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February 3, 2023

The Chestertown Spy

An Educational News Source for Chestertown Maryland

  • Home
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    • The Chestertown Spy
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Arts Design with Jenn Marella Habitat Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Langford Creek Farm

April 20, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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Last year I featured a contemporary house on this property that featured wood detailing by the artisan Vicco von Voss.  I noticed this older house nearby and I recently paid a visit to learn more about it. The house is part of “Langford Creek Farm”, consisting of thirteen contiguous parcels on approximately 790 +/- acres, 150 of which are tillable. 66% of the acreage has been preserved as mature forest, some of which contains the oldest second growth forest on the Eastern Shore. Over four miles of shoreline facing west provides breathtaking sunsets for an early evening stroll after a day enjoying the extensive biking and walking trails. There are a range of buildings that have been subtly inserted upon onto this pristine nature sanctuary including a log cabin, two large barns and the historic farm house that caught my eye last year.

As I drove down the gravel drive, the classic “L” footprint of the beautifully maintained farmhouse soon came into view, set onto a slight knoll overlooking Langford Creek and a pond. I admired the symmetry of the house’s front elevation with its five-bay arrangement, the entry door in the center bay, the three bay front porch and the three dormer windows in the roof. The warm light yellow lap siding and white trim create a classic look and the front and side porches provide views of the pastoral landscape and water. The rafters of the front porch are painted white to accent the decking of classic light blue. 

The front door opens into an open plan living-dining area with fireplaces at each end. The chimneys project slightly into the room and the white plaster surround of the firebox is set against the pine paneled walls.  With windows on three walls of the house, sunlight streams in throughout the day onto the beautiful wide plank wood floors and the hand hewn exposed framing.  The entry porch off the rear wing of the ‘L” opens into another open plan area with the galley kitchen overlooking a space set up as another dining area. French doors open onto the side shed roofed porch with a teak dining set and grille ready for outdoor entertaining overlooking the pond. If one wanted a main floor bedroom suite, this could easily be added behind this area  with exterior doors opening from the bedroom to the porch.

Stairs are one of my favorite architectural elements and this stair has an unusual flow.  You can access it from the kitchen-dining area or the living-dining area and winders then take you around and up to the second floor bedrooms and baths.

This house has most recently been used as a hunting lodge but could easily revert to a single family residence.  You could also add on to the log cabin on the site for a blend of old and new. If historic houses are not your style, the acreage for this parcel has opportunities for a second waterfront home site.  Development of three or four other waterfront homesites on the northern area of the property offer income potential as well. 

Rare large parcel, pristine nature sanctuary to explore by boat, bike or walks in total privacy, variety of housing opportunities-Langford Farm is one of a kind!

For more information about this property, contact Trey Rider with TTR Sotheby’s International Realty at 410-673-3344 (o),443-786-0235 (c) or trey@treyrider.com. For more photographs and pricing, visit https://www.ttrsir.com/eng/sales/detail/279-l-85898-zce69d/6270-broad-neck-rd-chestertown-md-21620 or www.treyrider.com ,“Equal Housing Opportunity”.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Old Sturbridge Reproduction

April 13, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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Like many of you, I have been an “armchair traveler” during the pandemic and seeing this house brought back happy memories of a trip to Massachusetts many years ago.  I spent a delightful day strolling through Old Sturbridge Village, an outdoor living history museum containing forty structures of restored buildings, including buildings from around New England,some authentic reproductions, to replicate life in 19th century Massachusetts. This house is a reproduction of a Sturbridge Village design and is sited on 2.2 acres with both rear views of pastoral farmland and close proximity to Chestertown. The New England simplicity of its two-story, two room deep, pitched roof form; minimal trim and two-toned exterior light color palette are indicative of this style.

The original house consisted of the main two-story wing with a brick terrace off the family room and the laundry/power room hyphen to the garage and the bonus room above.  The current owners expanded the house by converting the terrace on the other side of the main wing to a sunroom that leads to a sumptuous master suite including a private screened porch.

The front door opens onto the “U” shaped stair between the spacious living and dining rooms on each side of the foyer. Back to back fireplaces add charm and warmth to both rooms and the grayish-brown brick against the historical gray trim color of the mantel, moldings and chair rail in the dining room set the stage for the period furnishings. The rear of the main wing is an open plan family-informal dining-kitchen area that spans the length of the house.  I liked how the owners kept the original exterior windows to the former terrace, now sunroom, that frame the vista though to the primary suite hall. 

