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Australia’s Wild Card: Greg Natale

By Sarah Binder

GREG NATALE’S BOLD, TAILORED, AND SOPHISTICATED APPROACH PUTS HIM IN HIS OWN
CATEGORY, AND HAS LED TO HIS RECOGNITION AS ONE OF AUSTRALIA’S MOST ACCLAIMED DESIGNERS.

With a new tile collection debuting later this year, two new rug collections and a second carpet line launching next year, and a major refurbishment of a hotel nearly completed, Greg Natale is the design world’s equivalent of the Energizer Bunny, if it just so happened to live Down Under.
The Sydney, Australia-based interior designer embarked on his solo career with a project that others may deem low-key — designing his sister’s one-bedroom apartment. Natale made a splash by transforming it into a multi-award-winning space.
“I installed wall-to-wall, custom-colored Florence Broadhurst wallpaper, layering it with matching artwork and linen,” Natale, founder of Greg Natale Design, says. “The apartment was published in Australian Belle and the UK magazine Wallpaper* and won me my first award, the 2002 Belle Wild Card award, a category created especially for me. Since then, I haven’t looked back.”
Self-described as being “obsessed” with the realm of design since he was young, Natale grew up fascinated with the worlds he saw on television and in film. “The incredible settings showed me that there were endless creative possibilities and inspired me to design my own amazing spaces,” he explains.
Natale studied interior design at Sydney’s Design Centre Enmore, followed by visual arts at Sydney College of the Arts, and architecture at the University of Technology Sydney. In 1996, he received his first break at a residential design firm as a junior interior designer. From there, he worked in two more commercial firms before launching Greg Natale Design in 2001…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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The Pageantry of Portage Bay

By Alyson Pitarre

A MODERN TECHNOLOGICAL WONDER ON SEATTLE’S PORTAGE BAY CAPTIVATES WITH AERODYNAMIC ARCHITECTURE AND AWE-INSPIRING SEASCAPES.

Rising from opposing wedges of glass and concrete, the monolithic steel structure of this Seattle lakefront architectural gives one the distinct feeling that it is reaching out to the view of Portage Bay and pulling it right into the home. The stunning effect — “a seascape pageantry,” as listing agent Wendy Lister of Coldwell Banker Bain in Seattle calls it — is by pure design.
“I wanted it to feel as though you were descending into the view, but also pulling the view in and enveloping the space,” reveals architect Dave Dykstra. “Great consideration was given to making sure the view became a grandelement of the home and the experience of living there.”
Dykstra fashioned the 4,468-square-foot residence around the elemental qualities of water, first by extending the house toward the bay and then by integrating the pool and spa into the overall design. Being careful not to disrupt the full-width-view frontage of the home’s main great room, he oriented the spa and sunlit pool— which won an award in 2009 — with expansive terracing along the side of the home. The resulting placement protects the pool against the wind and connects the water elements to the landscape, unfolding and cascading, one into the next…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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Coldwell Banker Reports: Top Trends Shaping the Luxury Real Estate Landscape

By Mark Moffa

Recently, Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC asked seven respected and knowledgeable sales associates and broker/owners affiliated with the ColdwellBanker® brand to gather for a roundtable discussion to reveal and examine the developments currently having the greatest effect on the industry.
As we were preparing for the roundtable, we expected to hear that buyers are concerned about safety and security, highly focused on technologyand smart homes, and even preoccupied with spaces for their collections of art, wine or cars. And to some extent this was true. But it was clear that our panelists are also finding…
 

Click here for the full story, as seen in the Fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates. 

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Renaissance Men: Atelier & Co.

By Alyson Pitarre

Williamsburg, Brooklyn-based design studio Atelier & Co. boldly brings the art and architecture traditions of the past into the present.

In 1418, a goldsmith named Filippo Brunelleschi designed one of the greatest architectural feats in Italy: the dome of Santa Maria del Fiore cathedral in Florence. Il Duomo, as it is called, consists of two concentric shells, an inner one visible from within the cathedral nested inside a wider, taller external dome. His detailed sketches and diagrams reveal just how groundbreaking it was for the time. Five centuries later, Edwardian architect Sir Edwin Lutyens revolutionized the notion of the English country house by fusing function with the arts and crafts movement.
The evidence of their genius lives on in their buildings to this day — and yet the artistry of architecture, as these two men knew it, has largely faded. Hand-drawings and sketches have been replaced by digital renderings. Ateliers, once considered the birthplace of art and design, are few and far between. Many of the great arts and crafts traditions are being lost to mass-manufactured fabrications. Technological advancement, while positive and necessary, has made the intangibles in a physical environment — the emotion of a space — become pixelated.
“Once upon a time, an architect needed to paint and draw well,” explains Richard Cameron, co-founder of Atelier & Co. in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. “It was part of their architectural training.”
The idea of creating…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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The Triumph of Hacienda De La Paz Above California’s Palos Verdes Peninsula

By Alyson Pitarre
PHOTOS @SEPIA PRODUCTIONS INC.

