LAKESIDE Reverie

In the dining alcove, a circa-1700s wingback chair juxtaposes an oversize white oak and steel dining table and a pair of crisply modern banquettes (fabric, Perennials). OPPOSITE: A Bali-esque "summer house" extends out over the water.
DEEP IN THE ALABAMA WOODS, where oaks and cedars give way to water, where full-throated bullfrogs bellow in the obsidian night, there lives a house. Or maybe more of a house-ish nymph-a mystical, thatch-roofed inhabitant of the forest. With lozenge-window eyes, a cloak of darkest ebony, and 11-foot finials gently bowing up toward the sky, this enchanted being is the creation of architect Bobby McAlpine and his partner, Blake Weeks, both Alabama natives. McAlpine, for his part, had been on the hunt for decades for the "consummate lake property," he explains, "one enveloped by water, a spot that could hold some romantic building or series of buildings."
Though he hadn't grown up going to lakes, the architect was "smitten" when he first discovered Lake Martin in his early 20s. "It was one of my first non-suburban experiences," he says of visiting a friend's cabin there, immersed in woodsy waterside quietude. It was a spot he returned to year after year to celebrate a birthday week of solo creative musing. "I'd draw and dream. Many houses and furniture designs were birthed there," he says. Now, some 40 years later, when that elusive dream property finally materialized along these same shores, McAlpine and Weeks have birthed this furtive being, this house-but-not-house, a home deconstructed into different pavilions. Because a lake house, McAlpine believes, is a unique creature.
WE WANTED COLORS THAT PULSE, THAT SUGGEST NEW GROWTH INSIDE A CHARRED BOX." -BLAKE WEEKS
Bu hikaye Veranda dergisinin March - April 2025 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Veranda dergisinin March - April 2025 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap

Rebuilding Connection
Do old buildings hold the keys to reviving community? Carol Quillen, president and CEO of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, champions the untapped power of place in linking us to one another.

Follow in the Footsteps of Egypt's Kings and Queens
I MEET, AT LONG LAST, CLEOPATRA.

GOING for the GUSTO
A Dallas couple topples the notion that later-in-life house revamps must take away, scale back, hush. Here, Miles Redd and David Kaihoi dream up a glamorous fresh start for their International-style home.

The BUILDING STANDS
A Pacific Palisades temple miraculously survived the wildfires that torched much of the surrounding area. With his own residence destroyed, Associate Rabbi Daniel Sher contemplates the meaning of home, the significance of \"stuff,\" and the resilience rising from the ashes.

Journey Into the Unspoiled Villages of Laos
I AM NOT PREPARED FOR THE WILDNESS.

GROWING A LEGACY
At Highgrove House, King Charles III has planted the seeds for a future of sustainability and original artistry. But how to preserve the essence of the garden itself? English home furnishings firm Sanderson immortalizes his vision in a new collection of fabrics and wallpapers, created in close collaboration with His Royal Highness's estate.

Explore India's Architectural Riches
THERE IS NO SUNRISE MORE mystical than one on India’s Ganges river. It begins with the morning mist, which hangs so low and often so dense it diffuses the rising sun into an otherworldly scrim of mauves, oranges, and yellows.

GOD SAVE THE Queen Anne
...and other historic neighborhood beauties, advises designer Markham Roberts, who wrote the rules of rescue and restraint in updating them for modern families.

Belle of the Boulevard
Amid a flurry of historic-house teardowns in Nashville, a 1926 Greek Revival rediscovers its vitality at the hands of three local design powerhouses.

PAPER SCISSORS
A pilgrimage into the Alpine origins of Swiss paper cutting reveals a resurgence of the high craft at the hands of a fresh generation of artists.