The rear window of the family room is flanked by built-in millwork for display of photographs and books and the comfortable sofas encourage sinking into the leather to watch TV.  The dining area is between the pair of French doors with full height sidelights that lead to steps down to the brick walkway in the rear yard.  Opposite the French doors is another fireplace with its paneled full height surround detailed with a built-in door for wood storage. The spacious “U” shaped  kitchen and island has a counter overhang for bar stools, wood cabinets to contrast with the darker countertops and stainless steel appliances.

I truly coveted the primary suite.  The geometry of the gambrel ceiling adds height above the deep sage green walls. The sleigh bed is opposite the fireplace with single doors on each side to the screened porch.  French doors at the side wall lead to the brick walkway in the rear yard.  The bathroom walls are the same sage green with white accents of the trim and the porcelain free-standing lavatories between the soaking tub. The opposite wall contains an oversize shower with a glass door and glass panel next to a sliding door to access the toilet enclosure.  Now is the time to enjoy screened porches and this roomy porch’s framing around the screened panels maximizes the views of the rear yard outlined with evergreens and mature deciduous trees. 

Being a Hitchcock fan, I loved the “Vertigo zoom” shot of the stairs with their honey colored pine treads and white newel posts and balusters. Two windows in the second floor stair hall add sunlight and filter light below to the stairs. One bedroom is charmingly detailed with scalloped stencils around the ceiling and furnished with twin wood bed frames with white paneled headboards and foot boards.  The edges of the  bedspreads are also scalloped and the delicate floral pattern on a white background complements the design of the ceiling stencils.

The rear yard is partially fenced and the meandering brick paths lead to a pergola at one corner with chairs for relaxing, al-fresco dining or watching over pets or children at play. This house was beautifully detailed with the period charm of Old Sturbridge Village, including the random width pine floor throughout the house and multiple fireplaces, with modern conveniences in a serene setting close to Chestertown’s downtown amenities.        

 

For more information about this property, contact Lisa Raffetto with Coldwell Banker Chesapeake Real Estate Company at 410-778-0330 (o), 410-708-0174 (c) or lisar@cbchesapeake.com. For more photographs and pricing, visit www.cbchesapeake.com, “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Photography by Patty Hill, 410-441-4719, www.pattyhillphotography.com. For online booking, visit https://pattyhillphotography.simplybook.me/v2/.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

 

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: “Merrythought”

April 6, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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This unique site on 8.5+ acres has 320 feet of protected shoreline along the Chesapeake Bay.  When you sit underneath the pergola at the water’s edge, you have an unobstructed vista of water disappearing into the horizon. The brick house was custom built in 1986 but the front elevation could easily be mistaken for an historic house with later additions.  Semicircular brick steps lead up the six-panel Colonial style front door with its circular transom and overlapping muntins.  The front door is centered in the five-bay main wing with a smaller telescoping wing.  The windows have elliptical headers and slate blue shutters that contrast with the earth tones of the Flemish bond brick.  The beautiful symmetry of the dormers centered over the windows below give this home great appeal.

The front door opens to the entry and side stairs with a living room to the right and the formal dining room to the left.  Instead of art on the walls, the walls became the art.  Above the dining room’s wainscot is a mural around the room by the artist Jack Schroder who was inspired by scenes from Eastern Neck Island, Oxford and St. Michaels.  The mural is interrupted by a corner cabinet with a cabinet below arched glass doors to display china and crystal. The smaller wing contains an office with base cabinets along the side wall and built-in millwork on either side of the window with ample room for a work desk and comfortable seating for breaks from work. 

The center hall passes from the entry through the open plan kitchen and informal dining area with its ceiling detailed with stained beams to create a coffered look. The spacious kitchen has a “U” shaped layout opposite a wall containing the R/F, wall oven and desk area.  The dining area has a five unit picture window and a corner window for water views. There is also a butler pantry and I loved the Mola framed piece in the powder room.

