Talk Back
Post a CommentRelated Articles
[View All]
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- International Residential Codes Available Online
- Growing your remodeling business in the current economy
- 2008 Remodeler of the Year
- Develop Land Or Buy Lots? Home Builders Face Dilemma
- ProBuilder Product Report: Kitchen Appliances
- What Can You Recycle?
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
- Myths and Facts About Automatic Fire Sprinklers
- How to Use Percentage-of-Completion Accounting
Cottage Charm
Ann Matesi
July 24, 2000
Luxury Home Builder
![]() |
| Serving as a wonderful example of four-sided design, this cottage looks good from every angle. The historically accurate, flared chimney is constructed of fieldstone taken from the site. |
"It truly is a magical place," says architect Andrew Chary, who worked closely with his client and interior designer, Allen Ransome, to hand-select and restore many of the home’s fixtures, which were uncovered in New York salvage yards.
![]() |
| The fieldstone fireplace (left), flanked by site-built, cedar bookcases, serves as an inviting focal point for the great room. |
The cottage features a conveniently accessible main- floor master bedroom, and two guest suites and a loft on the second floor.
![]() |
| Multiple French doors provide access to the covered terrace, which serves as an outdoor extension of the great room. |
Throughout the house, modern conveniences are carefully hidden or disguised. "With the exception of one small ventilation stack, no mechanicals are visible outside," says Chary. "Even the air conditioning unit can’t be seen." Inside, ductwork is concealed in false beams. Secret drawers are everywhere. Even the refrigerator features decorative hand-painted panel doors that transform it from an ordinary appliance into a faux chicken coop.
![]() |
| As the heart of the main floor, the kitchen has a personality all its own. The open design promotes interaction between this space and the breakfast and great rooms. |
Chary used subtle touches to deliberately downsize the scale of the home. Actually its simple, Z-shaped, three-box design, he says, could be mistaken for almost any contemporary structure when viewed during its construction phase. "The difference," he says, "is in the finishing details." Inside, the walls feature a textured plaster finish. Floors and countertops are made of recycled barnwood.
![]() |
| The master bath features salvaged lighting and plumbing fixtures that Chary and his client found in a New York salvage yard. |
Project Spotlight
Architect/Builder: Andrew Chary Architects, Bedford, New York
Builder (initial construction): Restoration Modern Inc., New York, New York
Interior Designer: Allen Ransome, Toad Hall at ABC Carpet & Home, New York, New York
Major Products Used:
Appliances: GE; Viking
Cabinetry: Custom (site-built)
Doors: Custom
Exterior Finish: Cedar handsplit shake; acrylic modified stucco
Fireplace: Custom fieldstone
Flooring: Antique barn siding
HVAC: Hydroair; Reggio registers
Lighting: Found objects
Plumbing Fixtures: Salvaged, restored
Roofing: Cedar handsplit shake; standing seam copper
Windows: Marvin
Hand-Hammered Iron Hardware: Historic Housefitters.
Sidebars:
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This




