45
I ICTOSFI here GOOD BONES
The flat-roof connector
widens the living and
dining rooms; the
cantilevered deck with a
covered porch and glass
rail is a scenic spot for
morning coffee.
_ t was serendipity,
say Jeffrey Hunter and Janet
Griffin, that led them to the
property they would purchase
in Stonington, Maine. One
day, while summering on the
island, they spotted a For Sale
sign by an abandoned auto-body
shop at the top of a dead-end
road. Further investigation
led them down past an exposed
ledge where they discovered
a dilapidated farmhouse.
While the buildings weren’t
salvageable, the site was
extraordinary—tucked away
and private but overlooking
a bustling navigation channel
46
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I IcrosThcTc GOOD BONES
4«
‘One of the nice things about the site are the diagonal views
captured at various vantage points around the property.”
says Elliott Architects's JT Loomis about the Maine retreat
49
I leros There
GOOD BONES
FROM TOP TO BOTTOM: Looking up at the
house from the shore, the private left
wing contains the primary suites, while
the right side comprises the kitchen.
Iiving/dming areas, office, and guest
room. A new detached garage is visible
on one side of the glass connector while
the coast unfolds on the other side.
with a picturesque parade of boats.
The couple enlisted Elliott Architects,
with JT Loomis taking the lead on the proj-
ect. Their goal was twofold: “the antithesis
of our beautiful 1895 Queen Anne Victorian
in Iowa,” says Hunter, “and a design that
respected the vernacular architecture of
Downeast Maine.”
Loomis responded with a single-story
3,400-square-foot house that, he says,
“starts in that authentic Maine vernacular,
then gets transformed. We veered from
the traditional and gave it a little edge.” The
white cedar shingles, bleached to weather
naturally, nod to the coastal area, but the
overall aesthetic skews modern. Three
gabled structures, roughly the same height
and with eye-catching flat-roof connectors,
serve to bring down the scale of the house
and delineate the interior living plan.
ARCHITECTURE:
Elliott Architects
BUILDER:
Jon D. Woodward
& Sons
LANDSCAPE DESIGN:
Todd Richardson.
Richardson & Associates
Charles R. Myer & Partners, Ltd.
I -leresTherc
GOOD BONES
RIGHT: Owner Janet Griffin’s quilting studio doubles as
guest quarters; the quilting layouts pinned on the far wall
disguise a Murphy bed. BELOW: Large granite blocks pay
homage to Stonington’s history as a quarry town.
—Landscape architect Todd Richardson
z
The perpendicular structure contains the
two primary suites, while the two overlap
ping parallel volumes comprise the main
living area. A glass-and-wood connector
bridges the private quarters and family
spaces. A similar, larger connector extends
the living and dining room out into the
landscape, framing stunning views of
the rocky coast and islands beyond.
In fact, incorporating the architecture
into the landscape was a key component of
the project, says Loomis. Todd Richardson
of Richardson & Associates embraced the
existing site conditions—the ledge, the
meadows, the gravel beach—while hearken-
ing back to Stonington’s storied history in
granite quarrying. Huge blocks of granite,
ARCHITECTURE OUT TO
THE BOUNDARIES BETA EE.X
mined from a quarry a mile up the road,
were trucked in and placed perpendicu-
lar to the home. “The blocks extend the
architecture out to the landscape and blur
the boundaries between the two,” explains
Richardson.
They also celebrate a sense of place—a
notion dear to the homeowners. And one
that the design team took to heart. Sums up
Loomis: “The project represents a strong
connection in both form and materiality to
the Maine coast they love.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
JANINE DOWLING Ж
INTERIOR DESIGN
INTERIOR DESIGN | CUSTOM FURNITURE | ART & ACCESSORIES
tel: 617-445-3135 janinedowling.com
Interior Architecture
BOSTON
ARCHITECTURAL
COLLEGE
the-bac.edu
Congratulations to kitchen designer
Meaghan Moynahan for winning
the prestigious 5 under 40 awards.
VENEGAS
AND COMPANY
venegasandcompany.com
KITCHEN PHOTOS: MICHAEL J LEE | PORTRAIT: ROGER PE LIS SI ER PHOTOGRAPHY
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
The designer elected
Hector Finch j ;lass-globe
pendants fron i Studio 534
at the Boston
for their quiet ide, so as not
to steal the sp Dtlight from
standout feati res such as
the hood and jacksplash.
design Center
\ WHAT YOU
/ DON'T SEE
The island’s countertop is made from
a single slab of Vermont Danby marble
that was just large enough to avoid a
seam and adds beautiful polish to the
space. “We were so lucky to find it."
says interior designer Annsley McAleer.
“It fit within a couple of inches."
58
A CABIN
BY
THE SEA
The southern coast of Maine exudes a
gentle quality of life that’s all about family,
fun, and the great outdoors. This newly
constructed timber-frame vacation house, built
for a young family with two daughters,
embraces togetherness, especially when it
comes to the kitchen, which connects to dining
and family areas as well as views of the vast
front yard and ocean beyond. Defined by a large
island that sits perfectly between two timber
posts, the kitchen features “a coastal farmhouse
vibe," says interior designer Annsley McAleer,
principal of Annsley Interiors. “The exposed
beams make a strong architectural statement,”
explains the designer, “but the color palette is
beachier. We needed to create a balance with
all of that wood.” To that end, McAleer chose
kelly-green stools by O&G Studio and textural
tiles by Waterworks for the backsplash. The
effect is a casual-meets-practical space that
delivers on its promise. “The family’s relaxed
attitude,” says McAleer, “is reflected in the
way the house looks.”
INTERIOR DESIGN:
Annsley McAleer,
Annsley Interiors
BUILDER:
Colby Chase, Chase
Construction and Cabinetry
CABINETRY:
Barry Chase,
The Webhannet Co.
PHOTOGRAPHY:
Michael J. Lee
59
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
To brighten up a windowless kitchen
space, designer Elana Rudiger chose a
mirrored backsplash and hood that
reflect the dining area and library beyond,
giving the cook a great view, too.
Custom hardware
from Rockport. Maine-
based marine-industry
manufacturer Lowe
Hardware adds a layer of
sophistication.
HIDDEN JOYS
For a family of five with young
children, a hyper-functional kitchen in
their newly constructed Cambridge,
Massachusetts, house was a must.
At the end of a long, open-plan area that
includes a dining room and library, the
kitchen needed to act as a family hub.
“We thought a lot about how we would
use this space,” says Elana Rudiger
of Elana Rudiger Interior Design. “The
kitchen really informed everything
behind it.” One challenge, however,
was bringing light into the room, which
features walnut cabinetry but no win-
dows to the outside. To capture as much
light as possible from other parts of
the house, Rudiger installed a mirrored
hood and backsplash and honed white
Silestone countertops; the latter material
was also installed on one wall, this time
60
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By installing a glass transom
in one wall. Rudiger captured
borrowed light from the
family room’s floor-to-ceiling
windows.
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
A subtle panel /
reveals a sliding
spice rack tucked :
“We thought a
lot about how
we would use
this space.”
-INTERIOR DESIGNER
ELANA RUDIGER
with a polished surface for a subtle
textural change. A glass transom
between the kitchen and family
room helps, too. The design team
also found clever ways to carve out
additional hidden features, such as a
work surface that pulls out of a wall
and connects to the island. A nearby
banquette creates extra seating;
a secret pocket door turns it into a
cozy alcove.
WHAT YOU | .....
DON’T SEE |
A countertop surface pulls out of a
cabinet wall and connects to the island
via a clever hook and cleat. It also
serves to cordon off the work space
when entertaining. Rudiger added
overflow seating with a banquette; a
pocket door tucked behind it slides
out and swivels to turn the space into
a cozy alcove. A television above the
seat folds down for easy viewing.
INTERIOR DESIGN:
Elana Rudiger,
Elana Rudiger Design
ARCHITECTURE:
W. Edward Pitts III,
Charles R. Myer & Partners
CABINETRY:
Karla Monkevich, Kochman
Reidt + Haigh Cabinetmakers
PHOTOGRAPHY:
Michael J. Lee
62
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
SUNNY SIDE UP
While some kitchens are mostly for
show, others serve the needs of devoted
cooks. This colorful space in Concord,
Massachusetts, designed for a family
of six, was built for both. As the first
space in view when one steps into
the open-plan home, it needed to be
welcoming and pretty but also operate
as a working kitchen. “The homeowners
wanted a warm and cheerful palette,”
says interior designer Melinda Guglietta,
principal of Bespoke of Winchester,
who drew color inspiration from the
geometric tiles installed on the island’s
base. Because the wife is a passionate
cook who also teaches classes at home
for cancer patients, Guglietta maximized
storage and seating. A previous owner’s
"It's a not-fussy style and
a big mix of contemporary
and traditional.”
-INTERIOR DESIGNER MELINDA GUGLIETTA
INTERIOR DESIGN AND
cabinetry: Melinda Guglietta,
Bespoke of Winchester
BUILDER:
Thoughtforms
PHOTOGRAPHY:
Jessica
Delaney
CAROLYN THAYER
INTERIORS
NANTUCKET
BOSTON
carolynthayerinteriors.com
617.488.9533 © f
\ WHAT YOU
j DON’T SEE
Interior designer
Melinda Guglietta
replaced the kitchen's
second sink with
an additional work
surface. Beneath
it. sleek Fisher &
Paykel drawers can
be used as either
refrigerator or freezer
food storage. The
renovated kitchen s
countertops were
installed a few inches
higher than standard
to accommodate
the homeowners’
preferences.
renovations had left the 1963 deck house
with some disconnected Colonial-like
elements, so Guglietta worked to seam-
lessly combine traditional and modern
details that would strike the right notes
for the family, which includes four teen-
agers and two dogs as well as chickens
and bees in the lush backyard To that
end, the designer chose cabinetry with
classic styling, then subtly modernized
it with low-profile doors and drawers
and streamlined hardware. A custom
oak hood, minimal trim, playful lighting,
and, of course, the sunny palette further
perk things up. “It’s a not-fussy style,”
explains Guglietta, who specializes
in custom kitchens, “and a big mix of
contemporary and traditional.”
66
KEVIN CRADOCK BUILDERS
Custom Building | Renovation | Millwork
617-524-2405 | cradockbuilders.com | Boston, MA
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
Artisanal stained-glass panels
and lighting fixtures, crafted by
Robert Stump Studios, add “variety
in the realm of materials." says
architect John Battle.
HEART OF THE HOME
Built in the style of an old
Adirondacks lodge, the kitchen in this
New Hampshire lake house was sited
to be right in the center of the action,
between the dining and family areas and
a screened-in porch. “It’s right at the
knuckle of things,” says architect John
Battle, principal and owner of Battle
Associates Architects, who worked with
Beyond the Garden interior designer and
his spouse, Janet Battle. To create an
authentic Adirondack space and feeling,
the designers relied on skilled artisans
to custom build features including
the highly figured cherry cabinets and
stained-glass detailing. Installing two
islands ensured there’s always plenty of
"There's nothing standard
about this kitchen."
-ARCHITECT JOHN BATTLE
6«
Designed to Endure.
Learn more at psdab.com
25 years and hundreds of successful projects
later, we remain committed to design that
is lasting and noteworthy, and craft that
sustains, inspires and works in harmony
with this beautiful natural environment.
POLHEMUS SAVERY DASILVA
BLAZER SEATING SYSTEM I RODOLFO DORDONI DESIGN
TORII NEST ARMCHAIRS I NENDO DESIGN
MATTIA COFFEE TABLE I RODOLFO DORDONI DESIGN
DISCOVER MORE AT MINOni.COM/BLAZER
WHAT YOU |
DON'T SEE |
The designers carefully hand-
selected the cherry cabinetry
veneers for each and every door
and drawer to create purposeful
and balanced visual variation,
as is evident in the kitchen’s
walk-in pantry. The space hides
utilities like a coffee station,
wall ovens, and the refrigerator,
which feature substantial,
custom-made hardware that
makes grabbing a snack or
prepping a meal a unique, tactile
experience.
work space for cooks and extra
seating for everyone else. On the
south side of the room, a glazed
breakfast bay with seating for twelve
and views of the lake and boathouse
creates an ample, welcoming eating
area for the extended family who
frequently come to visit. “There’s
nothing standard about this kitchen,”
says the architect.
ARCHITECTURE:
John Battle. Battle
Associates Architects
INTERIOR DESIGN:
Janice Battle.
Beyond the Garden
BUILDER:
Wood & Clay
CABINETRY:
Paul Reidt, Karla Monkevich,
Kochman Reidt + Haigh Cabinetmakers
PHOTOGRAPHY:
Greg Premru
“The only things worth
counting on are people
you can count on...
Michelle and
Wayne Southworth,
and the entire
MWI Fiber-Shield®
team, are those people.
Not only are they there
to help protect all of
the fabrics and rugs
in our design projects,
but they are there to
donate their services
to these amazing
charitable causes.
They are always
there for you."
ERIC ROSEFF,
ERIC ROSEFF DESIGNS
MWI
Tlif Finest Fabric & Carpet Carr
MWI Fiber-Shield® | 516 East Second Street | Suites I Boston, MA
Boston-(617) 439-8790 I Hingham-(781) 740-8790 | mwifs(g)hotmail.com
mwifibershield.com | 0mwi.fibershield
Contact us now to see why designers count on MWI, again and again,
to protect your investments, and to help change the world a little.
It's never too late to do your part to help a child battling the ravages of cancer.
tommysplace.org | #4TheLoveofDanny
The homeowners
chose to restore the
egg-and-dart crown
molding, using a
skilled local plasterer.
Because the ceilings
are so high, designer
Nancy Serafini placed
cabinets low enough
to give the room a
more human scale.
BLUE STREAK
When it comes to the built environ-
ment, things that appear elegant in their
simplicity rarely start out that way. Such
was the case in a Boston brownstone
apartment, which had steps up and down
throughout the first floor when the
homeowners—two busy professionals
with grown children—purchased it. Lev-
eling it out required rearranging HVAC
ductwork, a tricky operation that “took a
ARCHITECTURE:
Sam Kachmar, Sam
Kachmar Architects
INTERIOR DESIGN:
Nancy Serafini,
Nancy Serafini Interior Design
CABINETRY:
Paula Accioly,
Jewett Farms + Co.
BUILDER: PHOTOGRAPHY:
FBN Michael J. Lee
Construction
74
CI IN
C.H. NEWTON BUILDERS, INC.
FINE HOMEBUILDING
ARCHITECTURAL MILLWORK
ESTATE CARE
508.548.1 353
CHNEWTON.COM
KITCHENS
WE LOVE
Judicious use of glass doors prevents ..••
the cabinetry from feeling too heavy.