The vista continues through to the dual fireplace that separates another sitting room from the rear TV room.  Off these rooms is a hall that connects to the other areas on the main floor that is detailed with a mix of textures from the paneled wall with casement windows and a door overlooking the courtyard opposite a wall of brick with a brick herringbone floor. This hall intersects with another wide hall that does double duty as a sunroom with its rhythm of casement windows above a paneled wainscot on opposite walls, rattan cushioned furniture and a gambrel shaped ceiling framing the end wall of brick with a white wood door and black strap hardware that leads to the garage wing. An eyebrow dormer set into the wood slat ceiling completes the range of textures and materials and brings additional sunlight/moonlight into the space.

The other leg of the corridor leads to a hall to the main floor primary suite and  another stair leading to the second floor bedrooms.  The spacious primary bedroom has a corner fireplace and a bay projection in the rear wall with wrap-around windows for views of the endless water. French doors lead to a covered brick terrace for direct views to the water and breathtaking sunsets. On the other side of the covered terrace is a pair of French doors leading to the corner family room with a wide picture window that frames the Bay views.  

The second floor bedrooms are tucked under the roof framing with dormer windows for sunlight and views. One child’s bedroom with intersecting gables and knee walls has imaginative murals to inspire creativity in a child-the sloped ceilings have wood Gothic-style arches that link together to become windows or fences to scenes of blue sky fields and green hills topped with trees above faux stone knee walls below. The crowning touch is the gable wall behind the white twin beds under the window. The painted wall is festooned with oversized deep lavender drapery and the three-dimensional folds and tie backs are simply marvelous! I also liked how all of the furniture was white which highlighted the painting and the rug with oversized colorful flowers over the warm pine wood floors. 

If the six bedrooms are not enough, there is also a spacious guest/in law/ extended stay suite over the three car garage. “Merrythought” is well named for how could you not be merry in this estate house with the Chesapeake Bay as a backdrop?  

For more information about this property, contact Miles Norris with Select Land &  Homes at 410-810-3900 (o), 410-708-5423 (c) or mnorrisselect@gmail.com.  For more pictures and pricing, visit www.selectlandandhomes.com , “Equal Housing Opportunity”.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: 1900 Era Farmhouse with 2021 Updates

March 30, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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Now that warm weather is final here, I am finally spending time once again on my screened porch. My farmhouse style house is linear and I wished it had this house’s compact floor plan with the porch across the  front of the house. Since this porch has jalousie windows, adding  a baseboard heater would enable the space to be used through the winter months.  When I moved to the Eastern Shore seventeen years ago, I was charmed by the rural vernacular architecture of houses like this one, with a full front porch and a steeply pitched gable centered in the roof above the front door with an accent window at the attic level. The house is “L” shaped and telescopes down to one-story additions, one at the rear for the kitchen and one at the side for the main floor bathroom. The rear yard landscaping has begun to awaken from its winter dormancy and the mature deciduous tree and the large beautifully shaped crape myrtle is beginning to show its deep pink color. The rest of the yard is lawn and ready for play. 

This house has been completely renovated, including the basic systems that make it move-in ready.  The roof, siding, foundation waterproofing, windows, wall insulation, recessed lighting, plumbing, water meter and water line that runs from the street to the house, underground electric and heating and cooling are all new.   The baths have been updated including tile floors and charming round windows. 

The main floor interior walls have been removed to create an open plan with windows on three sides that keep the great room living-dining-kitchen space sunny and bright. I liked how the gray tones of the waterproof Pergo flooring complemented the light gray walls with crisp white trim. The space is very flexible for a variety of arrangements-the area under the side bay window could be a reading or dining nook and the middle space could be a TV area or dining room. The front living room opens to the front porch for great flow for relaxing with family or friends. 

The vista from the living area ends at the “U” shaped kitchen’s island with the stainless steel range hood that is a dramatic sculptural element. The upper cabinets rise to the ceiling that expands the volume of the room and the white cabinets, granite countertops, stainless steel appliances and easy care tile floor would please any cook. I especially liked the detailing of the island’s corner facing the living room with  rounded open shelves instead of more base cabinets-a great space to display colorful pottery, ceramics or special serving pieces. The side door off the driveway makes it easy to unload groceries. 

The remainder of the main floor has a bedroom suite and the  round window and linen closet in the bathroom are great touches. Two other bedrooms and one bath are located on the second floor and one bedroom has a built-in seat under a window between two closets.  The details of the round window and linen closet are repeated in the second floor bathroom.  The bedrooms have windows on at least two walls for sunlight throughout the day.

