CROWN HOUSE::: A house brought back together and redefined through material and form.
This Queen Anne was once split into two apartments. Now, it lives as one home again, as a connected, open space shaped around how a family moves through the day.
At the front, the facade is recalibrated: masonry restored, openings refined, entry redefined. At the rear, a new charred-wood volume extends outward, bringing light, landscape, and daily life into closer alignment.
Inside, white oak herringbone runs continuously underfoot, while custom millwork is integrated into the architecture: built-ins, storage, and library elements conceived as fixed volumes rather than applied furniture.
Upstairs, the primary suite settles into a slower pace. The bath is designed as a retreat, with Venetian plaster walls offering a soft, shifting depth, light drawn from above and diffused throughout the space. A Vermont Verde serpentine stone vanity introduces a grounded, quiet richness.
Original details remain throughout, but are held within a quieter, more intentional framework. Design details at link in bio. Photos
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