Wooden shelving inside ties together
various elements of the kitchen.
WHAT YOU I
DON’T SEE |
“It's so beautifully organized now.
-INTERIOR DESIGNER NANCY SERAFINI
The kitchen previously sat
three steps higher than the rest
of the apartment. Architect
Sam Kachmar leveled out the
entire first floor and matched
the kitchen’s cased opening to
the living room's, an invisible
but critical—and elegant-
intervention that corrected
previously awkward transitions
between rooms. “If we can act
like a ghost and a space feels
good, then I feel like we've done
our job,” says Kachmar.
lot of mechanical gymnastics/*
says architect Sam Kachmar. Next, he
aligned a hallway connecting
the living room and kitchen, creating
a much smoother transition between
spaces. The move allowed interior
designer Nancy Serafini to smartly
divide the kitchen into its functional
parts. Along one wall that abuts the
circulation route, she installed tall
storage cabinets. Across from those
is the work space, with island, sink,
range, and primary oven. “It’s so
beautifully organized now,” says
Serafini, who specified a navy blue for
storage, lower cupboards, and the is-
land but left upper cupboards white.
“It’s just so pretty in its simplicity.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
CALCITE AZUL EXTRA POLISHED
Cumar is New England's preeminent source and fabricator of the finest marble, granite, limestone, and exotic stones.
617.389.7818 | cumar.com
PHOTO CREDIT: BUDDY SANBORN
BURPEE HILL
CONSTRUCTION
PASSION • PRECISION • PURPOSE
603.477.4782
BURPEEHILL.COM
THINGS WE LOVE
Keanu, Isla, and Gretel Dining Chairs by Made Goods
Woven naturals continue to be the material du jour. Made
Goods makes it easy to bring rattan’s breezy style into
your home with these new chairs. Living Swell, Marblehead
Mass., Iivingswellmarblehe3d.com
Kimono Collection
by Thomas Pheasant
Inspired by a recent trip to Japan,
Thomas Pheasant’s new
Rejuvenate your home with
product introductions reflecting
alluring craft and creativity.
thirty-three-piece collection
for McGuire, which includes
the Kimono Chaise
(pictured), showcases
the clean-lined aesthetic
and natural simplicity
found in Japanese culture,
art, and design. Ailanthus,
Boston, ailanthusltd.com
К Peplum Dining Table by Barbara Barry
For years, Barbara Barry has been
synonymous with understated elegance
and timeless design, so it is no surprise
her new capsule collection for Baker
exudes pure elegance. The Peplum
table, with its generous scale and brass
detailing, is a standout. Cabot House
Furniture, various New England locations,
cabothousefurniture.com
80
Ф L’Odyssee by Christian Lacroix Maison
Christian Lacroix Maison takes us on a fantastical journey with
fabrics and wallpapers for Designers Guild. Featuring imaginative
landscapes, over-scaled flora and fauna, and saturated colors, the
collection makes a seriously bold statement. Osborne & Little.
Boston Design Center, osborneandlittle.com
Ф The California Collection by Kelly Wearstler
Kelly Wearstler's collection for Farrow & Ball continues the
British paint company’s tradition of celebrating color in the local
landscape. Inspired by the light and hues of sunny California, the
line reflects the designer’s hip all-American point of view. Farrow
& Ball, Boston Design Center, farrow-ba/l.com
82
Ovalo Chain Pendant
Cluster by Boyd Lighting
Link necklaces are all the
rage this year, so naturally
the look has made its way
into home decor. Crafted
from square tubes of hand-
finished brass shaped into
oval loops, this pendant
is jewelry for the home.
M-Geough, Boston Design
Center, m-geough.com
Ф Renaldo 3 Arm Sconce by Donghia
Storied design atelier Donghia is back thanks
to Kravet. The relaunched brand includes
many favorites designed by its late founder,
Angelo Donghia, as well as new pieces like this
’70s-inspired sconce featuring Murano glass
globes. Kravet. Boston Design Center,
kravet.com
Cambridge Chandelier
by Mark D. Sikes
Traditional with a bit more snap and
dash, the 2021 additions to Mark
D. Sikes’s collection for Hudson
Valley Lighting reflect a British
sensibility and graphic appeal.
Rockingham Electrical Supply,
various New Hampshire locations,
rockinghamelectric.com
«4
PATRIOT CUSTOM HOMES, NAT REA PHOTOGRAPHY
flavin
ARCHITECTS
With an aim to blur the distinction between inside and out, we use transparency
and axial views to draw the eye to the natural world. Our work is designed to tread
lightly on the earth utilizing cutting-edge materials and techniques to conserve
energy, water and the natural systems present on the site.
flavinarchitects.com
Thompson Ai
bannon
Imagine a home, build a legacy
www.bannonbuilds.com | 508-833-0050
I ICFCsS^I hd’C SMITH ON STYLE
Editor at Large Clinton Smith shares the seoop on all things home.
FORWARD THINKING
umerous homes across New England—
from Beacon Hill and Brookline to
Martha’s Vineyard and Seal Harbor,
Maine—feature Boston-based interior
designer Nina Farmer’s indelible imprint.
Earlier this year, the New York School of Interior Design,
Farmer’s alma mater (she also graduated from Tulane
University), awarded her its prestigious Rising Star Award.
But recognition of her work is nothing new: Farmer’s stylish
and thoughtfully executed projects have been published
locally, regionally, and even internationally.
Yet trying to pinpoint a signature style for Farmer is
elusive. She deftly responds to her clients’ needs and wishes,
but in a way that marries both old and new, as well as
traditional with cutting edge.
“I start with the rug and build up from there,” says
Farmer who, as a 2017 New England Home 5 Under 40 winner,
designed her own rug as part of the awards program. “We
always have that foundation as we are building the room.”
From that point on, the sky’s the limit. “We do a big vintage
and antique mix within our projects,” she adds. “It’s seventy-
to eighty-percent found or antique items versus new.”
To balance out the history that accompanies those pieces,
Farmer layers in plush fabrics and unique color palettes (think
indigo blue with acid green accents) that fill her spaces with
an undeniable twenty'-first-century vibe. And her clients,
many of whom are repeat, appreciate the one-of-a-kind
furnishings, even if they’re being shipped from Europe, sight
unseen (except for perhaps a photograph).
“People really want interesting pieces, and they’re willing
to take the chance. Luckily, they do.”
These days, when she’s not in the studio or scouring Paris
flea markets for new finds, you might find Farmer on-site
at a new construction project in New Hampshire or at a 1930s
stone colonial being renovated in Westport, Connecticut
(her hometown). That variety is what keeps the work
exciting for her.
“We have a lens we see the projects through,” says Farmer
of her firm’s work, “whether it’s a rustic lake house or formal
estate property—and everything in between—but they’re all
different. It’s nice to vary the look.” ninafannerinteriors.com
DESIGN DETAILS
Nina Farmer shares some of her favorite
style sources for mixing old and new.
\ intagc Furnishings & Antiques
• Steven King Decorative Carpets. Boston
• Reside. Cambridge. Massachusetts
• BG Galleries. Hingham. Massachusetts
• George Home, Washington, Connecticut
• Naga Antiques. Hudson. New York
• Orange Furniture and Lucca Antiques.
Los Angeles, California
• Morentz. Amsterdam
88
Illustration by Monica Hellstrdm. Portrait by Hannah Osofsky
Jennifer Palumbo
INTERIOR DESIGN
246 WALNUT STREET SUITE 403 | NEWTON, MA
617-332-1009 | JENNIFERPALUMBO.COM
I Id’CS^I here SPECIAL SPACES
Water World
A new garden folly in a noted Newport home eoneeals a grand library atop
an otherworldly nymphaeum. byjill connors
into the marble spa in Bellevue
secret, as if a nymphaeum in the newest
there are cabanas on the right
House’s library-slash-nymphaeum,
they enter a shallow-water
chamber perfectly sized for two
nymphlike swimmers to recline,
illuminated by an aquatic-themed
plexiglass artwork. Climb through
folding glass doors above the
garden building on the grounds of a
historic, privately owned 1910 Colonial
Revival in Newport, Rhode Island, isn’t
already fantastical enough.
Architect JP Couture, builder
Glenn Parker, and numerous artisans
collaborated to realize homeowner Ron
90
Photography by Warren Jagger
I lercsThere
SPECIAL SPACES
Hand-waxed pine shelves and
millwork were designed to create
a library evocative of an English
Country estate; the urn-shaped
92
I leresThere
SPECIAL SPACES
/./17: THERE!"
—I lomeowner Ron Fleming
ABOVE: Seashells line the back wall of the spa area, creating a
grotto effect enhanced by a waterfall, stalactite chandelier, and
illuminated artwork in a chamber reached by swimming under
the waterfall. LEFT: Artist Christa Wilm made seashell mosaics on
netting to create the intricate design on the grotto walls.
Fleming's vision: a library of 6,000 books
arranged on hand-waxed pine shelves
nestled within the same Adamesque
garden building as a marble nymphaeum,
a type of room, historically featuring a
fountain and used for relaxation, that
dates back to Roman times.
“Nymphaeums are the most compel-
ling and eccentric places, an old idea
from ancient Rome and Greece that I
have known about since 1 was a boy,”
says Fleming, a town planner, preserva-
tionist, and author. “I built this library/
nymphaeum as a retreat. I could actually
live there!”
Indeed, the 1,500-square-foot library
includes not only two levels of books—
the upper level graced by a custom-made
bronze handrail—but also a closet,
kitchen niche, bathroom, and shower
room; a leather sofa converts into a bed.
7 BL I LT THIS
LIBRARY/.WMPIIAEL \l
94
COLLABORATE ♦ BUILD
Hawthorn Builders
97 Chapel Street, Needham, MA
HAWTH O RN-BU ILDERS.COM
78 1.707.6564
BEST of
BOSTON
HOME”
AWARDED BY BOSTON MAGAZINE
SPECIAL SPACES
“Imagine building all that for a Kindle/’
Couture wryly notes.
if the library inspires solitude and
soulful contemplation, the nymphaeum
below embraces creative expression and
aquatic delights. Vaulted plaster ceilings
give the underground space a sense of
volume, while marble floors and walls
evoke luxury. Off to one side, Fleming’s
RIGHT: On the building s lower level,
a vaulted marble room includes a raised
stage ideal for performances by the
homeowner's young grandchildren.
FACING PAGE: Adamesque elements in
the bay window alcove off the library
include the oak-and-mahogany floor and
the ceiling ornamentation. The period
English Sheraton chairs and English
Regency rosewood table invite reading
by natural light.
ZEN Associates, Inc
the balance of art, science, and nature
Landscape Architecture
Interior Design
Boston I Washington DC
zenassociates.com | 800.834.6654
96
three grandchildren give performances
on a built-in stage. A grotto that artist
Christa Wilm covered with thousands
of seashells cradles the spa, which is big
enough for six bathers, and waterfall.
For all the ancient and natural
themes, the library/nymphaeum’s HVAC
system is pure modem technology. “It’s
unique to have a humid environment like
the nymphaeum in the same structure as
thousands of books,” says builder Glenn
Parker. To ensure the right climate for
both, the HVAC is a mix of hydronic and
radiant systems working off geothermal
heat pumps.
“It was an amazing project,” says
Parker. “I’m fairly certain 1 will never do
another like it.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
ARCHITECTURE AND
INTERIOR DESIGN:
JP Couture.
JP Couture. Architect
BUILDER: Glenn Parker.
Parker Construction
97
able moraine
a design collective committed to exceptional interior architecture and decor
working with our creative community of artisans and craftspeople
born on martha’s vineyard | work nationwide
into@ablemoraine.com
For a dozen years now, we’ve been celebrating our area’s
abundance of young design talent with New England Home's
5 Under 40 Awards. The annual program honors excellence
in interior design, architecture, and landscape design. The
2021 awardees exemplify that excellence in their rich and
varied portfolios as well as in their commitment to
New England’s design community.
This year, we’re especially excited because we’re returning
to an in-person awards celebration. The party, on September
16 at 5:30 p.m. at the SoWa Power Station in Boston’s
SoWa Art + Design District, will be twice the fun as we honor
our 2020 winners along with this year’s talented group.
1()()
The festivities will include the auction of five custom rugs
designed by our 2021 winners and produced by Landry & Arcari Rugs
and Carpeting, with proceeds going to the nonprofit Barakat.
We can't wait to see you again!
Text by PAI LA \L BODAII Portraits by BRUCE ROGOV1X
The winners give us
a glimpse of their
designs FROM LEFT:
Heather Souza. Flavin
Architects; Mika
Durrell, Able Moraine;
Meaghan Moynahan.
Venegas and Company;
Gabrielle Pitocco
Bove, Eleven Interiors;
and Heather Harris.
James Doyle Design
Associates.
New England Home’s
40
AWARDS
101
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
; MEAGHAN MOYNAHAN
Moynahan found her calling
in high school when, as the only
girl in her woodshop class, she
built a cabinet. “That solidified
my going to design school,”
she says. “I think I’ve always
had a passion for millwork.”
That she ended up in kitchen
design was something of a happy
accident. After graduating from the
New England School of Art & Design
at Suffolk University with a BFA in
interior design, she got her first job
at a kitchen design studio. One of her
colleagues happened to be Donna
Venegas. Eventually. Venegas bought
the studio, forming Venegas and
Company. Moynahan stayed on as
lead technical designer and, in 2014,
became director of technical design
for the Boston company.
*We’re very team based,” she says
about her workplace. “That’s the
beauty of it. Great design is all about
collaboration.” As the technical designer,
she’s involved in projects from the
very beginning, working with the sales
designer in an equal partnership. “I offer
design opinions, 1 have a hand in choos-
ing finishes, and 1 help the clients with
career. Moynahan has loved veneers.
“Everything about them intrigues
me—how they are cut. how they can
be arranged, and the overall art and
countless possibilities for layup,*’
she says. She turned to two of her
favorites, figured avodire. a wood
from west and central Africa, and
eucalyptus, as inspiration for her rug.
“Playing with scale and color.
I blended the two veneer cuts into
the design." she explains.
102
Indigo Collection
Paying homage to natural indigo - the ancient blue dye source that has been the
cornerstone of color in hand woven carpets for centuries.
Landry&Arcari
RUGS AND CARPETING
SALEM • BOSTON • FRAMINGHAM • LANDRYANDARCARI.COM
5 Under 40 Awards
THE 2021 WINNERS
their choices/’ she explains.