An 8-acre Andalusian hacienda creates magic high above Los Angeles in the guard-gated city of  Rolling Hills, California.

“I felt like an eagle perched at the top of the Palos Verdes Peninsula, 1,100 feet above sea level, surveying my domain,” describes John Z. Blazevich, as he recalls the first time he stood on the stunning 8-acre parcel in the guard-gated city of Rolling Hills, where the splendid Hacienda de la Paz estate now rests. “I searched extensively in Los Angeles for a location with abundant acreage that was private, safe and off the radar. I found it in Rolling Hills.”

Indeed, he did. The impressive work of art and engineering took Blazevich, a food entrepreneur, nearly 17 years to bring to fruition. It was worth the wait. The end result is a millennium of architecture under one roof.

“I wanted to build a home that would stand the test of time,” he remembers fondly. “Therefore, it had to be historical. It had to be original. It had to be meaningful. And it had to be reflective of California.”

Blazevich felt, however, that California’s immediate history was too rustic — so he turned to the first-generation Spanish hacienda style, which he perceived as a sophisticated representation of Spain’s architectural history that later influenced California’s residential style. He cultivated a design vision by tracing Spain’s historical roots back to the Spanish explorers who discovered the Golden State, and then he “brought the history and architecture forward to the look of the 19th-century Andalusia region of Spain,” he reveals.

To turn his dream project into a reality…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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The Royal Treatment In New Jersey

By Jaymi Naciri

Once a playground for dignitaries and royalty, the famed Cragwood Estate enjoys privacy and pedigree.

First Lady Jacquelyn Kennedy riding horses on the property. The Duke and Duchess of Windsor celebrating the annual “Royal Weekend” as guests in the home. Stories of gold Kruggerands being doled out as party favors during elaborate galas.

Cragwood Estate in Far Hills, New Jersey, has both an inimitable pedigree and a storied and fascinating history, having once been owned by precious-metal magnate Charles Engelhard and his socialite wife, Jane. The couple was renowned for their lavish parties and for the dignitaries and heads of state, including Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, who visited.
Today’s soirees might not be quite as posh, but the 112-acre Georgian revival mansion certainly is. Crafted to exacting standards circa 1923 and lovingly restored and modernized by its current owners, the home features three levels of beautifully designed living space. In all, there are 24 rooms, including nine bedrooms, a professional home theater and a climate-controlled, 3,000-bottle wine cellar with a tasting room, plus an elevator and three terraces to take in the rare views of Ravine Lake and the distant hills…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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More Than Skiing in Winter Wonderland at Stowe

By Mark Moffa
An easy trip from Philadelphia to Stowe, Vermont, provided Unique Homes with an exhilarating and somewhat surprising On Location experience last weekend.
Our visit coincided with what locals pronounced “the arrival of winter,” as snow began to fall shortly after our midday Friday arrival, and continued almost until our Sunday afternoon departure. In just 72 hours, the top of Mt. Mansfield (Vermont’s highest peak) received 22 inches, while the base enjoyed 9, making for phenonemal skiing on Stowe’s first powder day of the season.
Hosted by Spruce Peak at Stowe, we toured the recently completed $90 million Village Center, an impetus for our visit. It did not disappoint. A 10,000-square-foot ice skating rink serves as the centerpiece of a high-end alpine village that the developers are rightly claiming is the East’s answer to Deer Valley, Aspen or Beaver Creek.
Director of Sales and Marketing Michael Langley, and Sam Gaines, vice president and director of development, proudly displayed Spruce Peak’s amenities, smartly noting the thoughtful details that add sophistication and elegance, and help reinforce the character already present in Stowe itself, a classic 200-year-old village. For example, the new Adventure Center — which now houses the famed Ski and Ride School, a movie area and casual dining — also boasts a climbing gym that replicates some of the local rock formations, and boasts a large-scale mural by famed artist Geoff McFetridge using caricatures of animals to reference the local points of interest. The Alpine Clubhouse and Club Residences — which features 19 luxury resort club homes, a private dining facility and a ski club for Spruce Peak residents and local members — has a dynamic glass and wood structure by architectural firm Bull Stockwell Allen that gives the feeling of looking out through trees. And for Clubhouse interior, Brayton Hughes Design Studio paid homage to the early ski lodge as well as New England architectural traditions, incorporating regional touches such as Douglas fir for the central stairways, granite and soapstone, and plaid carpets and fabrics contrasted with cowhides to reference Vermont’s agrarian traditions.
Gaines showed off one key amenity that doesn’t have glitz or glamour, but sets Spruce Peak apart — it is the only facility of its kind to offer underground slope-side parking, affording members trek-free, hassle-free access to the mountain.
Spruce Peak at Stowe clearly checks all the boxes for the intangibles: experience, lifestyle, authenticity. So what about the real estate? Checkmate.
Of the over 2,000 acres at Spruce Peak, only 35 acres will be used for residential development, and only 400 dwellings are permitted. For such a small footprint, the variety of real estate is astounding. From slopeside single-family homesites (one of which now has an HGTV Dream Home), to the 19 Club Residences that sold out late last year in 6 weeks for $42 million (Gaines jokes that he must have priced them too low), to the 34 Mountain Cabins that sold out in phases from 2004 to 2015, to condominiums in the Stowe Mountain Lodge (2003), to one-eighth fractional ownership opportunities in the Front Four Private Residence Club, the price points and styles vary greatly.
The newest offering: Spruce Peak recently broke ground on 18 four-bedroom Village Townhomes, 2,100-square-foot triplex units with direct access to the slopes, 18-hole golf course and Village Center. Homes range from $1.5 million to $2.2 million. About 50 percent of them are sold already — in fact, Langley sold one while we were there!
There is much more of this story to tell. Look for more online, and in print in the January/February issue of Unique Homes.
 

