Poetry of Space
Not just homes. Living sculptures-crafted for those who see life as a work of art. Sabbeth Projects builds more than homes-we shape the stage for your story.
Mornings in Ditch Plains start with salt in the air and the ocean just a short walk away. Light moves through the house like the tide-soft, constant, grounding-while every space feels effortlessly connected to the outdoors.
It’s calm, unpretentious, and quietly beautiful… the kind of place where life slows down, and everything just feels easy.
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#architecture #explore #aesthetic
Where the woods open, the house lifts gently into the light. Indoors, sunlight slips down the stair and settles on warm wood. Outside the glass, the trees move close, quiet and alive.
Set on two secluded acres in the heart of East Hampton’s horse country, this net-zero residence offers a way of living that feels deeply connected to the landscape around it. Sunlight pours through soaring spaces framed by weathered wood and industrial steel, while the quiet rhythm of the surrounding fields creates a sense of calm and escape. Inspired by the area’s historic equestrian barns, the home blends timeless architecture with forward-thinking design, operating entirely on net-zero energy through solar power, geothermal systems, and strategic natural shading. Here, modern luxury feels effortless, grounded, and completely in tune with nature.
East Hollow carries the quiet discipline of its era-long lines, natural light, and a deep connection to its surroundings. Rather than erase it, the transformation leans in.
The home’s narrow spine has been softened, its rhythm rewritten. A staircase once interrupting the flow now slips quietly into place, allowing the kitchen and living spaces to breathe as one-open, continuous, and made for gathering.
Outside, the facade shifts with intention. Subtle, grounded, and in dialogue with the landscape, it reflects a home that has matured rather than changed.
It feels less like a renovation, and more like a return.
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#architecture #design #build #renovation #explore
This home is a quiet conversation with the land. Every line, every material, every threshold was shaped in response to the site - drawing the outside in and letting the landscape lead. Light moves slowly through the rooms. The trees stay close. It’s a home built not just for a family to grow in, but for a way of living that feels deeply, intentionally connected to place.
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Sag Harbor, NY
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#explore #architecture #lines #glass #home
This feels like a space that moves with you.
Light shifts through the pergola above, spaces open without effort, and the line between inside and out quietly disappears. Mornings feel calm, afternoons expand into shaded porches, and nights settle into a softer, more intimate rhythm.
Less about rooms, more about how you live within them.
A vision of what Hamptons living can be-this architectural rendering captures a home designed to feel inseparable from its surroundings.
The structure blends into the landscape through natural materials, low horizontal lines, and expansive glass that pulls in light, sky, and movement. Native grasses soften the edges, while the architecture quietly mirrors the rhythm of the land.
It’s a study in restraint-where design doesn’t compete with nature, but dissolves into it.
A home imagined not to stand out… but to belong.
This renovation transforms a simple house-on-a-lot into a quiet courtyard compound, where architecture and landscape begin to move together. Long planes of wood siding and layered slats filter the sunlight as it moves across the day-casting shifting patterns of light and shadow that give the home a sense of rhythm and life. The wood almost feels porous, letting the house breathe with the ocean air.
As you walk through the entry and into the courtyard, there’s a calm that settles in. You feel the proximity to the water-the soft breeze, the warmth of the sun reflecting off the wood, the subtle sound of the trees moving. It’s the kind of place where indoor and outdoor living blur together, and every step feels connected to the beach just down the road.
One moment, the world is rushing by. The next, you turn into your drive and it all falls quiet. The house stretches confidently along the road, acting as a protective spine - shielding, buffering, holding space. Beyond it, woodland opens like a private sanctuary.
Here, mornings carry the faint scent of salt in the air. The ocean is close enough that you feel it before you see it - in the softness of the breeze, in the way the light hangs a little hazier at golden hour. Windows open and the trees seem to breathe with the house, leaves rustling in rhythm with the wind coming off the water.
Barefoot summers. Quick bike rides to the beach. Sand that inevitably follows you home. Evenings where the highway hum becomes distant and irrelevant, replaced by the sound of cicadas and the hush of branches overhead.
It’s the rare balance of proximity and privacy - beachside energy just minutes away, and a wooded calm that feels worlds apart.
Being a guest in someone’s home is a unique experience - you’re meant to feel welcomed, comfortable, and cared for, while still having a sense of independence. The Holley Guest House was designed around that exact balance: connected to the main residence, yet intentionally isolated enough to create its own retreat.
Reimagined on an existing footprint, the structure embraces an industrial character that contrasts the main residence’s formal modernism. Concrete, standing seam metal, and a Shou Sugi Ban frame create a tactile dialogue between architecture and landscape. A suspended fireplace anchors the interior, dividing living and rest without closing the space off.
Two glass garage doors transform the building when opened, allowing it to breathe with the property. Carefully aligned with the site’s grade and natural light, the guest house feels embedded in its surroundings - proof that thoughtful secondary architecture can elevate the entire experience of a home.
Cedar Farm is what happens when design is allowed to breathe.
Crafted as one cohesive vision. A home with depth, texture, and soul.
— Sabbeth Projects
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#architecture #homes #luxurydesigns #design #explore