Moynahan has seen trends in kitchen
design morph quite a bit during her
career. “When I started, it was much more
traditional/’ she recalls. “There were lots
of details, a lot of corbels and moldings.”
These days, homeowners favor a
more transitional look, she says, and she
enjoys the challenge of designing with a
contemporary vibe. “We do a lot of R&D
R.ILI
-KITCHEN DESIGNER MEAGHAN MOYNAHAN
with cabinetmakers to come up with new
styles, using new materials, repurposed
materials, and unusual finishes,” she
says. The out-of-the-box thinking might
yield a cabinet inset of old army tents or
cowhide. “It’s really cool, some of the
things we do.”
104
Photography by Michael J. Lee
Seasonal cocktails, handmade pasta, perfectly cooked steaks and
fresh salads expertly prepared using the J'inest ingredients.
BOSTON BACK BAY I BOSTON SEAPORT I FOXBOROUGH
CHESTNUT HILL I LYNNFIELD I BRAINTREE I LOGAN AIRPORT
ATLANTA I KING OF PRUSSIA I THE COLONY
www.davios.com iF@SteveDiFillippo ©@DaviosRestaurant
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
HEATHER SOUZA
underestimate the power of
a nudge from a high school
teacher. When Heather Souza
(then Heather Card) was a
student at New Hampshire’s
Portsmouth High School, her
drafting teacher pulled her
aside and told her he saw real
potential in her work. “He
asked me if I’d ever thought
of being an architect,” she
recalls. In fact, it had not
occurred to her. “The women
in my family were all nurses
or teachers.” The teacher,
Steve Jones, arranged to have her do
a job shadow at a local architecture
firm, and the young woman’s fate was
sealed. “1 was adamant about going to
grandchildren, I spent a lot of
time learning from my Nana
how to create with my hands,"
recalls Souza. “For my rug. I
wanted to create something
in honor of her." A blanket her
grandmother crocheted for her
inspired the pattern. And the
color? “In the spirit of inspiring
the next generation to create,
I chose pink—my daughter’s
favorite." she explains.
architecture school/’ she says.
She chose Northeastern University.
“It was a big enough city to make me feel
like I was getting away, but it was close
enough to home. 1 loved it/’ says Souza.
If Jones gave her the idea, and North-
eastern gave her the tools, her first job,
1()6
1. Ultra-modern smart
home in Reykjavik,
Iceland. Here we melded
technology seamlessly
with the aesthetics of
the space.
2. Lutron Motorized
Palladiom shades,
matched with beautiful
clear anodized
brackets.
3. Unique lighting
control keypad from
Lutron. Here showing
the Alisse keypad in
brushed brass.
TSP Smart Spaces provides
exquisite whole-house smart
home technology solutions.
Our Design, Build, and Support
process ensures we are with
you from the beginning of your
smart home journey and well
beyond.
Visit our website to see some
of our award-winning smart
home projects and learn how
technology can make your living
spaces come alive.
SMART SPACES
(617)267-3030 I www.tsp.space I Boston, MA
5 Under 40 Awards
THE 2021 WINNERS
at the Barrington, Rhode Island-based
firm Andreozzi Architecture, was the
springboard to her successful career.
“1 owe them everything,” she says about
principal David Andreozzi and senior
associate David Rizzolo. “They were
such great mentors to have as a young
professional.”
ft .
1$ Й
c\ мгщ .
-ARCHITECT HEATHER SOUZA
In 2013, Souza joined Boston-
based Flavin Architects, where she
now holds the position of junior
principal.
At Flavin, she feels she has the
creative freedom to meld her own
personality with the company’s
vision. That vision focuses on con
temporarv design, and Souza says
the term “natural modernism” is
a guiding principle. “It’s evolved
to a warm modernism,” she says.
“We use materials that are com-
mon for New England architecture,
such as natural wood, but with a
more modem application, clean
detailing, for homes that really sit
in nature.
1()8
Photography by Nat Rea
Architectural Icon
& Event Space
SoWa Power Station
550 Harrison Avenue, Boston
The SoWa Power Station is an iconic masterpiece of
late-industrial glamour. Built in 1891 as the world's
largest power generation plant, it produced enough
electricity to run the West End Street Railway.
The century-old property's structural elements have
since been rescued and restored, transforming
it into a blank canvas for community, celebration,
and innovation.
The SoWa Power Station: Destined to become
Boston's most iconic and sought after event venue.
To inquire about event rentals:
617-350-8870 | sowapowerstation.com
EXTERIOR PHOTO BY KEVIN POLLARD: EVENT PHOTOS BY LEAH HAYDOCK
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
GABRIELLE PITOCCO BOVE
was a child, Gabrielle Pitocco
Bove had an affinity for
creating art. “I would wake
up early every a.m., and my
mom and I would do crafts,”
she says. She took lots of
art classes as she grew, but
somewhere along the way
she had an epiphany of sorts.
“I realized I’m not a fine
artist,” she says. “I can’t be
alone with the art, and by that
1 mean 1 like people too much.”
interior design» she thought» could
combine her enjoyment of working
with people and her love of creating
beautiful things. “I feel like it’s
creating an with a purpose»” she says,
“and I’m very purpose driven.”
loves of Boves life. “I was born
with a passion for color and a
fervent desire to make art," she
says, “and no place inspires
me more than the coast/' The
convergence of these two loves
led to her rug. an abstract view
of the shore at sunset. "On a
grander scale,” she adds, "it
represents the interdependence
of nature and art."
After earning a degree in interior
design from Endicott College in Beverly,
Massachusetts, where she is now an ad-
junct professor, Bove worked at a Boston
firm where she specialized in designing
corporate and hospitality projects. Five
years later she transitioned to residen-
11O
5 Under 40 Awards
THE 2021 WINNERS
tial design and is now lead designer at
Boston’s Eleven Interiors. While the
lessons she learned about designing in
a commercial setting were invaluable,
residential design feeds her passion.
“It came back to a love for the creative,
the love of art, the love of working with
people,” she says.
As young as Bove is, she’s already
-INTERIOR DESIGNER GABRIELLE PITOCCO BOVE
seeing changes in the design world as
she works with her students at Endicott.
“What I see that’s similar is the pas-
sion for creating spaces that reflect the
people who are going to be in them,”
she says. What’s different? “The sheer
attachment to technology. It’s impres-
sive, the fancy renderings the students
can do, but one of my goals is to help
them understand that the design is
what’s important,” she explains.
As her clients and our judges know,
Bove clearly practices what she preaches.
112
Photography by (top) Michael J. Lee and (middle and bottom) Greg Premru
INTERIORS • RENOVATION • RESTORATION
JMAN-ARCHITECTS.COM • 857285.2500
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
: HEATHER HARRIS
her parents owned a land-
scaping company and, later,
a nursery, you might expect
that Heather Harris always
knew shrubs, trees, and flow-
ers would be in her future.
In fact, she grew up thinking
she’d become an engineer or
an architect. “I knew I’d do
something that had to do with
construction and buildings,
but I thought I’d build bridges
or apartment buildings, not
landscapes,” she says.
By the time she enrolled as a fresh-
man at Cornell University, however,
the idea of landscape architecture had
begun to take hold, and although she
ABOVE: Heather Harns, senior
landscape architect at James Doyle
Design Associates in Greenwich.
Connecticut. LEFT: Harris undertook
considered engineering as a second
major, in 2012 she graduated with a
degree in landscape architecture.
Now senior landscape architect
at James Doyle Design Associates in
Greenwich, Connecticut, Harris firmly
believes there is artistry in her work that
the challenge of rendering a hard
material—the stone she employs
in landscape designs—in soft form.
Working from a photo of one of her
own projects, she used a palette
of soft blues and a variety of fiber
textures to echo what she does in
designing a landscape. "In my work
I use stone with different textures
and colors to add movement and
softness." she says. “This does
the same."
114
JAMES DOYLE DESIGN ASSOCIATES
PHOTO BY ALLEGRA ANDERSON
R. P.M ARZILLI
LANDSCAPE PROFESSIONALS
LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTION | MASONRY | MAINTENANCE
R.R Marzilli & CO., Inc. | (508) 533.8700
RPMARZILLI.COM
5 Under 40 Awards
THE 2021 WINNERS
goes beyond a garden’s looks. “1 love it
when something comes out and looks
pretty,” she says, “but when you design
something that works the way you
intended, when people move through
the space the way you want them to,
1 consider that artistry, too.”
Her enjoyment of problem-solving
drives Harris the most. “We take what
we’re given—the house and the land—
and we have to work around them,”
she says. “My favorite part of a project is
actually doing all the construction
documents, and watching a space being
built from those documents.”
Harris stresses that the landscape
contractors and others, the ones who
literally do the heavy lifting, are crucial
to her success. “My favorite projects are
ones where we had a solid, experienced,
good team,” she says.
Although she’s surprised to be
among this year’s 5 Under 40 winners,
it’s hardly Harris’s first accolade. In 2018
alone, she won four professional awards
for her work.
We’re pretty confident that this one
won’t be her last.
-LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT HEATHER HARRIS
116
Photography by (top and middle) Neil Landino and (bottom) Allegra Anderson
We bring design guidance and leadership, home.
tastedesigninc.com
taste
Artful Interiors
& Design
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
; MIKA DURRELL
Durrell has had a long love
affair with Martha’s Vineyard.
Her father, a high-end resi-
dential builder, had a project
there and persuaded her to
spend the summer after her
freshman year of college
on the island. After her soph-
omore year, she left school
and moved to the island.
“1 was called the youngest wash-
ashore,” she says with a laugh. After a
couple of years of community college
and odd jobs, she enrolled at Boston
Architectural College, attracted by its
work-study model.
Studying by night and working
for three different architectural firms
in Boston by day took her away from
graphic rug is an homage to her
late uncle Don on her mother’s
side. “He taught me how to draw,
about the principles of perspective
and space? she says. The art he
left behind, work she describes as
“2-D art that’s spatial, architectural,
multi-dimensional, and extremely
intricate," inspired her to create
this beauty, crafted with a blend of
silk. wool, and hemp that gives it its
luxurious texture.
the Vineyard, and so did her post-degree
career, marriage, and two children. “1
wanted to invest in my career, but 1
needed life to be simpler/’ she says. By
serendipity, she got a text from a former
classmate asking if she knew anyone who
might want to live on the Vineyard year-
ll8
Landscape Architecture
LombardiDesign.com
5 Under 40 Awards I
THE 2021 WINNERS
round to work at Hutker Architects.
"1 was like, ME!” she says.
Durrell spent five years at
Hutker’s Vineyard office, serving
as the firm’s director of interior
design. In 2019, she started her
own interior design company,
Able Moraine, affirming her com-
mitment to the island.
The company name was inspired
by the island itself, a moraine
formed by a glacial sheet thousands
of years ago. “1 think of the incred-
ible energy and pow er that created
this beautiful place,” Durrell says.
Able, she adds, is a literal refer-
ence to the capabilities of the many
talented people it takes working
together to create beautiful homes.
Able Moraine isn’t island-bound,
however. Durrell and business partner
Paul Commito have projects as far away
as Hawaii. Neither are they bound to
a particular style. “Our work is really
diverse,” Durrell says. 'AVe want it to
be fun. A good fit with our clients is the
most important.”
-INTERIOR DESIGNER MIKA DURRELL
120
Photography (top and middle) courtesy of Able Moraine and (bottom) Jared Kuzia
Wiggly
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to see how things are made,
so a half-hearted joke
turned a bit serious over the
years. They explored the
idea by researching,
studying, and some say
obsessed over how to build
a still and produce alcohol.
By utilizing long forgotten
styles and techniques such
as hand building their
copper pot stills, every dent
and angle uniquely
contributes to the flavor of
their spirits unlike many
mass produced spirits on
the market. Now winning
awards and becoming
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they realize they have
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At the end of the day
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THE 2021 WINNERS
esigning a rug
isn’t a regular part of the job
for our 5 Under 40 winners. In
HOW IT’S DONE
fact, they all confess it was a
bit daunting. Fortunately, the
experts at Landry & Arcari Rugs
and Carpeting were there to
shepherd the young designers
through the process of bringing
their beautiful creations into
says Eric Brissette, who heads up
custom rug production and inventory
management at Landry & Arcari. “They
related directly to the winner’s profes-
sion in some cases, and in others, were
inspired by family relationships.”
While the pandemic continued to
take two weavers several months to
bring each of the five-by-eight-foot
beauties to life. Wool and silk make up
the majority of the materials used, but
every now and then an unusual fiber,
like the hemp in Mika Darrell’s graphic
rug, is added.
being, a task the team has
happily undertaken for twelve
years now. “This year, the rug
designs were very personal,”
make life difficult in Nepal, where
Tibetan weavers craft the rugs, Bris-
sette says the process went smoothly
this year—a good thing, since it can
The rugs will be auctioned off at
the September 16 awards celebration,
and as always, benefits will go to the
nonprofit Barakat.
children and women who attend Barakat’s schools in
Pakistan and Afghanistan struggled to surmount the
challenges of COVID-19. "The schools would be open
for a week, then we'd have to close them again," says
the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based organization's
executive director Arti Pandey. "It was a rough year."
We at New England
Home are proud of our long
association with Barakat. Since
the inception of the 5 Under 40
Awards, with the help of New
England’s generous design
community, we’ve raised
$240,000 and counting for the
nonprofit. By auctioning off
the stunning rugs designed by
our 5 Under 40 winners, we’ve
helped 75,000-plus boys, girls,
and women get an education.
With the pandemic on the wane, Barakat has big
plans on the drawing board, says Pandey, including
opening a school in Pakistan that is strictly for girls.
“We need to reinforce the value of girls’ education
because the past year was rougher for girls than
boys,’’ Pandey says.
She’s optimistic that the return to an in-
person auction will help swell the
organization’s coffers. "There is a
real sense of joyousness when people
are able to get together again." she
says. She hopes that joy will translate
to generosity. For more information
about Barakat, visit barakatworld.org.
^Barakat
Helping Communities 'Through Education
122
DANGORDON
LANDSCAPEARCHITECTS
5 Under 40 Awards I THANK YOU!
Join us to honor the winners of the twelfth 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.*
DATE: September 16.2021
TIME: 5:30 p.m.
LOCATION: SoWa Power Station, 550 Harrison Ave.. Boston
SCHEDULE: Rug Preview 5:30 p.m.
Awards Ceremony & Rug Auction 6:00 p.m.
Cocktail Party 7:30 p.m.