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Play it Again, Spirio: Technology Meets Craftsmanship in New Piano

By Roger Grody

Steinway & Sons introduces an innovative, unprecedented player piano, combining craftsmanship and technology.

Steinway & Sons is practically synonymous with meticulously crafted grand pianos, commissioned for royalty throughout the world and played in concert by everybody from Sergei Rachmaninoff to Taylor Swift. Its latest release, the Spirio, is the result of more than 150 years of artistry and more than a little bit of science.
The Spirio is Steinway’s first autonomously playing piano, and revolutionizes the entire concept of a player piano by introducing extraordinarily high-resolution sound. Through technological advancements, the piano’s “hammers” — when a piano key is struck, it activates a hammer to hit the strings — are measured 800 times per second, resulting in nearly perfect facsimiles of live world-class performances.
Ron Losby, president of Steinway & Sons – Americas, reports the company had been exploring…

Click here for the full story as seen in the fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates.

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Sweet Visions at The Ritz-Carlton, Dove Mountain

A Unique Homes ON LOCATION Special Report

By Camilla McLaughlin
When Unique Homes visited the Residences at the Ritz Carlton Dove Mountain, just north of Tucson, last week, preparations for the holidays were full on. Outside, workers were busy installing lights and decorations to ready a 37-foot spruce in advance of Saturday’s official tree lighting. Inside, holiday cheer was very much in evidence, but the showstopper was a life-sized gingerbread house “tucked” into a corner of the resort’s lobby. Decked out with a working fireplace and table for six, made exclusively for the house, it is an instant memory maker for diners large and small. Literally the stuff sweet dreams and visions of sugar plums are made of, this delectable abode required 400 pounds of honey, 856 pounds of sugar, 350 pounds of flour, 100 pounds of ginger powder, 50 pounds of cinnamon, 250 eggs and 10 pounds of nutmeg. According to the resort, it is expected to make an appearance on the Today show this week.
Near both Tucson and Phoenix in the high Sonoran Desert, the resort is nestled in the foothills of the Tortolita Mountains and offers miles of hiking as well as 29-holes at The Golf Club at Dove Mountain, the former home of the annual World Golf Championships-Accuenture Match Play Championship. The spirit of the land and legacy of the Hohokam Indians is woven into the experience here. Every evening, a ranger gives a short talk on this heritage in a gathering on a patio, while a Native American flutist on a nearby hill plays traditional refrains to celebrate and honor the end of the day. On the last night of our visit, those last notes seemed to hover over the resort for a few extra seconds and the glow of numerous fire bowls and the tree made the setting even more magical. It was a bittersweet ending to an idyllic interval.

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Setting Sail

A new project that includes Bermuda’s first Ritz-Carlton Resort promises to raise the bar for luxury hospitality and vacation real estate.

By Alyson PItare

If the idea of living directly on the waterfront with access to a mega-yacht marina, five-star hotel and luxury residences overlooking the azure seas of Bermuda sparks your sense of wanderlust, then you may want to keep close watch on Caroline Bay, Bermuda, over the next two years. The tropical sanctuary has promised to be “the flagship for a new era of luxury hospitality in Bermuda,” according to CraigChristensen, president and CEO of Morgan’s Point Ltd., the development company behind the much-anticipated project.
The first phase will feature a 79-room Ritz-Carlton Reserve resort — the first Ritz-Carlton inBermuda — and world-class amenities such as restaurants, an indoor/outdoor spa and upscale boutiques, a mega-yacht marina with slips for 79 boats and 23 super yachts, and 35 branded waterfront residences represented exclusively by Coldwell Banker Caroline Bay. Adds Christensen: “The first block of residences is scheduled to be ready for occupancy in the summer of 2017, with the remaining blocks to open consecutively, one per month, until all five are completed.”  
 Nestled in a cove on the island’s west end…

Click here for the full story, as seen in the Fall 2016 issue of Homes & Estates. 

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