Total renovation in the heart of Rock Hall, large rear yard with mature trees, primary bedroom suites on both floors for flexibility, high-end kitchen, ready for move-in!

For more information about this property, contact Debbie Meilke of Long and Foster Real Estate Kent Island  at 410-643-2244 (o), 410-708-7789 (c) or  DEBRA.MEILKE@LongandFoster.com,   “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Photography by Patty Hill, 410-441-4719, www.pattyhillphotography.com. For online booking, visit https://pattyhillphotography.simplybook.me/v2/.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week:  Davis Creek Retreat

March 16, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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This is the third time I have featured a house on Davis Creek and I always enjoy the serene setting of woods and water-the perfect backdrop for a full time or part time retreat convenient to Ferry Park Beach on the Chesapeake Bay at Rock Hall and Chestertown’s amenities. This contemporary cottage with a primary suite on the main floor is nestled in the woods with a screened porch and deck for enjoying the water views and a private pier to launch your boat.  There is also a detached two-car garage with a large workshop/studio/office and a half bath. 

The three-step massing of the house defines the functions with the center story and a half main wing containing the entry foyer with stairs to the upper floor bedrooms, bath and lower floor open plan living-dining-kitchen area. The center wing is flanked by the primary suite wing set slightly back and the one-story screened porch wing set further back resulting in varying roof ridge lines to break up the box. Sunlight filters through the trees onto the elevations clad in light blue lap siding that add texture and casts shadows to further enliven the facades. The rear elevation of the house opens up to the water with wide glass sliding doors at the main floor and double window shed dormers for the second floor bedrooms.

At the front door there is a wood stoop with a bench on one side that is convenient for resting packages before entering the house and the entry foyer’s half glass door with full height side light brings sunlight into the space. The vista from the front door extends through the house’s rear wall’s double sliding doors with views of the woods and water. The open plan living-dining-kitchen wraps around the foyer for great circulation and a short hall off the foyer leads to the primary bedroom suite.  

I loved how the interior design continued the blue and white color scheme and I especially liked the interior design of the very appealing living-dining room.  The wood-burning fireplace is set at the rear wall between pairs of sliding glass doors that lead to the waterside deck. The side wall has full height built-in white millwork with cabinets below and open shelves above for the TV, books, family photographs and memorabilia. The TV disappears into the deep blue-gray back wall of the millwork. The bold light blue rug with white diagonal pattern reminded me of tree branches in the woods surrounding the house and it anchors a seating grouping of contemporary pieces with traditional accents against warm blue-gray walls. 

The dining area at the corner of the room has another pair of sliding glass doors at the side wall that leads to the screened porch giving diagonal views of the woods and water. The wood table, corner chest, eclectic mix of chairs and the colorful poster of a Pennsylvania Dutch barn scene sets the scene for lingering over a meal. The half-height wall to the kitchen gives the cook water views and the wood floors that continue into the kitchen and the spacious “U” arrangement of the two toned color scheme of  gray base cabinets, white upper cabinets and white appliances would please any cook. The built-in cabinetry between the kitchen and the foyer has a dual use as a pantry or display of serving pieces.  The one-story screened porch has a pitched roof that is open to the roof rafters to increase its spatial volume and a screened door to the deck, separate steps to the ground and a pet door for ease of access for all. The rear railing of the deck incorporates a continuous seat to accommodate many guests for parties with both steps and a ramp leading to the ground for access to the pier.

The bedrooms are spacious to accommodate a range of bed sizes and the two full baths have delightful color accents in their shower curtains-one is a pattern of small squares of various shades of blue with a random white square that becomes a mosaic “wall” and the other bath’s curtain contains images of vertical columns of stained glass.

This house was built in 1988 and its compact floor plan, easy circulation flow between indoors and outdoor “rooms” of screened porch and deck, flexible bedroom arrangements with a main floor primary bedroom suite, soothing blue and gray paint colors, a detached two-car garage with extra space for myriad uses and extra storage space over the garage is the perfect retreat just in time to enjoy the upcoming warm months!