TICKETS: $90 online
$110 at the door (cash only)
For tickets, visit nehomemag.com/5-under-40/tickets
The judging panel for this year’s 5 Under
40 Awards consisted of a group of seasoned
design pros. We are grateful for their time,
expertise, and dedication to the vetting
process.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP RIGHT:
Dee Elms, principal. Elms Interior Design. Boston
Keith Wagner, founding partner. Wagner Hodgson Landscape
Architecture. Burlington. Vermont
Dell Mitchell, principal. Dell Mitchell Architects. Boston
•All proceeds from the auction will benefit BarakaL a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based charity
that works to strengthen education and literacy in Central and South Asia.
PRESENTING SPONSOR
Landry;
&Arcari
RUGS AND CARPETING
SIGNATURE SPONSORS
GREGORY LOMBARDI DESIGN
ARCHITECTS
R. P.M ARZ1LLI
SMART SPACES
LATTE CART SPONSOR
PHOTOGRAPHY SPONSOR
LUXURY DRIVE SPONSOR
FBNConstructior
AWARD SPONSOR
w
TREAT-TO-GO SPONSOR
INSTALLATIONS
plus.
HOSTEOBY
New^nc^aM
yymiMui
Venue Partner. SoWa Power Station | Catering Partner Davio's Northern Italian Steakhouse Design Partner DiCicco Design | Wine Partner. 90 Cellars
Liquor Partner. Wiggly Bridge Distillery Beer Partner: Samuel Adams Event Partner: Event Savy Treat-to-Go Partner: Bisousweet Confections I Latte Cart Partner: Latte Boston
PROUD PARTNER OF OFUDWFSO UNDER 40 AWARDS
©2021 THE BOSTON BEER COMPANY. BOSTON. MA
SAVOR THE FLAVOR RESPONSIBLY®
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______DISTINCTIVE___
Kitchens & Baths
IMAGE COURTESY OF FRANK WEBB HOME
Special Advertising Section
Clarke: Sub-Zero—Wolf—Cove
Spend an hour at a Clarke
Showroom and one thing is
clear: your time with a Clarke
Consultant is the most valuable
part of your kitchen journey. While
they’re not designers, these are the
people designers call on when it
comes to appliance recommenda-
tions. You won’t buy anything at
Clarke, so there’s simply no
pressure. What you can do is
compare more Sub-Zero, Wolf,
and Cove models than anywhere in
New England. Plus, you’ll explore a
living portfolio of kitchens created
by the region’s top designers. You’ll
leave inspired with new knowledge
to make your appliance selections
with confidence and, when you are
ready, your Clarke Showroom
Consultant will connect you with
your authorized retail dealer
where final arrangements can be
made. When you purchase your
appliances after a visit to Clarke,
you unlock a wealth of benefits,
including complimentary
appliance demonstrations and
one-on-one professional chef
sessions to answer all of your
appliance-use and recipe questions.
For discerning homeowners, there
truly is no place like Clarke.
130
“I Have to
Have It” Moment
After seeing it
in action at the
Clarke Showroom,
more visitors add
a Wolf Convection
Steam Oven
to their kitchen
design than any
other appliance!
CLARKE
800-842-5275
clarkeliving.com
uiolpJ sub-zero COVCj
393 Fortune Blvd.
Milford, MA 01757
7 Tide Street
Boston, MA 02210
64 South Main Street
South Norwalk, CT 06854
131
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Crown Point Cabinetry
amily-owned and -operated,
Crown Point Cabinetry
handcrafts the finest-quality
custom cabinetry for your entire
home. We are the only custom
cabinetmaker in the country that
sells direct to homeowners, custom
builders, remodelers, and design-
ers nationally and internation-
ally. And now we have raised the
bar, as every cabinet is built with
American black walnut interiors
and drawers. Every base cabinet,
every wall cabinet, and every tall
cabinet. It’s our new standard.
Work directly with one of our tal-
ented and award-winning in-house
design professionals. Made only in
New Hampshire and celebrating
more than forty years in business.
132
133
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Frank Webb Home
At Frank Webb Home, were
all about rooms where
water flows and light
shines—and helping you make
those spaces your own.
Homeowners and design profes-
sionals rely on Frank Webb Home
for a wide selection of the indus-
try’s finest products. Our show-
rooms offer classic styles and the
latest trends in settings that help
you envision the fixtures in your
own home. Unique working dis-
plays allow you to experience how
water is delivered from dozens of
faucets and showerheads, provid-
ing an easy way to compare prod-
ucts and make your selections with
confidence.
Whether you’re replacing a single
fixture, remodeling a bathroom, or
building a new home, Frank Webb
Home’s luxury bath, kitchen, and
lighting showrooms are here to
help. Our friendly expert consul-
tants will help provide you with
inspiration and guidance from the
start of your project down to the
very last detail.
134
BATH - KITCHEN - LIGHTING
Frank Webb Home offers
collections from top
brands like MOEN. AXOR.
Hansgrohe. and more.
Pictured here:
O MOEN Colinet Collec-
tion in brushed nickel
9 AXOR Massaud Single
Handle Single Hole Bath-
room Faucet in chrome
® Hansgrohe Aquno
Select HighArc Kitchen
Faucet. 3-Spray Pull-Down
in matte black
о Hansgrohe Locarno
Semi-Pro Kitchen Faucet
in brushed gold optic
Frank Webb
ноте
Visit frankwebb.com for
more information on our 48
showrooms, including Boston,
Needham, Bedford, and Salem.
135
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Kitchen Views
at National Lumber
Whether 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
136
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
YOUR design journey....
PHOTO CREDIT: NAT REA
Showrooms in Newton, Mansfield,
New Bedford, and Berlin, MA;
Warwick, Rl;
Oxford and East Hartford, CT
Coming soon to Gardner, MA
Kitchen Views at National Lumber
5O8-DESIGNS
kitchenviews.com
KITCHEN
IVIEWSI
AT NATIONAL LUMBER
137
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Longfellow Design Build
Longfellow Design Build is a
custom architect and builder
working with homeowners
on Cape Cod and Bostons South
Shore. Our team of award-winning
kitchen and bath design special-
ists are talented professionals,
experienced in working with a
wide breadth of styles, budgets,
and circumstances. They can bring
your specific vision to light or
provide a creative process with lots
of options and ideas. Either way,
our designers consistently exceed
customer expectations.
Longfellow s design-build philos-
ophy provides customers with an
efficient process that reduces risk,
cost, and time to completion. With
designers and master craftsmen
working together as a team, we can
provide the perfectly executed cus-
tom architectural details that make
a difference.
Give us a call to schedule a no-
obligation consultation, or visit
one of our design showrooms in
Falmouth, Sandwich, Harwich
Port, or Osterville to see a wide
variety of finishes, materials, and
fixtures, specially selected for our
coastal climate.
138
139
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Moniques Bath Showroom, Inc.
e have all found out how
difficult and challenging
life can be, but we are
here to help. Don’t let your kitchen
or bath remodel add to your frus-
tration. Let the award-winning team
at Moniques Bath Showroom help
you to navigate through the seem-
ingly endless choices of bathtubs,
shower valves, toilets, sinks, vani-
ties, faucets, and medicine cabinets.
Our sales staff is the best in the
business with well over 100 years of
combined industry experience. As
an independent showroom, we have
no ties to any one manufacturer; in
fact, we pride ourselves on carrying
the finest products from around the
world, and that includes high-end
US manufacturers as well.
Moniques is a family-owned
business, now including our third
generation! We strive to provide the
best in customer service and cus-
tomer satisfaction. Moniques is a
must-visit in your kitchen and bath
planning. We highly encourage you
to call and make an appointment so
that we can focus on you and your
needs without interruption.
140
DOROTHY GRECO
141
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Monogram
From controlled simmers to
the perfect sear, Monogram
ranges are expertly engi-
neered to perform beyond expec-
tations. Our substantial brass-
accented knobs and signature large
windows unify the details that
make our ranges look, feel, and
perform as if they were perfectly
designed for you.
“Our versatile gas-burner con-
figuration includes two 23,000-
BTU multi-ring brass burners and
dual-stack burners, allowing heat
settings to go from a gentle simmer
to an intense flame. The industry-
exclusive TrueTemp™ burner offers
consistent precision temperature
management and also works with
the Hestan Cue™ cookware, helping
you amplify your cooking experi-
ence.” —Heather Guerriero Dans,
Monogram Sales Manager
142
143
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Payne | Bouchier Fine Builders
t Payne | Bouchier we bring
to your project a process
that blends your vision and
imagination with our experience,
expertise, and craftsmanship. We
believe that a critical ingredient of
a successful project is building a
team at the outset that comprises
architect, interior designer, land-
scape architect, and builder. This
approach merges ingenious minds
into a creative think tank focusing
on ways to achieve your dream.
With our rigorous on-site project
management team, skilled carpen-
ters, and expert subcontractors we
can achieve just about anything. At
the same time that we are build-
ing a new house on Cape Cod,
we will be doing a historically
accurate restoration of a Greek
Revival house on the North Shore,
renovating a Back Bay townhouse,
and doing a super sleek build-out
of a Cambridge mid-rise. At our
twenty-first-century wood shop,
our artisans bring nineteenth-cen-
tury sensibilities to their craft as
they produce cabinetwork, mill-
work, and staircases.
We’ve been constructing beauti-
ful homes for over 35 years in Bos-
ton, Cape Cod, the western sub-
urbs, and the North Shore. We’ll
find a way to build whatever you
desire. We are your dream builder.
4» DESIGN: LYNN HOPKINS ARCHITECT. PHOTOGRAPHY: ERIC ROTH О DESIGN: JILL NEUBAUER ARCHITECTS. PHOTOGRAPHY: ERIC ROTH
• DESIGN: PAYNE I BOUCHIER DESIGN. PHOTOGRAPHY: GREG PREMRU О DESIGN: HART ASSOCIATES. PHOTOGRAPHY: SUSAN TEARE
144
Payne| Bouchier Fine Builders
173 Norfolk Ave. | Boston, MA 02119
617-445-4323
paynebouchier.com
PAYNE
BOUCHIER
FINE BUILDERS
STEVE PAYNE & OLIVER BOUCHIER
145
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Snow and Jones, Inc.
hen remodeling this bath-
room, the client wanted
to combine coastal and
natural elements to create a spa-like
space. Bringing light into the dark
shower stall, creating better organiza-
tion in the vanity space, and replacing
the surrounded tub with a vessel were
key elements that would provide a
more relaxed and airy feel. The client
chose Becky Carbone of Farmhouse
Fresh Interiors and partnered with
Patti (ones at Snow and (ones to make
the perfect plumbing selections.
A custom vanity f rom Mackenzie
Custom Carpentry paired with a
vessel sink enabled the client to have
the look and organization desired.
Rounded squares became the theme,
and a minimalist tub filler allows the
view of native plantings and mature
pines to shine through the back win-
dow. The shower was expanded, and
replacing the outer wall with glass let
natural light in, creating an open and
expansive feeling. Patti chose coor-
dinating fixtures to make the shower
space functional and luxurious.
The client says, “It's been four
months since the completion of our
bathroom, and each morning we look
forward to enjoying this fresh space
all over again!’*
146
PHOTO CREDIT: LIZ MCCARTHY PHOTOGRAPHY
The clienfs desire for a Spa-like
bathroom was captured by
a warm tone custom vanity
featuring Kohler vessel sinks.
The freestanding tub adds
clean sculptural elements with
incredible views and the rain
shower head and hand shower
allow for therapeutic water
flows to inspire relaxation.
PATTI JONES
Farmhouse Fresh Interiors
Norwell, MA & beyond
617-290-3377
beckycarbone(3)g mai I .com
farmhousefreshinteriors.com
Snow and Jones, Inc.
85 Accord Park Dr.
Norwell, MA 02061
781-878-3312
snowandjones.com
MttcAc/t <£• .(Z?r//Z r lo/ttttofM
147
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Bertoia Custom Homes
& Remodeling
A Paris penthouse my client
rented inspired this project.
There is a paneled refrigera-
tor and a cabinet that hides the small
kitchen appliances, eliminating clut-
ter. The fully equipped cooking island
has an induction cooktop, steam oven,
regular oven, and warming drawer. The
entire kitchen is matte black with a row
of high-gloss black upper cabinets. The
end result of this finish was to enable
the homeowners to see the reflection of
the lake they live on while at their sink.
Every inch of the space is carefully
designed to serve a particular func-
tion. The tall ceilings and abundance of
glass combine with the white floors to
balance the design perfectly. The move-
ment on the marble helps to warm up
the overall design aesthetic. The large
island allows lots of space for prepping,
cooking, and interacting with guests.
As we all know, everyone gathers
around the kitchen—and this one is a
conversation starter for sure!
Bertoia
CUSTOM HOMES * REM00ELIR0
Bertoia Custom Homes
& Remodeling
Waltham, MA 02453
781-975-1809
bertolacustom.com
OO©0
148
PHOTO CREDIT: SHELLY HARRISON
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Main Street @Botellos Showroom
Main Street ©Botellos is a
full-service design showroom
that takes pride in the ability
to navigate clients’ needs from design
through installation. The expansive
showroom inspires you with an impres-
sive range of styles, colors, woods,
and attention to detail with moldings,
millwork, and hardware for every
room in your home. Benjamin Moore
paint complements with color in every
corner. Andersen doors and windows
displayed throughout give you many
options to love the view you see. If you
haven’t experienced walking through
Main Street ©Botellos, what are you
waiting for?
Serving Cape Cod and the Islands,
the South Shore, and Boston. Our show-
room is filled with ideas that define your
personal style, and our knowledgeable
designers bring a balanced functionality
to support the way you live.
We invite you to start at Main Street
with innovative ideas and limitless pos-
sibilities to Make Home Your Favorite
Place to Be.
MAIN STREET
^BOTELLOS SHOWROOM
ENDLESSLY INSPIRING
26 Bowdoin Road
Mashpee, MA
508-477-3132
mai nstreetbotel los.com
149
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
This custom kitchen
features white cabinets
and a mix of materials,
including wood, marble,
and stainless steel.
Classic Kitchens & Interiors
With 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, office, or other storage solution.
They collaborate with homeowners,
architects, builders, and interior design-
ers throughout Cape Cod, the Islands,
and southeastern New England.
Since 1979, Classic Kitchens & Interi-
ors’ focus has been on providing supe-
rior craftsmanship, an individualized
approach to the design process, and
state-of-the-art cabinetry. The team is
with you during every step of the
process—from design to delivery.
Classic Kitchens & Interiors
127 Airport Road
Hyannis, MA 02601
508-775-3075
ckdcapecod.com
CLASSIC
KITCHENS & INTERIORS
UJS1OM CABINETRY • DESIGN A INSTALLATION
THE TEAM OF DESIGNERS AND INSTALLERS AT CLASSIC KITCHENS & INTERIORS.
