In 1916, yachting enthusiast Henry Steers purchased the land for his second home, on the banks of Long Island Sound. A U-shaped affair, it was sited on six-acres in the Byram Shore section of Greenwich, Connecticut.
Steers passed away at the home in 1928, but it stayed in the family until the mid1950s. More recently though, the once-grand home was listing toward dereliction. Its pink stuccoed exterior and worn-out interiors could only be called down at the heels. It was bland, dated—and untouched for years.
Enter Charles Hilton, of the Greenwich architecture firm that bears his name. A Classicist of the first order, he was hired to rethink the home’s look, inside and out. “The new exterior style initially was envisioned in a Mediterranean aesthetic with a barrel-tile roof,” he says. “But it was ultimately executed to resemble an English or Irish country house with a new, flat, terracotta tile roof.”
Then Hilton’s work ground to a halt; eventually the house would change hands. When a Filipino couple with four children from Westchester County became its new residents in 2018, they began to articulate a new vision for the home, inside and out.
Their first call was to a contractor who suggested they contact Hilton. “We met with him and he made recommendations,” says the client, a stay-at-home mom whose husband works in finance in New York. “We said: ‘Wow—you really know the house and the area’—and that’s how we ended up with him.”
Denne historien er fra Ocean Home June/July 2023-utgaven av Ocean Home.
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Denne historien er fra Ocean Home June/July 2023-utgaven av Ocean Home.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
RAISING THE BAR
With the help of a local designer, a once vacant and lifeless dirt lot adjacent to a primary residence in Manhattan Beach, California, is converted into a functional oasis for entertaining and relaxing.
Young at Heart
A tightknit family upgrades its Vancouver lifestyle with a legacy home overlooking English Bay.
Reinterpreting THE PAST
Saved from demolition, the once-grand Myles Standish Hotel revived by architect Patrick Ahearn is now a family home.
A LEAP OF FAITH
TRUST IS THE THEME FOR A CLIENT'S NEW HOME ON THE OCEAN IN NEWPORT BEACH-AND FOR ITS ARCHITECT.
FAMILY AFFAIR
ONE MAN'S VISION FOR BUNGALOWS KEY LARGO REACHES BEYOND HIS RESORT-TO STAFF AND GUESTS ALIKE.
CONCRETE COASTAL
SASHYA THIND WARMS CONCRETE WITH WOOD, CREATING CONTEMPORARY INTERIORS THAT FEEL PERFECTLY AT HOME ON THE WATER
NO PAIN, NO GAIN
A NEW HOME IN HERMOSA BEACH OVERCOMES MULTIPLE HURDLES TO EMBRACE DRAMATIC PACIFIC VIEWS
NANTUCKET BY DESIGN
KENNERKNECHT DESIGN GROUP CREATES A TIMELESS NEW ENGLAND AESTHETIC ON THIS SMALL ISLAND 30 MILES OUT TO SEA.
TURNABOUT
A 1990S COLONIAL STYLE HOME IS NOW A QUIET BACKDROP FOR A BUSTLING CAPE COD WATERFRONT ESTATE.
CHASING LO TYDE
PSD ARCHITECTS AND INTERIOR DESIGNER CAROLYN THAYER CREATE A SUMMER BEACH HOME FOR A FAMILY ON CAPE COD.