 

For more information about this property, contact Debbie Meilke of Long and Foster Real Estate Kent Island  at 410-643-2244 (o), 410-708-7789 (c) or  DEBRA.MEILKE@LongandFoster.com,   “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Photography by Patty Hill, 410-441-4719, www.pattyhillphotography.com. For online booking, visit https://pattyhillphotography.simplybook.me/v2/.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Archives, Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Unique Restoration Opportunity

March 9, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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On my visits to Chestertown for research, I always include a stroll along North and South Water Street. In the 1770’s and 1780’s Chestertown was one of the wealthiest towns in Maryland and Water Street was literally laid out along the Chester River. Its banks were infilled with grand houses through the years in a range of architectural and material styles. Architecture buffs can enjoy the many gems along this street from the majestic Georgian of “Widehall”, the Federal style of the John K. Aldridge House; (one of my favorites) with its later elements of Greek Revival, Italianate and Victorian; and the Collins House with its blend of High Victorian with Greek Revival and Italianate design elements.  

This house’s hipped mansard roof is typical of the Second Empire style and is a rare opportunity for restoration.  On the day I visited, I was enchanted by the symmetrical front three story five-bay façade with the entry door centered in the middle, the front porch that spans the full width of the house, the white color palette accented by the red shutters and the silver gray texture of the mansard roof’s tin shingles with three roof dormers.  The rear elevation is very similar with the addition of a screened porch that spans most of the rear elevation and a double window unit at the kitchen. 

The front door opens to the foyer and the splendid staircase that rises to the third floor. The staircase is detailed with wood treads and cap rail over the painted balusters enclosed by walls of wainscot and wallpaper. To the left of the foyer is the front parlor whose focal point is the fireplace on the side wall flanked by single windows.  The high ceilings, original trim including baseboard, crown moldings, corner blocks at the doors and windows and wood floors evoke an earlier era of gracious living. To me, the radiators for heat are a plus; two of the houses I have called home had them and I much prefer their radiant heat paired with high velocity AC to forced air HVAC.  

Two pairs of French doors lead to the rear parlor which could have several uses. The side wall has a triple-unit window with a seat below between built-ins framed by glass doors with diamond shaped muntins. The rear five-panel wood door leads to the screened porch and the interior door leads to the butler pantry, secondary stair and kitchen. Opposite the front parlor is another room with a fireplace that could be an elegant dining room.  Next to the fireplace is a floor to ceiling cabinet with glass doors above for display of china and crystal and a short hall that leads to the kitchen. The rear butler pantry offers plenty of storage for the galley kitchen and the exterior door from the kitchen to the rear screened porch makes serving convenient.  

The second floor contains two or three bedrooms and two baths.  The primary suite is located on the left side of the house with the bedroom at the rear corner and large closets between a hall to the front room that would make a wonderful dressing room with additional built-ins. The primary bath has classic black and white tile and the walk-in tub could be replaced with a glass-walled shower to open up the space to the sunlight from the window.  The bedroom of the other suite is located at the rear of the house with a bath connected to the front room which could be a sitting room, office or another bedroom. 

Clearly my favorite space is the third floor with its original layout and original plumbing fixtures including clawfoot tubs . How could one resist the charming interior architecture from the steep pitch of the mansard roof framing that creates seats beneath each window for river views from the front windows?  I could easily imagine my cat spending the entire day on this floor and changing seats as the sun’s path moved overhead!  Although this floor has suffered from water leaks in a few areas from the nearly flat portion of the roof above the mansard area the surfaces could be fixed.  As a veteran of many renovation projects, I was relieved to see that the house has “good bones” – just imagine what removing the wallpaper and heavy window treatments would do – this splendid house is a diamond in the rough and she could become a gem again!  

For more information about this property, contact Lisa Raffetto with Coldwell Banker Chesapeake Real Estate Company at 410-778-0330 (o), 410-708-0174 (c) or lisar@cbchesapeake.com. For more photographs and pricing, visit www.cbchesapeake.com, “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Photography by Patty Hill, 410-441-4719

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week:  Rancher on Waldo

March 2, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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The area between Washington Ave., E. Campus Ave. and the Chester River was once Byford Farm but lives on as a popular neighborhood with some of the streets named Byford Court for the family farm and Richard Drive, David  Drive and Waldo Drive for the family’s three sons. This one level house on Waldo Drive was built in 1966 and its lot has many mature trees that enclose the outdoor areas and provide privacy. I grew up in a brick rancher and I appreciate how this house’s front elevation was detailed to break out of its rectangular box. 