MICHELLE KAYE PHOTOGRAPHY
150
PHOTO CREDIT: BRIAN VANDEN BRINK
Special Advertising Section
Installations Plus, Inc.
For more than 38 years, our crafts-
people have provided superior
service and custom installations
of all large- and small-format tile, from
large porcelain panels to mosaics, plus
so much more.
Our skilled team of installers is at
home in all types of construction
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Installations Plus, Inc.
131 Flanders Road
Westborough, MA 01581
installplusinc.com
774-233-0210
JON MOSS
PHOTO CREDIT: TAMARA FLANAGAN
151
Special Advertising Section
Fieldstone cabinetry, quartz countertops
from Silestone, stools from Trade Winds
Furniture, light fixtures from Capital
Lighting, and Hafele hardware.
Marine Home Center on
Nantucket has been serv-
ing the community since
1944. Marine’s five-acre campus
has become the leader in the high-
quality resources needed to build,
decorate, and live on Nantucket.
To showcase the expanding and
diverse offerings, Marine’s design
team worked to create a new show-
room of luxury custom cabinetry
and furnishings to complete the
Nantucket home. The Cottage
inside Marine Home Center is the
team’s finished product. With more
than 1,500 square feet, The Cottage
inspires with the finest in kitchen,
living, dining, and bedroom
furnishings. We offer a custom
approach, a team of design profes-
sionals, and the space to explore the
different door styles, finishes, and
countertops needed to turn your
kitchen and bath into your favorite
room.
Visit The Cottage and our design-
ers will show you the latest in
cabinetry, window treatments, and
hand-knotted rugs and lighting to
complete your cottage project.
я
MARINE
Home Center
134 Orange Street
Nantucket, MA 02554
508-228-0900
marinehomecenter.com
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Marine
Home Center
152
PHOTO CREDIT: WENDY MILLS
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Mid-Cape Home Centers
Kitchen & Bath Design
This Martha's Vineyard
kitchen, designed by one
of many talented Mid-
Cape designers, features
Dura Supreme custom
cabinetry.
For over 125 years, Mid-Cape Home
Centers has served Cape Cod, the
Islands, and southeastern Massa-
chusetts with quality building materials,
reliable delivery, custom millwork, and
kitchen and bath design services. Their
design showroom locations in South
Dennis, Orleans, Falmouth, Middleboro,
and Martha’s Vineyard hold a variety
of kitchen and bath displays along with
windows, doors, and mill work.
Mid-Cape offers the ideal materials for
any project. Add a unique and beauti-
ful touch to your kitchen or bathroom
project with Dura Supreme or Omega
cabinetry. Finish it off with countertops
or vanity tops in stunning styles and col-
ors from brands like Cambria, Viatera,
and more. To brighten it up, choose
windows and doors by Marvin.
Whether for a replacement project or
new construction, Marvin’s high-quality
windows and doors have been built to
stand up to the challenges of coastal
conditions. Mid-Cape Home Centers is
dedicated to quality, service, and you.
L Mid-Cape
Mid-Cape
Home Centers
South Dennis
Orleans
Wellfleet
Falmouth
Middleboro
Martha’s Vineyard
800-295-9220
midcape.com
153
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
The red Oasis back-painted glass
backsplashes provide an easy-
to-clean wall covering that offers
a vibrant contrast to the natural
wood and dark stone in this
contemporary kitchen design.
Oasis Shower Doors &
Specialty Glass
В ack-painted glass is the perfect
complement to a modern kitchen.
It is an easy-to-clean and colorful
solution that offers the minimalist style
designers crave. This kitchen, designed
with bamboo and windowed aluminum
cabinets, features red backsplashes by
Oasis Shower Doors & Specialty Glass.
Designed, fabricated, and installed by
the company, this latest product will give
your kitchen a vibrant, contemporary
look. Oasis back-painted glass is made
with ultra-clear, low-iron glass that
assures perfect color replication every
time. Each piece is custom made, with
or without faucet and outlet cutouts, to
fit the space exactly, even when walls are
out of square. The color is applied using
a heat-cured, two-coat process for added
durability and is available to match any
RAL Color Code, Benjamin Moore, or
Sherwin-Williams formula. Sizes avail-
able up to 70” x 144”. Color options,
color clarity, and extreme durability
make Oasis back-painted glass perfect
for projects large and small.
TOM DALY. OWNER
Oasis Shower Doors &
Specialty Glass
Shawn Zenuh | Specialty
Glass Division Manager
800-876-8420
Showrooms Across
New England.
oasisspecialtyglass.com
GOasis
SPECIALTY GLASS | SHOWER DOORS
154
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
The Granite Place
Often in life we find our-
selves busy, working or
running around with a
list of errands to do. When you
finally get some time to relax,
why not do it in the comfort
of your home, with a beautiful
kitchen designed and hand-
picked by you, to be enjoyed
with special friends and family?
Natural or man-made materials
give any space in your house
that one-of-a-kind look, with
unique stone that can’t be
replicated. This is the beauty
of nature.
The Granite Place is a family-
owned company that offers you a
wide range of granite colors and
other materials, including quartz,
marble, soapstone, and quartzite.
Think of us as artists who use
granite to create masterpieces in
your home!
JONATHAN DA COSTA AND CAROL GOMES
The Granite Place
374C Cambridge Street
Burlington, MA 01803
781-362-4774
thegraniteplaceinc.com
GRANITE
PLACE
155
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Top Line Granite Design
Top Line Granite Design is one of
the largest stone fabricators in
New England, founded by Edy
Ramos in 2003. Mr. Ramos is passion-
ate about the industry and dedicates his
time to traveling around the world, vis-
iting quarries to supply the best quality
and most unique materials.
Top Line Granite Design is known
for its high standards in stone, fabrica-
tion, and installation, with experienced
professionals servicing not only New
England, but also the entire country as
well as international accounts.
The main showroom, located in
Tyngsborough, Massachusetts, is more
than 10,000 square feet and houses
amazing stonework and design ideas for
all tastes; it also has a 40,000-square-
foot production line, which has one of
the most sophisticated mechanisms in
the country.
Offering marble, granite, quartzite,
soapstone, onyx, quartz, porcelain,
slate, and more, we have more than 100
different colors in stock and 2,500-plus
slabs in inventory. We have designed,
fabricated, and installed more than
100,000 projects for highly satisfied
customers.
EDY RAMOS
Top Line Granite Design
347 Middlesex Rd.
Tyngsborough, MA 01879
978-251-8087
toplinegranitedesign.com
TOP LINE
GRANITE
156
Special Advertising Section
Distinctive Kitchens and Baths
Vermont Cabinetry
Vermont Cabinetry has been
designing and building custom
cabinets since 1982. Our com-
pany’s foundation is based on unparal-
leled quality, service, and value. At VC,
you can count on fine quality delivered
timely and within budget.
We design and build custom cabi-
netry for every room in your home.
We offer a large variety of hardwood
species, including exotics, as finely
finished, stained, or rustic as you wish.
We will provide color and wood pattern
samples as needed, and customers are
always welcome to visit our manufac-
turing facility to view samples and see
the process.
Fine cabinetry should be as beautiful
on the inside as it is on the outside. At
Vermont Cabinetry, that means creat-
ing features and accessories to make
your life easier. We offer a wide array of
racks, dividers, pull-outs, shelves, lazy
Susans, and more to accommodate all
of your work and storage needs.
Vermont Cabinetry
5 Dunning Lane
North Walpole. NH 03609
802-463-9930
vermontcabinetry.com
157
MICHAEL D'ANGELO landscape architecture www.m-d-l-a.com | 203.592.4788 | Boston
Michael J Lee Photography
NICOLE HOGARTY DESIGNS
530 HARRISON AVE I BOSTON. MA
nicolehogarty.com
Early autumn's warmth
invites us to break the
rules—who says waterside
homes are relegated to
summer?—and embrace
our environment.
See story on page 196.
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBE
Photograph by Greg Premru
161
Designer Dunean I lughes spins Parisian nostalgia into
an atelier-inspired Baek Bay apartment.
French doors, painted the same
lush Farrow & Ball Sugar Bag Light
as the rest of the foyer, lead to the
living room FACING PAGE: A Cole
& Son wallcovering on the foyer's
ceiling coordinates with the aqua
blue wall color. Stained oak, natural
maple, and walnut comprise the
inlay floor.
The living room boasts a very
French seating configuration with
scattered, informal velvet chairs
and sofas that can be rearranged
to accommodate entertaining
in the style of a Parisian salon.
l65
ewport, Rhode Island,
residents Linda Sawyer
and John Harris craved
a weekend pied-i-terre
with Boston character and
French flair. When they
found a penthouse apartment on Back Bay’s
Marlborough Street, they fell for the prime
location, the private elevator, and the roof-
top deck with 360-degree views of the city
and room for the dogs to play. The second
they closed on the residence, the couple
called their designer. Duncan Hughes had
thoughtfully reworked their Rhode Island
house, and they needed his eye to rethink
their dated 9os-era Boston interiors. Their
one request? Give it a French spin, without
going over the top.
ABOVE: Brassworks Fine Home Details created the
custom marble fireplace surrounds. LEFT: The powder
room goes glam with gold Zoffany wallpaper, a vintage
Italian mirror, and bubble-glass sconces by Finnish
designer Helena Tynell from the 1960s. FACING PAGE:
Paolo dining chairs by Studio Van den Akker keep
company with a vintage bar cabinet by Baker.
“As a child, I loved Paris apartments and
wanted an atelier feel,” says Harris, who
spent nine years of his childhood living
with his family in the French capital.
“We wanted classic yet chic and modem—
that je ne sais quoi.”
To strike this tone the moment you step
off the elevator, Hughes painted the foyer
in a rich turquoise. Overhead, coordinating
hand-painted wallpaper covers the ceiling.
Vintage 1920s sconces and a custom gold
mirror accent a chandelier, the only
pre-redesign element that stayed. “It feels
like entering an old mansion,” Hughes says.
44It’s the most Old World of all the rooms,
and it just envelopes you at the beginning.”
Using a saturated palette throughout,
Hughes went bold with blues in the living
166
168
The kitchen’s leopard-themed glass
mosaic backsplash features 24-karat gold
leaf and adds another Old World element.
LEFT: To create this “anti-kitchen." designer
Duncan Hughes skipped whites altogether
and opted for Benjamin Moore Van Deusen
Blue walls, made even more mesmerizing
with original artwork by Eric Zener.
Leather banquettes and gold Jonathan
Adler chairs add to the clubby feel.
spaces and lit up the walk-in closet with
a glowing Hermes orange—a nod to the
French brand the couple appreciates. Key
materials such as nubby raw linen, mohair,
and velvet further dial in that casual-yet-
sophisticated feel, while black ironwork—
a Parisian signature—adorns the primary'
bathroom’s custom curving shower, one of
many engineering feats the team tackled.
Given the 1940s building was constructed
after Boston’s Cocoanut Grove fire, the
deadliest nightclub fire in history, ten-
inch-thick concrete walls offer a fireproof,
soundproof shell that also made changing
anything and everything tres difficult.
“The whole building is steel beams,
concrete, and terra-cotta blocks,” says FBN
Construction’s Sejal Chander, who served
as a project manager along with Aaron Paz.
“We couldn’t drop the ceilings because they
weren’t terribly high, so even the lighting
plan was a challenge.”
169
-IIOMEOW \ER IOIIX HARRIS
Deep blues drench the family room
where a lounger and sofa from The
Bright Group mix with a pair of
Casa Design Group swivel chairs
and an original oil painting. Twilight
Arcadia, by Dan Goozee.
170
The stark black-and-white palette of the
primary bath reflects the curving metal-
and-glass shower created with the help
of West Wareham, Massachusetts's
Make Architectural Metalworking.
FACING PAGE: Custom scalloped mirrors
in gloss black from Mecox make waves
with bath fixtures from Lefroy Brooks’s
1900 Classic Black collection.
'73
ABOVE: Art deco lines repeat in the primary
bedroom, where a headboard feels architectural
alongside a mirrored nightstand that holds a
jewel-like lamp. BELOW: Lion-head wall lights
from Vaughan flank the fireplace in the primary
bedroom, while the walk-in closet glows Hermes
orange. FACING PAGE: On the private roof-deck, the
couple can soak up 360-degree views from their
teak Casa Design Group chairs.
INTERIOR DESIGN: Duncan Hughes.
Joanne Nhip. Duncan Hughes Interiors
BUILDER: FBN Construction
LANDSCAPE DESIGN: Pamela Rodgers.
Verde Garden Design, and Edward
MacLean. Tom Kroon. Potted UP
Yet the team found a way (with help via
structural engineering and radar) to devise a
plan that thoughtfully illuminates just
the right corners while leaving others dusky.
The salon-style living room sports blown-
glass sconces flanking a custom marble
fireplace, while the Prussian blue kitchen’s
gold-inlay ceiling panels reflect light and
add to the art deco detail around the apart-
ment. “I call this the anti-kitchen,” Hughes
says. “I do so many big, bright, white,
airy kitchens. This is a late-night kitchen.
It’s sexy* and dark for midnight Champagne,
more like a comfortable club.”
True enough, many evenings end in the
moody kitchen, where the couple cozies
up in the caramel-colored banquettes for
candlelit grilled-cheese sandwiches and cold
Manhattans. Sawyer, a trained chef, loves
the mosaic backsplash of dancing leopards
and the dramatic underwater artwork above
the table. Like everything in the apartment,
the room is filled with interesting elements
that Hughes says simply “make you feel like
you’re somewhere else.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
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Beyond the custom-made dining table in
this Chilmark home sits the ‘guest zone,"
which includes a wine refrigerator, small sink,
and coffee station. The door, painted the same
shade of Sherwin-Williams Evergreen Fog
as the kitchen island, leads to the garage.
“Low-maintenance”
and “farm” aren’t
synonymous. Neither arc
“barn” and “Martha’s
Vincvard.” But a retired
Chilmark couple knew
what they wanted when
they reached out to
architectural designers
Sherman + Associates
and interior designers
Carrier and Company,
both of whom they had
ABOVE: The home's standing-seam aluminum
roof matches the roof on the nearby barn.
“It’s a nod to a simple agricultural metal roof."
says architectural designer Tom Carberry.
