Vintage Vineyard: A Martha’s Vineyard Vacation House

By Robyn Griggs Lawrence
Published on July 1, 2006
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In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.
In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.
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In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.
In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.
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Stained-glass pocket doors to the music room, just off the great room, allow for privacy and quiet. Right: The kitchen features a variety of reclaimed woods: river-salvaged heart pine on the floors; cypress cabinetry (including the custom refrigerator door); and pine timbers salvaged from a warehouse on the ceiling. The open shelves provide convenient, table-ready storage for clean dishes.
Stained-glass pocket doors to the music room, just off the great room, allow for privacy and quiet. Right: The kitchen features a variety of reclaimed woods: river-salvaged heart pine on the floors; cypress cabinetry (including the custom refrigerator door); and pine timbers salvaged from a warehouse on the ceiling. The open shelves provide convenient, table-ready storage for clean dishes.
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The house has no air conditioning, so the open-on-three-sides screened porch, with ceiling fans, provides a cool summer living room with a view.
The house has no air conditioning, so the open-on-three-sides screened porch, with ceiling fans, provides a cool summer living room with a view.
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The open-air outdoor shower is made of salvaged redwood beer-tank stock and reclaimed cypress scribed to natural granite boulders found on the site.
The open-air outdoor shower is made of salvaged redwood beer-tank stock and reclaimed cypress scribed to natural granite boulders found on the site.
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The approach to the house reveals a collage of roofs that dips in the middle to allow a glimpse of the Vineyard Sound and the Elizabeth Islands beyond.
The approach to the house reveals a collage of roofs that dips in the middle to allow a glimpse of the Vineyard Sound and the Elizabeth Islands beyond.
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The stone patio rises out of the landscape to floor level, supported by rough stone walls and protected by a curved bronze railing.
The stone patio rises out of the landscape to floor level, supported by rough stone walls and protected by a curved bronze railing.
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The welcoming entry porch is framed using sassafras trees harvested from the site. The lift of the beam perfectly frames the front door.
The welcoming entry porch is framed using sassafras trees harvested from the site. The lift of the beam perfectly frames the front door.
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The high timber-frame ceilings, made of aged reclaimed pine with a soft patina, allow for tall transoms that bring light deep into the room. The stone fireplace is surrounded by cypress built-ins.
The high timber-frame ceilings, made of aged reclaimed pine with a soft patina, allow for tall transoms that bring light deep into the room. The stone fireplace is surrounded by cypress built-ins.
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South Mountain builders devised a complex system to join the sassafras branches with the roof.
South Mountain builders devised a complex system to join the sassafras branches with the roof.
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Main Floor
Main Floor
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Secound Floor
Secound Floor
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Lower Level
Lower Level
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In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.
In the evening glow, stone steps lead to the entry of one of Diana and Roy Vagelos’ houses on Martha’s Vineyard. The home’s white-cedar shingles are made by Maibec, a Canadian manufacturer that buys 80 percent of its cedar logs from the Seven Islands Land Company in Maine, which is certified as a producer of sustainably managed wood products.

Summers on Martha’s Vineyard are sacred for Diana and Roy Vagelos, their four children, their children’s spouses and their seven grandchildren. The members of the Vagelos clan travel from all ends of the country to gather on the island off the Massachusetts coast. “They think summers in the Vineyard are better than anything else,” Diana says. So after decades of squeezing into summer rental homes, in 1998 the Vageloses bought 80 acres of forested hillside overlooking the Vineyard Sound and the Elizabeth Islands and approached a local builder, South Mountain Company, about a house.

The extended family needed space, and they planned to build four houses over time. For the first–the main house–no one was crazy about building something humongous, which would have disturbed the wooded site’s natural balance and displaced several large oak trees. So South Mountain, a group of designers and builders that pays particular attention to how their homes blend into the landscape, proposed two smaller houses connected by a covered breezeway. The Vageloses had their solution.

The first home and a guest house were tucked down into the woods near the water. When it came time to build a third, the family had thoroughly explored their land and fallen in love with a hilltop spot with spectacular views. “For several years we would hike up there, rest and meditate, and think how beautiful it was,” Diana says. “We couldn’t not put the house there–it was just too good.”

While the South Mountain team agreed the hillside site was magnificent, it wasn’t without challenges. “Our biggest concern was keeping the house from breaking the tree canopy above it,” South Mountain cofounder John Abrams explains. “The house would have this wildly expansive view, but we didn’t want it to be too much a part of everyone else’s view from the water.”

“We always keep in mind not just what the family sees from inside, but also what the community sees from outside,” says South Mountain co-owner and designer Derrill Bazzy, who managed the project. “This site was very visible from the water, so we tucked the home’s second floor up into the roof line, and from the water it looks like a one-and-a-half-story house instead of a three-story house. Even though it’s perched, it’s somewhat settled in.”

The water views were down a north-facing slope, presenting another challenge. “It was easy to get fixated on this stunning view,” Bazzy says, “but we had to think about really windy, cool days–about having nice spaces without the view that are protected from rain and get southern sun.”

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