| / Home / Articles / Sarasota Magazine / 2001 / 10 / |
|
|
|
|
|
|
An Island Legacy Modern design and family memories mix in a new Boca Grande beach house. Marsha Fottler |
The architect, 43-year-old Michael Epstein, had to satisfy both the owner's desire for a distinctive modern structure that captured views of Charlotte Harbor and the neighborhood's strict deed restrictions, which mandated a peaked metal roof, wood siding, white trim and a "traditional" beach house aspect when viewed from the street. Coastal flood zone regulations meant the house had to be at least 13 feet above the ground. Epstein managed to create a thoroughly modern home within a more conventional shell complete with a street-side white pergola and colorful climbing bougainvillea vines.
In many ways the home extends the legacy of the Sarasota School of Architecture; that's fitting, since the founder of Seibert Architects, Tim Seibert, has lived in Florida since 1942 and was briefly a draftsman for Paul Rudolph before opening his own architectural firm and designing his first
residence in 1952. Seibert, who has always had a strong interest in Florida Cracker architecture as well as modernism, now lives in Boca Grande. It was through mutual friends that the Gorskis discovered the architectural firm, which is now owned by Sam Holladay. The Gorski house was built by Tandem Construction.
"The house floats above the ground and has that appealing in-out relationship characteristic of Sarasota School homes," explains Epstein. "We extended the same cross-cut travertine marble flooring from the inside rooms out onto the porches and terraces; and we kept the ceiling materials (tongue-and-groove cedar), as well as the ceiling height and pitch the same inside and out." He says they also worked to achieve "the clarity of concept, clean geometry and honest expression of structure that you always find in Sarasota School designs."
The architect was able to capture the views that the client wanted. "No matter where you stand inside the house or in the outside spaces, you see out to the water," says Epstein. "Each circulation path ends in a view. You are always part of the larger picture."
Happily, this in-out attitude was incorporated into the interior design from the outset. The architect and designer worked as partners with the client. "That was a great luxury," says Pam Holladay, a University of Florida graduate who has been with Seibert Architects since the mid '70s. "It meant we could choose the color palette, the furniture and the art as the house was being constructed with the sure knowledge that the result would be a single unified look. We brought this harmonious outlook to the smallest detail, like the octagonal, oil-rubbed bronze doorknobs. And we also collaborated on bigger decisions, such as not installing upper cabinets on one whole side of the kitchen because we knew Luci wanted an unobstructed view of the mangrove preserve and the water. Even Luci's closet/ dressing room and the laundry room have windows with a view."
Gorski wanted a feeling of casual sophistication to pervade the main house and the connected guest suite. She chose comfortable, unfussy furniture in peaceful tones of gray-blue, watery greens and taupe. She decided on warm, soft white for most of the walls. "We selected modern furniture on legs so that it had that sense of floating above the floor," says Holladay.
Persian and Tibetan rugs in pale colors selected from Shiraz Gallery and Designer's Source of Sarasota reinforce the color palette and harmonize with the simple lines of Barbara Barry and McGuire dark wood furniture. Sofas and chairs are upholstered in natural linen with a little texture. "The interior furnishings don't scream for attention," says Pam Holladay. "They're meant to embrace rather than compete with the views."
The great room is the heart of the home. It's also the space with the most glass and (along with the master bedroom wing upstairs), the room with the most stunning views. The great room ceiling soars to 26 feet, where a gallery rings the room. Two giant artworks dominate the great room and are an integral part of the architectural taming of the huge space.