The attached one-car garage shifts slightly to provides a door to the front porch and the bedroom wing at the opposite end of the house projects even further as bookends for the recessed front porch. The mix of brick and vertical siding for color and texture, the gable wing infilled with lap siding and windows with wood panels below and shutters all combine to create a very pleasant curb appeal.   

The front yard landscaping includes low shrubbery at the edge of the porch for privacy and another row below the brick of gable wing and several trees, including a crape myrtle at the corner of the garage.  The rear yard is anchored by towering silver maples at each corner infilled with evergreens which create a wonderful ‘outdoor room’ to enjoy from the large brick terrace off the kitchen.

The front door opens to a small foyer that leads to both the living room and the kitchen with “saloon” doors to block the kitchen view. The living room has a large picture window overlooking the porch with operable windows on each side. This room has privacy from the street since it is located behind the front porch and  I would be tempted to replace the sheers with bottom mount shades to cover just the lower part of the windows to allow sunlight to filter through above. Opposite the windows is an extension of the living room with wrap-around windows for views of the landscape. I could easily image adding a fireplace at the front room for relaxing by the fire and using the rear space as a dining room.  

The kitchen layout has room for a breakfast area and is centrally located between the living room and the family room with its bay window to the rear landscape and built-ins.  There is a fireplace surround as a focal point so all it needs is a pre-fab fireplace to complete the space. 

The bedroom wing has three bedrooms and two baths. The neutral finishes of the baths’ floors and tub/shower surrounds are a blank canvas for the next owner’s accents of color in towels or the upper wall color. 

Although I love the urban lots and distinctive houses of Chestertown’s Historic District, this neighborhood offers larger lots for family activities or one-level living for aging in place, streets with low traffic for walking the family pets or biking, proximity to Chestertown Middle School while being just off Washington Ave. for access to the amenities of downtown and Washington College.  

For more information about this property, contact Debbie Shiley at Long and Foster Real Estate at 410-604-6335 (o), 410-490-4327 (c) or  DEBORAH.SHILEY@LongandFoster.com. For more photographs and pricing visit www.LongandFoster.com/DeborahShiley,  “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.          

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Craftsman Bungalow

February 9, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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Above my office area is a poster with freehand drawings of ninety seven architectural styles of American residential architecture, from an earth lodge of 300 AD to a Post-Modern House from 1978.  The drawings are from the book “American Shelter, An Illustrated Encyclopedia of the American Home” by Lester Walker, published in 1981 and updated in 1997. Whenever I sit down to write my weekly column, I am inspired by the rich range of American architectural styles and today two caught my eye, the 1905’s Bungalow and the Craftsman Cottage. This Craftsman Cottage combines the best of those two styles with its gable roof, shed dormers at the front and rear elevations, front porch with tapered wood columns resting on river rock piers supporting the beam above with its curved edges to connect the columns, shake siding and earthy colors. 

The site is nestled in a clearing of mature trees and the curved driveway leads around the house past the landscaping including a mature crape myrtle for seasonal color to the deep back yard with two sheds for garage or workshop use. Nearly is a public landing where you can launch your small craft of choice into the Chesapeake Bay. After a day on the water, you have a choice of relaxing on the large deck, screened porch or the pergola. 

The front door with sidelights opens into the foyer and stairs with vistas to the open plan living room- dining room-kitchen that wraps around the corner of the house. The wood stove, TV and comfortable furnishings grouped under the double windows between the full-height built-in millwork create a space for relaxation.  The tile flooring continues through the wide wall opening to the kitchen with its creamy craftsman style cabinets, upper cabinets with semi-transparent glass fronts for transparency, quartz countertops and tile border backsplash that complement the floor color and white appliances. Track lighting over the bar area at the peninsula base cabinets creates a breakfast spot next to the dining area.  Built-in cabinets to match the kitchen units and the hutch with the owners’ display of beautiful blue and white ceramics provide ample storage. 

Sliding glass doors lead from the dining room to the spacious screened porch overlooking the deep rear yard from the seating and dining areas. I especially liked the porch detailing with the bead board ceiling and minimal framing of wide screened panels above the railing with horizontal rods that disappear into the landscape. The remainder of the main floor contains a bedroom suite and a rear laundry, utility closet and powder room off a short hall. 