BELOW: In the living room, wainscoting,
Designtex grasscloth wallcovering, and a trunk-
turned-coffee-table make the home feel older
than its two years. FACING PAGE: The fireplace
mantel was crafted from the same reclaimed
yellow pine as the floors. “The mantel was
something the homeowner was passionate
about," says designer Jesse Carrier.
i7s
0
'79
The dining table, which seats twelve,
is so large it requires two Visual
Comfort lanterns hanging above. The
iron straps on the backs of the chairs
echo the lanterns. FACING PAGE:
The kitchen includes an island with
plenty of space to maneuver. “The
homeowner planned to use the island
to host casual buffets and wanted to
ensure the countertop was generous
and uninterrupted without sinks or
cooktops," designer Mara Miller says.
worked with on two previous projects.
In addition to a farmhouse-style
guesthouse, the husband longed for an
auxiliary barn “a la Bunny Williams,”
he says, referencing the famed designer’s
Connecticut estate. So a threshing bam
estimated to have been built between
1810 and 1820 was disassembled in Ver-
mont, shipped to the Vineyard,
and reassembled on-site while the
husband watched from his lawn chair,
Diet Coke in hand.
“The barn was the passion of this
project,” says architectural designer
Tom Carberry. “The guesthouse was a
continuation of the barn.”
That continuation translates to a
farmhouse aesthetic that jells with the
181
homeowners’ style and the surrounding
town of Chilmark, historically more
agrarian than maritime. The couple
enlisted Jesse Carrier and Mara Miller
to convey provenance and ambience in
the home’s interiors. Because this space
serves as a guesthouse, primarily for the
couple’s two adult children and their
growing families, easygoing was key. “We
didn’t want to have to hold our breath
about who was doing what where,” says
the wife.
A faux sisal carpet covers the living
room floor, and the position of the
sage-green island in the kitchen makes
buffet-style dinners seamless. A “guest
zone” between the kitchen and dining
room boasts a wine refrigerator, small
sink, and coffee station so visitors can
help themselves without opening every
cupboard in the kitchen, says Carrier.
Though the home was built in 2019,
the design team’s thoughtful touches
detract from its newness. A grasscloth
182
BELOW: The auxiliary barn, built
in Norwich. Vermont, in the early
1800s for hay storage, hosts
everything from tricycle races to
work-from-home sessions. RIGHT:
The screened porch, which served
as the location for the homeowners'
daughter’s wedding dinner last
year, can be quickly reconfigured
depending on the occasion.
wallcovering in the living room hearkens
back to the farm that originally stood
on the land, explains Carrier. Reclaimed
old-growth yellow-pine floors convey
timelessness. Sourced from Cataumet
Sawmill, the floors purportedly origi-
nated from McLean Hospital in Belmont,
Massachusetts, during the time when the
hospital treated some of its most famous
patients. “Not everyone can say Sylvia
Plath and James Taylor walked on their
floors,” says the wife with a laugh.
The storytelling extends to the fur-
nishings. Chappaquiddick woodworker
Collins Heavener fabricated the dining
room tabletop from two wood planks
sourced from a sustainable forest in
Suriname. RT Facts in Kent, Connecti-
cut, custom designed the table’s base.
Most of the dining, however, hap-
pens on the screened porch, designed
to be reconfigured at a moment’s notice
depending on the occasion. The porch
connects to both the kitchen and an
outdoor deck with a barbecue. “It’s a
very smart house in terms of the floor
plan,” says Miller. “There’s a practicality
to it along with some wow moments—
it’s a modern, open concept that still
feels timeless and vintage.”
The husband’s must-have bam, of
course, epitomizes the vintage. It houses
183
a Ping-Pong table and sitting area and
has served as everything from a gender-
reveal-party location to a kid’s rainy-day
roller-skating rink. Making it even more
poignant, the bam was the final project
of Ken Epworth, owner of now-shuttered
Vermont-based The Bam People, who
passed away shortly after the rebuild
was complete. Epworth sat right next to
the husband in his own lawn chair and
explained the ins and outs of the entire
process during the reconstruction.
“The barn was a crazy, wonderful
addition,” says the wife. ‘‘One look at
it, and there’s no doubt you’re in farm
country, not whaling country’.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
CLOCKWISE from ABOVE: A reproduction of historical wallpaper from Adelphi
Paper Hangings makes a statement in the primary bedroom. A grasscloth-
wrapped mirror hangs above the secretary. Bathrooms the homeowners
encountered while living in Europe inspired the primary bath, with its
Calacatta gold marble on the floors and walls in the all-in-one tub/shower
area. FACING PAGE: ‘This is my favorite room in the house," says the wife of
the upstairs guest bedroom. “Every child wants to sleep here."
ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN: Tom Carberry.
Sam Sherman, Sherman + Associates
INTERIOR DESIGN: Jesse Carrier, Mara Miller,
Carrier and Company Interiors
BUILDER: Geoff Kontje, 41 Degrees North
Construction
LANDSCAPE DESIGN: Jennifer Anderson
Design & Development
186
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The renovation
of the 100-plus-year-old English manor-
style home included new landscaping by
Symbio Design. A geometric smoky-gray
rug anchors the living room, which features
a new statuary marble fireplace surround,
twin swivel chairs, and leather and wood-
188
Photograph (top left) by Dan Nystedt
It was time to downsize. Or was it?
After some forty years in their much-loved, century-
old, Newton, Massachusetts, home, the owners,
who had raised a family in the 6,000-square-foot
English manor-style space, decided it was time to
sell and buy something smaller. “Their children were
grown, and they’d been empty nesters for a while,”
says David Boronkay, owner of the architectural
firm Slocum Hall Design Group. “They planned to
move to a condo being built in Boston.”
However, when the couple walked through
the new condo, they changed their minds. “They
felt it was simply too small and didn’t meet all their
needs,” remembers Boronkay. “So they decided
to renovate and redesign their Newton home to give
them everything they wanted.”
While a modern kitchen sourced from kitchen
manufacturer SieMatic in Boston topped their must-
have list, the scope of the restyling soon expanded.
189
"THE OWNERS KNEW EXACT IA
W HAT THEY WANTED TO ADD AND CHANGE.”
-ARCHITECT DAVID BORONKAY
A painting by Sigalit Landau
hangs on the dining room wall; the
custom-made ebonized china chest
features high-gloss ebony-veneer
cabinet doors. FACING PAGE: The
small, cozy den/TV room includes
cream-colored curtains, gold-leaf
wallpaper on the ceiling, and walls
191
The kitchen’s custom-designed
banquette is made of faux leather to help,
as designer Carolina Tress-Balsbaugh
notes, breakfasters “slide into” the space.
The wood table is from Keith Fritz, and
the painting is by Melanie Daniel. FACING
PAGE: The home’s former kitchen space
was gutted, reconfigured, and replaced
with a kitchen built by SieMatic that
includes a marble-topped island.
192
“WE WORKED HARD TO KEEP IT SIMPLE.
THERE’S .1 SENSE OF CONTINUITY—AND
CONSISTENCY—TII ROEG IIOUT TI IE IIOUSE. ”
-INTERIOR DESIGNER CAROLINA TRESS-BALSBALGH
After consulting with Boronkay and interior
designers Manuel de Santaren and Carolina
Tress-Balsbaugh, the couple decided to redo their
furnishings and transform their second-floor
primary suite by replacing a guest bedroom,
sunroom, and bathroom with his-and-her closets
and bathrooms and a sitting room. The second floor
also includes a guest bedroom and office.
Other additions included a new attached garage
and a radiant-heated cobblestone driveway.
“We heated the driveway so there would be no
worries about slipping or falling on ice,” explains
Boronkay. “It was a real team eflfort making these
changes. Also, because the owners had lived in
the home for so long, they knew exactly what they
wanted to add and change. That made all of our
jobs that much easier.”
When Marc Kaplan, president of Sanford Custom
Builders, learned of the changes the couple envi-
sioned, he suggested upgrading and reengineering
all the home’s services, from electric to plumbing to
HVAC. “The job became a total gut renovation,” he
193
ARCHITECTURE:
David Boronkay, Slocum
Hall Design Group
INTERIOR DESIGN: Manuel
de Santaren, Carolina
Tress-Balsbaugh. Manuel
de Santaren
BUILDER: Marc Kaplan,
Sanford Custom Builders
LANDSCAPE DESIGN:
Symbio Design
LEFT: The primary bedroom showcases
a leather headboard, lavender-and-
cream satin curtains, and matching
bedside tables. BELOW: A small settee
and a drink table in the bedroom set
the scene for relaxation. FACING PAGE:
The newly designed dressing room
includes custom-made built-ins with
glass doors, a bench, and an island-
Iike marble-topped chest of drawers lit
by a glass-globed chandelier.
remembers. “We tore all of the home’s plaster and
lath walls down to the studs so the subcontractors
could add new wiring, plumbing, and a hydro-air
heating system.” The high-tech heating system
replaced a former hot-water system, so all radiators
were removed. The team also added new trim, base-
boards, and crown molding throughout the home.
Instead of replacing the plaster walls with drywall,
they used blue board—which lends itself to smooth-
er textures—with a plaster coating. “The walls still
have that classic plaster look,” Kaplan explains.
Because the owners have an extensive art col-
lection, especially paintings, the interior designers
chose a neutral color palette that features creams,
grays, and robin’s-egg blue so as not to overpower
the artwork.
“We worked hard to keep it simple,” says Tress-
Balsbaugh. “There’s a sense of continuity—and
consistency—throughout the house that helps create
logical transitions from one room to another.”
For example, the kitchen’s wooden floors are painted
light gray to echo the color scheme used elsewhere
in the home.
Boronkay speaks for the entire design team when
he says, “It is a very beautiful older home, and we
all worked together to respect the architecture of
the house while pleasing the owners. It was a labor
of love.”
EDITOR S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
194
Designed by Marcus Gleysteen
Architects, this contemporary Lake
Sunapee. New Hampshire, retreat
throws off traditional notions of
what a lake house should look
like. FACING PAGE: Sunlight plays
through gaps in a pergola under
which a wall of sliding glass doors
connects the kitchen and living
area to the outdoors.
A MODERN LAKE HOUSE
DEEIESCONVENTION BY EMBRACING
ITS ENVIRONMENT.
Produced by
К \RI\ LIDBECK
brent
Text by
DEBRA JUDGE SILBER
Photography by
GREG I’RE.MRL
196
у
Handmade tiles from Heath
Ceramics and Douglas fir ceilings
bring the colors of nature into the
living room FACING PAGE: Stocky
fir beams with steel detailing
frame the custom door at the
main entrance. At a glance, the
home's simplicity belies the high
craftsmanship behind it. "There
was a lot of behind-the-scenes
work to make everything line up."
says builder Tony Bourque.
pend time on a lake, and you’ll notice the
water has two colors. One is a resplendent
blue that floats under the slanted light of the
rising or setting sun. The other is a blinding white
that ignites the surface at the height of the day.
199
Rather than dictate style, interior
designer Atsu Gunther directed her
clients to sources that offered the unique,
handcrafted look they desired. Croft
House, in Los Angeles, became a favorite,
supplying the living room’s sofa, marble-
topped table, and cabinet Gunther
unified the pieces with a rug from Landry
& Arcan Rugs and Carpeting, a painting
by Boston artist John Vinton, and a
striking photograph by Roger Palframan.
ГИс sensory
connection to
-PROJECT ARCHITECT
ROE} \ GEXTILE
The brother and sister who approached
architect Marcus Gleysteen for ideas about de-
signing their shared retreat on New Hampshire’s
Lake Sunapee hadn’t thought much about this
blue-water, white-water thing before.
But, says the sister, “As soon as he started
talking about it, I knew the kind of light he was
talking about.” They also knew that Gleysteen’s
focus on the lake—rather than the conventional
rules of what a lake house ought to look like-
meant he was the architect they needed to hire.
“He understood that we didn’t want some
fantasy, that we wanted him to guide us in
designing a house to fit the site,” her brother
adds. “He understands how architecture is part
of nature.”
Nature already had a decisive hand in the
project. In 2014, a lightning strike destroyed
the forty-something-year-old house on the lot,
which was owned by the siblings’ father. His
two children bought the property from him and
planned to build a peaceful, low-maintenance
retreat for both their families.
200
201
A walnut-and-metal dining table
designed by Gleysteen catches
sunlight from across the room. The
globular lighting is by Bocci FACING
PAGE: The contemporary kitchen picks
up the same color of tile used around
the living room fireplace to brighten
a recessed wall with open shelving.
A blend of heartwood and sapwood
in the Douglas fir island and ceilings
creates a range of honeyed tones that
complement the reclaimed heart-pine
floors and vintage counter stools.
ФЙ
f - * “ “ *
Gleysteen and project architect Robyn
Gentile began by reorienting the existing
footprint to the south to maximize those
luscious blue-water views. From there,
the 4,836-square-foot house took shape as
an assemblage of rectangles, with wide
windows facing the lake. The interior was
organized accordingly: rooms where their
clients would spend the most time—the
two primary bedroom suites, living room,
dining area, and kitchen—face the lake,
with windows that open to admit air from
multiple directions. “The sensory connec-
tion to the landscape—being able to listen
to the lake, feel the breeze, and have the
view, the daylight—is very important,”
says Gentile.
Yet Gleysteen and Gentile didn’t plan
to invite all of the lake’s sights and sounds
inside. The removal of trees damaged by the
-“Л
CLOCKWISE FROM RIGHT: The two
primary bedrooms are situated for
maximum lake exposure, but the
windows are positioned to guard the
occupants’ privacy. The adjoining bath
features a glass-tile shower and deep
soaking tub from Victoria + Albert. A
shiplap wall and handcrafted bed from
Croft House introduce texture without
disturbing the room’s simple lines.
ARCHITECTURE: Marcus
Gleysteen. Robyn Gentile,
Marcus Gleysteen Architects
INTERIOR DESIGN:
Atsu Gunther. Atsu Gunther
Design
BUILDER: Tony Bourque,
Burpee Hill Construction
LANDSCAPE DESIGN:
Greg Grigsby. Pellettien
Associates
“The house is a piece of sculpture that you live in.”
—ARCHITECT MARCLS GLEYSTEE\
lightning strike left the property exposed
to a continuous parade of kayakers, water-
skiers, and pontoon boats. So the architects
lifted the windows in the upper bedrooms
and added a lake-facing pergola for shelter
and a visual barrier. Strategic plantings by
landscape architects Pellettieri Associates
also reestablished boundaries.
Other factors shaped the house as
well. A twenty-five-foot height restriction,
coupled with the clients' desire to offset
energy consumption, translated to a flat
roof that maximizes ceiling heights while
hiding a forty-six-panel solar array. Com-
bining photovoltaics with a high-velocity
hydro-air-conditioning system and
meticulously sealed exterior walls qualified
the house as net-zero, meaning it can
generate as much energy as it uses, says
builder Tony Bourque.
