Two different upstate homes, one modern, one cozy.
designed this house for his family, transforming and reviving a dilapidated old farmhouse. Sited on a stunning backdrop of Stanfordville countryside in New York, the house was originally built in the late 18th or early 19th century. Numerous renovations had left no features of the original house so the design was not constrained to the usual limitations of a historical renovation, freeing Larson to design more personally.
The existing, smaller interior rooms were replaced with larger spaces, and the structural beams and posts were exposed as an intentional design element. Of the previous wings of the house, the attic was removed to create a spacious family kitchen and common space, and the gable end wall was glazed all the way to the ridge. The former front porch was reinstated using Doric columns. The roof was also replaced with metal panels similar to nearby agricultural buildings.
has been imaginatively reinvented to bring a touch of modernity to a historical, picturesque property.
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