The second floor’s long shed dormer gives headroom for two of the three bedrooms, one of which is furnished as an office.  The other bedroom is located under the front shed dormer with its triple window. I would be tempted to claim this space as an office to enjoy spreading out my work along a countertop underneath the triple window with glare free daylight from the northeast. The large bath has both a corner tub and free-standing shower, dual lavatories and storage unit.  The floor plan takes advantage of the front eave storage with a walk-in closet for one bedroom and a room off the hall for general storage.

This is the second time I have featured this street in its rural setting that is also very close to Rock Hall, the Chesapeake Bay and the Eastern Neck National Wildlife Refuge. This charming Craftsman Bungalow built in 2009 with a main level master suite, range of outdoor rooms to enjoy the surrounding landscape and two sheds for myriad uses has great appeal.  

For more information about this property contact  Lynn Hilfiker with Gunther McClary Real Estate at 410-639-2118 (o), 443-480-1163 (c)  or lynnhilfiker@gmail.com. For more photographs and pricing visit www.rockhallrealestate.com , “Equal Housing Opportunity”.

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Shingle Style

February 2, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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I was immediately captivated by this property since it reminded me of a visit to Nantucket many years ago spent exploring the island by walking or biking past the island’s distinctive houses with siding that had weathered over time accented by crisp white trim. When I drove up for my visit to this property, the massing and architectural details of the house could have been part of Nantucket’s historic streetscape. The white fence along the street and the tall hedge along the driveway offers privacy. The circular driveway continues through a breezeway between the house and garage with a bonus room above. 

The massing breaks down the floor plan into charming “pavilions” with appealing architectural details-the master suite at one end with a pitched roof and a hipped dormer above, the entry area with its pitched roof and flared hip roof over the front porch, the kitchen area with its shed dormer overlapping the shed roof that connects to the breezeway roof with its dormer window and the garage/bonus room wing with its hipped roof with flared eaves. 

 The house is sited very close to the Chester River and has its own sandy beach and pier.  The foundation was built up after Hurricane Isabel and faced with stone which adds additional texture to the elevations, enhances the house’s cottage charm and adds broader views of the water.  Walking through the house and the waterside outdoor rooms of rear screened porch and the terrace off the kitchen and dining room, I felt I was on a yacht since the water was so close.

The front door opens into a foyer with a graceful staircase of wood treads and painted risers ending in winders and the last two steps wrapping around the stair wall. Behind the foyer is the living room with its focal points of a wide bay window to water views opposite the wood paneled wall of built-ins, fireplace and wide paneled opening to the foyer. A French door to the screened porch, wide arched wall opening to the dining-family-kitchen area, rear terrace and the bar/butler pantry provides great flow for relaxing with family and friends. 

The ceilings’ geometry over the wrap-around areas of dining-family-breakfast area-kitchen follows the roof framing with stained wood beams accented against the white ceiling planes extending into the dining area’s bay-shaped rear wall.  The kitchen’s side, rear windows and shed dormer windows provides sunlight throughout the day and an exterior door gives convenient access to the garage. Stairs from the kitchen lead to a delightful gallery linking the house to the bonus room over the garage.  The gallery is cleverly detailed with cabinets for storage under the eaves and deep niches above for display divided by dormer windows opposite each other halfway along the hall. The spacious bonus room with bathroom could have myriad uses-home office, play room, extended stay, etc.

There are master suites on both floors but my choice would be the main floor suite.  The spacious bedroom’s pair of French doors flanked by windows leads to the screened porch with both sitting and dining areas-the perfect spot to have your morning coffee. On cool nights, plush upholstered chairs around the corner fireplace create a cozy sitting area. The double doors from the bedroom to the sumptuous bath frame a vista of the free-standing white soaking tub in the bathroom below the colorful antique Italian poster whose background color matches the stone floor.  On either side of the tub are dual lavatories and a dressing table with white cabinetry and countertops of white marble with grey veining.  A half-glass wall separates the marble lined shower from the dressing table. 

The second floor master bedroom has charming interior architecture from the dormer windows with a cozy seating area under the wide front dormer and the rear and side windows have views of the water. Two of the other second floor bedrooms are made for children or grandchildren with twin beds between dormer windows.  

