Preserving
Sarasota’s
architectural heritage has never been more successfully accomplished than with
Guy Peterson’s renovations to the iconic Revere Quality House. A classic of the
Sarasota School, it was built in 1948 to showcase the use of
Revere copper
products in postwar housing. But its greater accomplishment was to define a
moment in the history of architecture, when new ideas were everywhere and
Sarasota was
teeming with brilliant minds like those of Paul Rudolph and Ralph Twitchell, the
Revere House creators.
Time and remodeling had taken its toll on the house when Peterson took on
the project several years ago. Even worse were the economics of the situation.
The acre lot the tiny house stood on was now prime multimillion dollar Siesta
Key real estate. How could it be preserved in a way that made economic
sense?
Peterson and builder Pat Ball came up with the solution of making the
original house the guest house for a new 4,755-square-foot home that would be
the epitome of modern Sarasota luxury. The result is a museum-quality
work of art—two houses that speak to each other, separated by the years but
united by the timeless language of classic modernist
design.
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