The interior, where Douglas-fir
ceilings, heart-pine floors, and handmade
Passing boaters see no sign of the rooftop
solar panels that supply the house with
electricity. The lake-facing pergola,
meanwhile, lets homeowners engage with
passersby—or not. “You can hang out and
wave to the boats, or turn your back, keep
your shades on, and focus on your book,"
says Gleysteen. FACING PAGE: A concrete
coffee table from CB2 anchors a seating
area facing the outdoor fireplace. Stones
that project slightly from the fireplace face
are used to hold candles at night.
tiles provide all the ornamentation neces-
sary; expresses a similar economy. Interior
designer Atsu Gunther let the color and
craftsmanship of those elements stand out,
with a limited palette of black and white.
Furnishings, chosen by the homeowners
with recommendations from Gunther, mix
vintage and easy-care pieces with a casual
mien that fits the home’s purpose as well
as its design. “The house is a piece of
sculpture that you live in,” says Gleysteen.
“It has to function as a house, and it has to
be livable. You can’t let beauty compromise
function, and you can’t let function
compromise beauty.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: For details, see Resources.
2()6
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The Good Lite
ON THE MARKET
True Colors
A few perfect places for fall leaf peeping, by maria lapiana
FARM INGOLT
This fifty-eight-acre estate features a
unique provenance, a prized location, and
something for everyone. It includes historic
Runnymede, a working equestrian farm once
owned by Peter Fuller, a philanthropist and
thoroughbred expert who bred and kept
horses there until the early 1980s. The prop-
erty is in North Hampton, New Hampshire,
on the banks of the Little River, an estuary
stall bam, paddocks, a
riding/jumping arena, and
a caretaker’s residence,
but the farm is just one
of five parcels included
in the sale. Designed in
the classic Shingle style
in 2003, the elegant
main residence sits on
that flows to the ocean. Listing agent Tony
Jalbert describes it as a peaceful seaside spot
with ocean views, amid rolling meadows and
pastures, with river and marsh frontage pro-
tected by extensive conservation land. Such a
diverse landscape makes for some lovely fall
foliage viewing. The farm includes a twelve-
approximately nine acres.
There’s a carriage house with garage and
guest quarters above; a separate, charming
guesthouse (with a 6,ooo-square-foot stor-
age building behind it); and yes, a sheep bam
that includes some nine acres of electrified
fencing for livestock grazing. Jalbert, who
has listed and visited his fair share of luxury’
properties, says he has quite simply never
seen anything like this one.
CONTACT: Толу Jalbert, Tate & Foss Sotheby's
International Realty, Rye, N.H., 603-498-6241,
4dancersimagelane.com. MLS# 4848251
210
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I'he Good Life ON THE MARKET
3 BEDROOMS
3 FULL BATHS
3 PARTIAL BATHS
11.658 SQ. FT.
$10,500,000
ISLAM) TIME
This magical property—an extraordinary
eighty-six-acre private island—is being
offered by the son of its original owners,
for whom it was a dream come true, ac-
cording to listing agent Jasmin Moulton.
and constructed the house for his own
family, so he spared no details, especially
in the infrastructure. The property' can
only be accessed by water (its reinforced
roads allow a barge to pull up to a ramp
The compound includes three residences
and surroundings so unspoiled the island
feels like a wildlife preserve (deer are
plentiful, the staff keeps chickens, and
there’s even a white peacock in resi-
dence). The estate sits on Maine’s Hope
Island, not far from Chebeague Island in
Casco Bay and twenty minutes by boat
from Portland. master builder designed
and unload cargo) or helicopter (while
there’s no designated helipad, one can
land on the island). At just under 7,000
square feet, the Mediterranean-style
main house boasts mahogany millwork,
including a showstopping staircase with
an exquisite balustrade. The common
rooms have a clubby feel: there’s a formal
dining room and expansive kitchen, three
bedroom suites, a gym, and an executive
office. Panoramic ocean views from every
room and multiple balconies make leaf
peeping a breeze. Two guesthouses, a
tavern, chapel, boathouse, multiple staff
and caretaker apartments, an equestrian
barn, storage barns, and sundry' multi-use
outbuildings complete the island. Walk-
ing onto this property is like setting foot
in a fairy tale, says Moulton. “The owners
just hope they can find a nice steward,
someone to take care of the majestic
place going forward,” she says.
CONTACT: Jasmin Moulton. Legacy
Properties Sotheby's International Realty.
Portland. Maine, 207-450-1529.
Iegacysir.com, MLS# 1496949
212
Photography by Peter G. Morneau
SHOPE RENO WHARTON
ARCHITECTURE Ig 8I
I
ON THE MARKET
FINE ART
Designed to impress as much as showcase
an extensive art collection, this Stowe,
Vermont, property is both rustic and re-
fined. Listing agent Geoffrey Wolcott likes
to describe it as the epitome of “casual lux-
ury.” Indeed, it is luxurious. The home was
thoughtfully constructed of the finest natu-
ral materials—hammered stone, polished
steel, smooth heart pine. The floor plan is
open, and yet there are places that invite
solitude. Expansive windows and multiple
outdoor spaces offer a variety of vantage
points from which to enjoy the changing
seasons. This property’s list of amenities
includes a lavish owner’s
suite housed in a two-
story' tower, a separate
guesthouse, and an
Ipe-and-steel bridge that
leads through a hemlock
forest to a gallery/studio
with translucent roof.
Staff quarters perch
Photography by Geoffrey Wolcott
above heated garages that can accommo-
date twelve-plus vehicles. An eighteen-hole
miniature golf course, sculpture garden,
and pond stocked with rainbow trout offer
recreation opportunities. But even with
all that luxury, the home exudes a sense of
casualness; it’s not formal or fussy in any
way. Wolcott loves the ease with which you
move through its rooms, how approachable
it is, and the many ways it welcomes you.
CONTACT: Geoffrey Wolcott. Four Seasons
Sotheby’s International Realty, South
Burlington, Vt., 802-233'9465,
fourseasonssir.com, MLS# 4721679
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BostonDesignWeek.com
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Produced by: Fusco & Four/Ventures, LLC
Sponsored by:
lurtesy of:
imel Daher, Daher Interior Design
SHOP LUXURY
Client Testimonial
“I always ask
how a customer
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New England Home's
Shop Luxury spot*
lights the best
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mosspure.com
rhe Good Life DESIGN DISPATCHES
EDITED BY LYNDA SIMONTON
Notebook
While many of us were enjoying
some much-deserved downtime
during the summer, the design
community stayed busy.
Boston’s rapidly develop-
ing SoWa Art * Design District
continues to get better and better.
Ailanthus moved from the Boston
Design Center to 540 Harrison
Avenue. The showroom, renamed
Ailanthus on Harrison, continues
to carry the same roster of brands,
including Baker, Lloyd Flanders, and
John Lyle, to name a few. Danielle
Schimanski has taken ownership of
the showroom after working there
for many years.
Charles Spada also moved
to the neighborhood. This iconic
Boston showroom, known for its
selection of fine antiques and
bespoke furniture, lighting, and
fabrics, is now located at 500
Harrison Avenue.
Not to be outdone, Boston’s
Beacon Hill welcomed J. Grady
Home to bustling Charles Street
in July. The design studio and shop
features a variety of home decor
such as Matouk linens, lighting from
Dunes and Duchess, and trays from
The Lacquer Company. Don’t worry
North Shore residents, J. Grady’s
Annisquam location remains open
for your shopping and design needs.
Herman Miller opened a new
concept store in Boston’s Seaport
District. The space, located at 83
Pier 4 Boulevard, sells contemporary
performance seating. If you want
to upgrade your desk chair or other
seating, you can test-drive different
options and find out which style fits
you best.
Speaking of expansion, Holly
Gagne Interior Design, based in
Rowley, Massachusetts, has opened
SEPTEMBER 11
DESIGN WEEK Rl
SEPTEMBER 24-OCTOBER1
Bulfinch Awards
» RISD Craft
PRISM Awards Gala
OCTOBER 26-28
» New England Home's
5 Under 40 Celebration
« 39th Annual Codman
Estate Fine Arts & Crafts
Festival
« Luxury Home Design
Summit
Newport Mansions Wine
& Food Festival
This annual event focuses
on a variety of topics from
architecture and urban planning
to bespoke design. Attend
panel discussions, workshops,
demonstrations, and more.
bostondesignweek.com
A roster of design and marketing
experts helps professionals
in the home-design and
construction industries market
to affluent consumers at the
Chatham Bars Inn.
Chatham, Mass.
Iuxuryhomedesignsummit.com
Boston Design Week
SEPTEMBER 27-OCTOBER 16
Peruse the work of more
than 100 local artisans while
enjoying live entertainment
and food. Guests can also tour
the Codman Estate.
Lincoln. Mass.
histoncnewengland.org
Celebrate creativity,
community, and design in
Rhode Island with in-person
and virtual events.
designxn.com
SEPTEMBER 16
Kick off the fall social season
and toast the 5 Under 40 classes
of 2020 and 2021 at the SoWa
Power Station. The highlight of
the event is a live auction of rugs
designed by the winners.
Boston
nehomemag. com
OCTOBER 21
The PRISM Awards at Boston
Marriott Long Wharf celebrate the
finest projects and outstanding
achievements of professionals
in the home-building industry.
Attend in person or join virtually.
Boston
bragb.org
OCTOBER9
This juried sale of Rhode Island
School of Design alumni and
students features an array
of fine art and crafts, all on
display on Providence's Benefit
Street.
Providence
nsdcraft.com
SEPTEMBER 17-19
Rosecliff mansion provides a
glamorous backdrop for this
annual festival showcasing fine
wine from around the world
alongside local and regional
cuisine.
Newport, R.L
newportmansions.org
OCTOBER 2
Enjoy a special evening honoring
the 2021 Bulfinch award winners
at the Harvard Club of Boston,
presented by the Institute of
Classical Architecture & Art's
New England Chapter.
Boston
classicist-ne.org
2I«
Thomas O Bnen
Visual Comfort & Co.
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The Good Life
DESIGN DISPATCHES
6o CRANBERRY HIGHWAY | ORLEANS, MA
(774) 316-4571 I thetileryatp.com
an outpost in Camden, Maine. The new
location includes a design studio and a
retail shop, so you can take advantage
of full-service design or simply find a
unique piece carefully selected by Gagne
•and her associates.
Patti Watson and her team at Taste
are also on the move. After seventeen
years in Jamestown, Rhode Island, they
headed east to a much larger space in
Middletown, Rhode Island. The new
headquarters will include House of
Taste, a mini showroom featuring luxury
vendors and building supplies, so clients
can experience firsthand the quality and
craftsmanship they can expect in their
own home.
Pinney Designs and its retail shop
Syd + Sam relocated from Cambridge
to Belmont, Massachusetts. The new
location at 453 y2 Common Street is also
a design-studio and retail-space combo.
Are we seeing a trend here?
In other news, EM NARI is now
PRO NE (Professional Remodeling
Organization of New England), an inde-
pendent group dedicated to championing
and supporting residential design and
remodeling. The organization honored
the best of the industry with its annual
awards presentation in June. Gold Award
winners included J.P. Hoffman Design
Build. Masters Touch Design Build,
Platt Builders, and New England
Design ♦ Construction. To see a
complete list of winners, visit pro-ne.org.
Finally, congrats to Polhemus
Savery DaSilva Architects Builders
as it celebrates a quarter century of
creating beautiful residences. The firm
was one of the original design-build
companies in the region, pioneering an
integrative approach to creating homes.
Follow along on PSD’s Instagram
account as it shares its extensive
portfolio from the past twenty-five years.
Do you have news to share with New
England Home? Email Lynda Simonton at
lsimonton@nehomemag.com.
The New England Design Hall of Fame is Baek!
Save the Dale!
For the design event of the season.
Thursday, November 11,2021
For more info visit nehomemag.com
THE FOURTEENTH ANNUAL
NEW ENGLAND DESIGN
HALL OF FAME
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KEYNOTES:
Bobby McAlpine
Renowned Architect
and Entrepreneur
Madeline Stuart
Celebrated Interior and
Architectural Designer
1 Andrew Davis
Top Global Marketing
Influencer and Speaker
We are excited to bring back the Luxury Home Design Summit, presented by
New England Horne with Esteem Media (the team behind the Design Influencers Conference).
The Luxury Home Design Summit is an advanced educational and networking forum
for owners and leaders of professional design businesses. Attendees will include architects,
interior designers, landscape architects/designers, custom builders, contractors, showroom
operators, suppliers who serve the luxury design market, and more. In addition to providing
top tier industry networking opportunities, the mission of this 3-day event is to help
attendees develop foundational market knowledge, business vision, and problem-solving
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PRODUCED BY:
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MONOGRAM & Design
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THE
SHADE
STORE
HOME
fhe Good Life THE SCENE
EDITED BY EMILY EDIGER
Christina Hawkes. Debra
Wallace. Jen DeRose,
and Catherine Truman
New England Home’s Joyce
Leavitt and Jenna Talbott
flank Mat Cummings
New England Home's Kathy
Bush-Dutton. Elizabeth
McGann, and Holly Curtis
Donna King. Diana James.
Lee Reid. Heather Ukstins.
and Chloe Rideout
The Ogunquit
Playhouse
Ogunquit Pinvhousc
The Ogunquit Playhouse introduced
its open-air performance venue, the
Leary Pavilion, this summer. New
England Home's annual sponsored
performance returned with a
pre-show cocktail party at local
restaurant Clay Hill Farm. Guests
enjoyed drinks and light bites while
catching up with the New England
Home team before everyone headed
to the playhouse for a viewing of this
year’s sponsored show, Spamalot.
The Leary Pavilion is the Ogunquit
Playhouse's 25.000-square-foot,
fully covered performance venue
PRO Awards
The PRO Awrards honor the work of
New England’s exceptional remodeling
professionals. This year, members of the
Professional Remodeling Organization
of New England competed across
sixteen categories. The awardees were
recognized during a virtual gala held
at the Clarke showroom in Milford,
Massachusetts.
fine
furnishings
H i| shows
NOVEMBER 5-7, 2021
WaterFire Arts Center | free parking
475 Valley Street, Providence, Rl
Friday 5-9, Saturday 10-6, Sunday 10-4
Admission: $10
finefurnishingsshows.com
Annual shows offering American made, handcrafted furniture & accessories.
Show expansion to include The Parade of Chairs
Over 100 artists, craftsmen and students including many new exhibitors!