You don’t have to be a transplanted New Englander to appreciate this unique waterside property very close to Town. The house has undergone major renovations in 2000 and 2020 that maintained its historic charm, great flow among the rooms and a balance between open plan and enclosed spaces.  Outdoor rooms of the screened porch and terrace give you a front row seat to the activity on the Chester River- a wonderful property!

For more information about this property, contact  Peter Heller with Coldwell Banker Chesapeake Real Estate Company at 410-778-0330 (o), 410-708-3301 (c) or pheller@cbchesapeake.com. . For more photographs and pricing visit www.hellertheseller.com , “Equal Housing Opportunity”. 

Photography by Patty Hill, www.pattyhillphotography.com, (410) 441-4719

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

House of the Week: Queen Size Matters

January 26, 2021 by Jennifer Martella

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When I made a site visit to a property on Byford Court that was a recent House of the Week, I drove past this house on Queen St. that caught my eye for several reasons.  It is easy to be charmed by a diminutive scale, and I was intrigued by this house’s two rooms on the first floor and three rooms on the second floor.  The long driveway is between houses on Queen St so I surmised this house must have begun its life as a carriage house. The street side of the house projects a pleasing façade of vertical board and batten blue-gray siding that adds texture and shed dormers that break the wood shake roof over the second floor windows above the two windows below. I especially liked the “Carpenter Gothic” touch of the decorative edging of the eave fascias and how the same blue gray paint is used on the walls and trim of the house to give it greater massing.

A gate in the fence along the driveway leads you along a gravel path to the entry porch that has a very low slope red metal roof below the main gable roof above. The porch spans the full length of the two-bay house and is supported by simple double columns at the corners and a center column with diagonal bracing from the sides of each column to the beam above. Above the front porch is the gable side of the house with an arched vent at the attic level and two windows at the second floor that are aligned with the entry door and window below.

When you open the front door into the living room, the contemporary interiors are immediately apparent.  White walls and trim, a ceiling of white exposed decking over light brown tile floors laid on a diagonal stretches the space. The eye-catching detailing of the stairs that are fully open at the living room side with an ogee edged trim under each tread and matchstick inside-mount blinds over the windows completes the contemporary look. Accents of the simple round stained wood handrail at the wall behind the stairs and the black stovepipe open fireplace become sculptural elements.

The vista from the front door ends at the dining area that is open to the kitchen. The table and chairs are placed in the alcove created by the stairs along the side wall and the double unit window behind the table and contemporary chairs creates a pleasant dining area. The “U” shaped kitchen has a window at the street side of the house and the cabinetry cleverly accommodates the low window sill by adding a window seat with storage below at the break between the base cabinets. The tones of gray of the stainless steel appliances, cabinetry and countertops blend seamlessly together and the mirrored backsplash is a deft touch. The continuation of the tile flooring into the kitchen-dining area ties the main floor together with the benefit of easy maintenance.

At the top of the stairs is a delightful office area with a pitched ceiling, wood flooring and two windows for diversion from office work. Behind the office area is a pocket door that leads to the spacious bathroom and a closet for the stack washer/dryer. Another pocket door leads to the large bedroom at the entry side of the house and the stovepipe from the fireplace below penetrates the space. All of the second floor rooms have ceiling planes that follow the shed roof framing over the windows.  

Move-in charming cottage architecture with wonderful contemporary updates and a full basement for storage- enjoy the view of the landscape from the private entry porch or “park” yourself on the bench at the corner of the yard while you envision your garden design to create your own urban oasis!  

For more information about this property, contact Retha Arrabal with Doug Ashley Realtors at 410-810-0010 (o), 410-708-2172 (c) or retha@dougashleyrealtors.com. For more pictures and pricing, visit www.dougashleyrrealtors.com ,  “Equal Housing Opportunity”.

Photography by Janelle Stroop, Thru the Lens Photography, 845-744-2758

Spy House of the Week is an ongoing series that selects a different home each week. The Spy’s Habitat editor Jennifer Martella makes these selections based exclusively on her experience as a architect.

Jennifer Martella has pursued her dual careers in architecture and real estate since she moved to the Eastern Shore in 2004. Her award winning work has ranged from revitalization projects to a collaboration with the Maya Lin Studio for the Children’s Defense Fund’s corporate retreat in her home state of Tennessee.

Please support the Spy’s House of the Week project by making a donation here.

Filed Under: Design with Jenn Marella, Habitat Portal House of the Week

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