Northshore Home

Northshore Home Spring 2020

Northshore Home magazine highlights the best in architectural design, new construction and renovations, interiors, and landscape design.

Issue link: http://read.uberflip.com/i/1226262

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 77 of 107

76 floor for the new house." It was a brilliant idea that allowed the couple to envision what they'd see outside the windows of their new home. Suffice it to say, they liked what they saw. With the newly angled 4,600-square-foot footprint in place, Frausto and his team began to concentrate on the home's design. Shingle-style residences are one of the firm's fortes; the style was popularized by notable architecture firms such as McKim Mead & White, who built many of the seaside cottages in Newport and Long Island. "It's a style that gives you a lot of freedom, but there are some essential ingredients," says Frausto. On the exterior, "the rooflines are very important, so for this house we created slung twin gables that peak on both sides." Since Gloucester's zoning code prevented Frausto's team from creating a true ridge along the roofline due to height restrictions, they gave the illusion of one by placing the chimney on the side of the home, which hid where the hips rose up and didn't quite meet. Then they stained the shingles a warm honey-brown and painted the trim hunter green, typical of the Shingle- style homes traditionally found in Newport and on the North Shore. The green trim also wraps around the roof ends to delineate where the roof ends and the first floor begins, thus breaking up the height of the home, another distinct characteristic of the Shingle style, along with an outdoor porch, which gives the couple a place to relax outside and includes roll-down motorized screens to keep out bugs during the warmer months and a wood-burning Harvard brick fireplace for when it gets chilly. The home's ample interior space includes a playroom for extended family on the third floor along with an office with a curved eyebrow window that looks out onto the ocean. There are three bedrooms and a den with a porch off it on the second floor and plenty of shared spaces on the first, including a seating area at one end of the kitchen nicknamed "The Starbucks Zone," where guests can relax with coffee in the morning and family and friends can hang out together anytime, especially when the wife, who loves to cook, is preparing meals. "They wanted a house that was open and flowed, but didn't necessarily have an open floor plan," says Frausto. "So the plan has visual continuity but clear delineated edges, like in the dining room, which is framed on one side by interior columns." An abundance of windows with the mullions pushed up high, typical of Shingle- style homes, allows light to flood in, while dark-stained white oak floors and four gas fireplaces lend a sense of snugness. And while the home's lines are crisp and clean, it has plenty of historic detail, like lofty ceilings, substantial crown molding, an abundance of shiplap, a tray ceiling in the master bedroom, and even a ballast Architectural details create a rich design throughout, including square columns that help divide the dining area and hall. pattern on the outdoor Juliet balcony railing off the second-floor den. This clean yet detailed aesthetic was reflected in the owner's choice of décor. "They wanted this house to be more sophisticated than a typical beach house, so the challenge was finding that sweet spot between being sophisticated and a place that someone can sit anywhere in the house in a wet bathing suit," says the couple's longtime designer, Abby Welling Forstall, owner of Rockport-based Embellishments Interior Design and Décor. "The client also wanted a very calming house that had lots of ambiance but also felt cozy and warm, since it was going to be used in the summer as well as holidays and weekends in winter." To achieve all this, Forstall used a neutral color palette throughout the home to keep attention on the dramatic ocean views. The entry has off-white shiplap walls with a complementary cream stone floor, perfect for wet boots on a rainy day. A fog-gray finish adorns the kitchen cabinets, while a soft green-gray grass cloth in the adjoining "Starbucks" area adds warmth. An organic touch runs throughout the home in the form of natural materials and animal appointments, like the metal bird sculptures on the stone mantel in the living room, the whale cotton pillows in the second-floor den, and the leopard chairs in the third-floor office, where a little giraffe sits on the desk. "I make sure elements

Articles in this issue

view archives of Northshore Home - Northshore Home Spring 2020