Handmade home decor for the home & garden
Student Work from RISD and North Bennet Street School
INSTITUTE OF CLASSICAL
ARCHITECTURE & ART
NEW ENGLAND
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE
2021 BULFINCH AWARD WINNERS!
Join the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art New England
at the 2020 & 2021 Bulfinch Award Ceremony & Gala
HARVARD CLUB OF BOSTON
374 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston
Sat, October 2, 2021
6 p.m. — 10 p.m.
To purchase tickets and view die Honorees, visit classicist-ne.org
Resources
A GUIDE TO THE PROFESSIONALS IN THIS ISSUE S FEATURED HOMES
ввв
Find а
trusted
business
at BBB.org
COASTAL CONNECTION
PAGES 45-52
Architecture: Elliott Architects,
Blue Hill, Maine, 207-374-2566,
el I iottarchi tects. me
Builder: Jon D. Woodward & Sons,
Sedgwick, Maine, 207-359-2541
Landscape design: Todd Richardson,
Richardson & Associates,
Saco, Maine, 207-286-9291,
richardsonassociates.com
Structural engineer: Paul Becker,
Thornton Tomasetti, Portland. Maine,
207-245-6060, thorntontomasetti.com
Lighting design: Peter Knuppel, Peter
Knuppel Lighting Design, Sullivan,
Maine (retired)
A CABIN BY THE SEA
PAGES 57-59
Interior design: Annsley McAleer,
Annsley Interiors, Boston,
617-266-1426, annsleyinteriors.com
Builder: Colby Chase, Chase
Construction, Wells, Maine, 207-646-
6703, chaseconstruction.com
Cabinetry: Barry Chase, The
Webhannet Co.. Wells, Maine,
207-646-6703, thewebhannetco.com
HIDDEN JOYS
PAGES 60-62
Architecture: W. Edward Pitts III,
Charles R. Myer & Partners,
Cambridge, Mass., 617-876-9062,
chariesmyer.com
Interior design: Elana Rudiger,
Elana Rudiger Interior Design,
Winchester. Mass., 917-319-2420,
elanarudigerdesign.com
Cabinetry: Karla Monkevich,
Kochman Reidt + Haigh
Cabinetmakers, Stoughton, Mass.,
781-573-1500, cabinetmakers.com
SUNNY SIDE UP
PAGES 64-66
Kitchen design: Melinda Guglietta,
Bespoke of Winchester, Winchester,
Mass., 781-570-2210,
bespokeofwinchester.com
Builder: Thoughtforms, Acton,
Mass., 978-263-6019,
thoughtforms-corp.com
HEART OF THE HOME
PAGES 68-72
Architecture: John Battle, Battle
Associates Architects, Concord, Mass.,
978-369-1805. battlearchitects.com
Interior design: Janice Battle. Beyond
the Garden, Concord, Mass.,
978-337-0916. beyondthegarden.com
Cabinetry: Paul Reidt, Karla
Monkevich, Kochman Reidt + Haigh
Cabinetmakers, Stoughton, Mass.,
781-573-1500, cabinetmakers.com
Stained glass: Robert Stump Studios,
Poughquag, N.Y., 845-464-0600,
robertstumpstudios.com
Builder: Wood & Clay, Gilford, N.H..
603-524-3128, woodandclay.com
BLUE STREAK
PAGES 74-76
Architecture: Sam Kachmar. Sam
Kachmar Architects, Cambridge,
Mass., 617-800-6223,
kachmardesign.com
Interior design: Nancy Serafmi.
Nancy Serafini Interior Design.
Boston, Nantucket, Mass., Okatie,
S.C., 617-413-3388,
nancyserafini.com
Builder: FBN Construction, Boston,
617-333-6800, fbnconstruction.com
Cabinetry: Paula Accioly, Jewett Farms
+ Co., Boston, 978-961-1538.
jewettfarms.com
WATER WORLD
PAGES 90-97
Architecture and interior design:
JP Couture, JP Couture. Architect,
Providence, 401-621-1861,
couturedesignassociates.com
Builder: Glenn Parker. Parker
Construction, East Providence, R.I.,
401-427-8500, parkercci.com
Interior millwork: Jutras Woodworking,
Greenville. R.L, 401-949-8101,
jutraswoodworking.com
Decorative piasterwork: Clayton
Austin. Boston Ornament Company,
Allston, Mass., 617-787-4118,
bostonornament, com
Library lighting design: Evelyn Audet,
Evelyn Audet Lighting Design, East
Providence, R.L, 401-435-3688,
evelynaudet.com
Bronze balcony fabrication: Concentric
Fabrication, Somerset Mass.,
508-672-4098, concentricfab.com
Custom leather sofa: Paul Bergeron,
PJ Bergeron, New Bedford. Mass.,
508-644-7126, pjbergeron.com
Seashell installation: Christa Wilm,
Christa’s South Seashells, West Palm
226
Beach, Fla., 561-2544853,
csseashell.com
Murals, faux painting, and gilding:
Luke Randall, Pompeii Paints,
401-295-8211, lukemranda/l.com
Custom chandelier: Emmett
Barnacle, Pawtucket, R.L,
401-374-1214, emmettbarnacle.com
FRENCH CONNECTION
PAGES 162-175
Interior design: Duncan Hughes,
Joanne Nhip, Duncan Hughes
Interiors, Boston, 617-426-1440,
duncanhughes.com
Builder: Andy Patterson, John
Ramsdell, Sejal Chander, Aaron Paz,
FBN Construction, Boston,
617-333-6800, fbnconstruction.com
Interior millwork: Chris Rice, Furniture
Design Services, Peabody, Mass.,
978-531-3250,
furnituredesignservices.com
Cabinetry: Heather Kahler. Rachel
Murphy, Downsview of Boston,
Boston, 857-317-3320,
downsviewkitchens.com
Landscape design: Pamela Rodgers,
Verde Garden Design, Newport, R.L,
401-619-0562, verdegardendesign.
com; Edward MacLean, Tom Kroon,
Potted UP, Boston, 617-504-4139,
pottedup.com
Audio/video design: Thomas Thayer,
Michael Farris, Creative Systems,
Hopkinton, Mass., 508-655-2262,
creativesys.com
Lighting design: Sergio Mazon. Mazon
Lighting Design, Boston, 617-501-
8822, mazonlighting.com
Curtain fabrication: Marie Chaput,
Ed Cavallo, Thread, Ashland. Mass.,
508-429-5606, threadworkroom.com
Metal fabrication: Paul Meneses,
Chris Brum, Make Architectural
Metalworking, West Wareham, Mass.,
508-273-7603, makearchmetal.com
Shutter fabrication: Back Bay Shutter
Co.. Woburn, Mass., 781-221-0100,
backbayshutter.com
Fireplace mantel fabrication:
Brassworks Fine Home Details,
Boston, Newton, Mass., 617-244-3900,
finehomedetails.com
BREATHE EASY
PAGES 176-185
Architecture: Tom Carberry, Sam
Sherman, Sherman + Associates,
BOSTONStonC
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Vineyard Haven, Mass., 508-693-8311,
shermanadesign.com
Interior design: Jesse Carrier, Mara
Miller, Carrier and Company Interiors,
New York, N.Y., 212-706-1025,
carrierandcompany.com
Builder: Geoff Kontje, 41 Degrees
North Construction, Edgartown,
Mass., 508-783-6442,
41degreesn.com
Interior millwork and cabinetry:
Crown Point Cabinetry,
Claremont, N.H., 800-999-4994,
crown-point.com
Landscape design: Jennifer Anderson
Design & Development. Wilton,
Conn., 203-834-9666.
ienniferanderson-designs.com
Landscape contractor: Working Earth
Organic Gardening & Landscaping,
Edgartown. Mass., 508-627-7094,
workingearthmarthasvineyard.com
Upholstery: Vineyard Decorators,
Vineyard Haven. Mass., 508-693-9197.
vineyarddecorators.com
SECOND ACT
PAGES 186-195
Architecture: David Boronkay,
Slocum Hall Design Group.
Watertown, Mass., 617-744-6399,
slocumhalldesign.com
Interior design: Manuel de Santaren,
Carolina Tress-Balsbaugh. Manuel
de Santaren, Boston, 617-330-6998,
manueldesantaren.com
Builder: Marc Kaplan, Sanford Custom
Builders, Wellesley Hills. Mass.,
781-416-7007, sanfordcustom.com
Landscape design: Symbio Design,
Cambridge, Mass., 617-921-4254,
symbio-design.com
OUT OF THE BLUE
PAGES 196-207
Architecture: Marcus Gleysteen,
Robyn Gentile, Marcus Gleysteen
Architects, Boston, 617-542-6060,
mgaarchitects.com
Interior design: Atsu Gunther.
Atsu Gunther Design, Boston,
617-784-3311, atsugunther.com
Builder: Tony Bourque. Burpee Hill
Construction, Newport, N.H., 603-
477-4782, burpeehillconstruction.com
Landscape design: Greg Grigsby,
Pellettieri Associates. Warner, N.H..
888-826-2275, pellettieriassoc.com
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Advertiser Index
AJ. Rose Carpets & Flooring 209
Able Moraine 98
Back Bay Shutter Co., Inc. 126
Bannon Custom Builders 87
BauTeam 93
Bertoia Custom Homes & Remodeling 148
Better Business Bureau 226
Bisousweet Confections 125
Boston Architectural College 55
Boston Beer Company 125
Boston Design Week 216
Boston Stone Restoration 227
Botello Home Center 149
Burpee Hill Construction, LLC 78
C.H. Newton Builders, Inc. 75
California Closets 47
Carolyn Thayer Interiors 65
Catherine Truman Architects 113
Charles R. Myer & Partners. Ltd. 51
Christopher Pagliaro Architects 79
Christopher Peacock 10-11
Circa Lighting 43
Clarke Distribution Corporation 130-131
Classic Kitchens & Interiors 150
Clay Hill Farm 222
Crown Point Cabinetry 132-133
Crown Select 18-19, 132-133
Cumar, Inc. 77
Daher Interior Design 1
Dan Gordon Landscape Architects 123
Davio’s Northern Italian Steakhouse 105
Designer Bath/Salem Plumbing Supply 83
Divine Design Center 32-33
Dolphin Insulation 208
Downsview Kitchens inside front cover
Elms Interior Design 12-13
FBN Construction Co., LLC outside back
cover
Fine Furnishings Shows Providence 225
Flavin Architects 85
Fossil. Inc. 20-21
Frank Webb Home 134-135
Gregory Lombardi Design 119
Hammer Architects 91
Hawthorn Builders 95
Herrick & White Architectural
Woodworkers 36-37
Hutker Architects 14-15
Installations Plus, Inc. 151
Institute of Classical Architecture & Art
(Bulfinch Awards) 225
Jamestown LP/Boston Design Center 35
Janine Dowling Design, Inc. 53
Jennifer Palumbo. Inc. 89
Kevin Cradock Builders, Inc. 67
Kitchen Views at National Lumber 136-137
Knickerbocker Group 228
KVC Builders 2-3
LaBarge Homes 40
Landry & Arcari Rugs and Carpeting 103
Latte Boston 215
LDa Architecture & Interiors 28
LeBlanc Jones Landscape Architects.
Inc. 63
Leslie Fine Interiors. Inc. 4-5
Light New England 219
Longfellow Design Build 138-139
Mandarina Interior Design Studio 31
Marine Home Center 152
Matthew Cunningham Landscape Design,
LLC 86
MGa | Marcus Gleysteen Architects
inside back cover
Michael D’Angelo Landscape Architecture.
LLC 158
Mid-Cape Home Centers 153
Minotti 71
Moniques Bath Showroom 140-141
Monogram 142-143
Moss Pure 217
MWI Fiber-Shield 73
Nicole Hogarty Designs 160
Northern Outdoor Lighting 211
Oak Hill Architects, Inc. 127
Oasis Shower Doors/Specialty Glass 154
Ogunquit Playhouse 222
Onyx Corporation 22-23
Opus Master Builders 111
Paragon Landscape Construction 81
Payne|Bouchier Fine Builders 144-145
Pellettieri Associates, Inc. 41
Polhemus Savery DaSilva Architects
Builders 69
PRG Rugs 159
R.P. Marzilli & Company, Inc. 115
Rob Bramhall Architects 99
Robin Gannon Interiors, LLC 26
Roche Bobois 8-9
Sea-Dar Construction 54
Sherman + Associates, LLC 38
Shope Reno Wharton 213
Siegel Associates 219
Snow and Jones 146-147
SoWa Power Station 109
Splash Kitchen and Bath Showroom 128
Studio 2112 Landscape Architecture 217
Sudbury Design Group, Inc. 16-17
SV Design, Siemasko + Verbridge 44
Systems Design & Integration. Inc. 24-25
Taste 117
The Granite Place 155
The MacDowell Company, Inc. 27
The Tilery at Tree’s Place 220
TMS Architects 6-7
Top Line Granite Design, LLC 156
TSP Smart Spaces 107
Venegas and Company 56
Vermont Cabinetry 157
Weezie Towels 42
Wiggly Bridge Distillery 121
WKP Construction 61
Youngblood Builders. Inc. 39
ZEN Associates, Inc. 96-97
New England Home. September-October 2021, Volume 17,
Number 1 © 2021 by New England Home Magazine. LLC.
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A Touch of Glass
arlier this year, Grade, maker of hand-painted wallpaper,
and mosaic-designer New Ravenna announced a
collaboration that brings a sense of movement to both
art forms. New Ravenna’s master mosaicists interpreted
five Grade designs, each chosen for its international
and historical themes.
Family matriarch Linda Grade's travels through Italy
inspired the Romanesque Linda’s Garden (pictured
above). Blythedunes takes its cue from antique Chinese
wallpaper. Stylized Japanese streams and plum blossoms
appear in Wave and Blossom. Late Parisian designer
Armand-Albert Rateau’s trees influenced French Deco,
and Waves pays tribute to a seventeenth-century hand-
painted Japanese screen as well as the Grade family’s
love of the ocean.
The mosaics, customizable according to size and
color, can be found in showrooms throughout Massa-
chusetts, Maine, and New Hampshire, newravenna.com
Photograph courtesy of New Ravenna
MG8 Marcus Gleysteen Architects
617.542.6060 | mgaarchitects.com
Meet the women of FBN Construction (left to right): Sharon Stoller (Bookkeeper), Sejal Chander (Project Manager), Shalini Vattes (Associate Project Manager),
Larissa Cook (Executive Vice President), Charlene Foran (Custom Client Services Manager), and Ellen McGovern (Custom Client Services Manager).
Photo: Mebssa Ostrow
FBNConstruction
617.333.6800 fbnconstruction.com
hello@fbnconstruction.com