Tuesday, March 24, 2015

"SEAVIEW TERRACE", THE NEWPORT HOUSE of EDSON BRADLEY

           

                            - CLICK TO PLAY APPROPRIATE BACKGROUND MUSIC -




Edson Bradley's ''Seaview Terrace'' estate, Newport, RI

   
Edson Bradley's ''Seaview Terrace'' estate, Newport, RI


"Seaview Terrace", Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
ARTS & DECORATIONS MARCH, 1924 
COVER DESIGN: "The Bird Merchant", by J. M. Sert
One of eight canvas panels for the Spanish castle by Addison Mizner for J. M. Cosden, Palm Beach
The house of Edson Bradley, of Newport, R. I. This building is finished in chalk-white stucco, with limestone trim reminiscent of old Normandy.


The Newport House of Edson Bradley
Executed in the Style of an Old Manor House in Normandy By HOWARD GREENLY


Ruggles Avenue Entrance Gate, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York


HIS house will be, when complete, a study in archaeology of an architect's own work. In many instances owners have leaned toward examples of English or Continental Architecture in the design of country seats which have inspired more or less exact copies, and in many instances these have fitted into alien surroundings with a certain felicity. Modern sentiment in design abroad rather scores our archaeological tendencies as reactionary and unproductive of progress in art, and in architecture. As a matter of fact there is no present progress in art, nor has there been relative progress for centuries. What is evident is a general progress in appreciation of beauty and things of the spirit, and inspiration derived from monuments of the past, excelling in design and in craftsmanship, have been responsible for this spiritual growth of artistic appreciation.

    In 1907 and covering a period of four or five years of various additions, the writer altered and remodeled the old Gardiner Hubbard house in Washington, on Dupont Circle, for Mr. Bradley. The existing house, dating from the early seventies, was of red face brick trimmed with sandstone in what has come to be known as the Mid-Victorian manner and American interpretation. The alteration adhered to the lines of the existing walls, making use of the red brick and introducing limestone as a trim in plain or ornamented courses, quoins, corbels, cornices, etc., with carved enrichment in the manner of the French Renaissance architecture, where the Gothic merged into the classic
detail of Italian derivation. The use of stained and other leaded glass in the windows contributed to the stylization effect of the ensemble. The house might have been considered as archaeological in point of its detail and in its composition and silhouette, but was in no sense a copy of an ancient structure either in plan or in elevation.

    All of this material has been for the last fifteen years undergoing a natural weathering process adding greatly to its interest. And when the owner determined to abandon his Washington home and develop his property in Newport, it was decided to remove from the Washington house the most interesting of the stone work, wrought iron, and stained glass, and build the new house around this collection of the architect's earlier contribution to archaeology.

    On the Newport site existed the old Kernochan residence, a structure of brick and half timber with enriched gables reminiscent of the Elizabethan manner. With various changes in the silhouette of roofs and gables and the re-employment of the half timber considered merely as weathered material, this house has been incorporated into the new structure. A new wing has been added to the southwest, and a service wing to the north, and the great tower, virtually removed in its entirety from Washington, makes an interesting turning point between the new southwest wing and the south facade of the old house. It was determined to finish the exterior walls in a chalk-white stucco with the limestone trim reminiscent of the smaller chateaux and manor houses of Normandy or of Touraine in place of the red brick walls in the Washington house. Half timber will be used sparingly in certain gables and overhangs to convey the impression of additions carried out at various periods. The roofs of the high-pitched type characteristic of the style will be covered with dark, variegated slate laid with certain graduations of thickness and exposure, but not emphasized in point of picturesque irregularity associated with roofs done in the English manner. Wide balustraded terraces to the south and east at levels varying with the change in levels of the old and new first stories will give a sense of structural repose between the house and the lawns and gardens. The property is fortunate in the quantity and quality of its trees—beech, tulip, maple, and elms existing in admirable locations and massing.

    The interiors of the house are designed with relation to the collections of the owner, which number tapestries, porcelains, furniture, and carpets of the first importance; besides which there are examples of ancient wood panelings and carved ornament to be incorporated into the general scheme of interior decoration.


The great entrance hall is shown with its windows of fourteenth century stained glass and its high gallery of carved and polychromed oak and Spanish chestnut. The beautiful space is lighted with hanging wrought iron Medieval Italian lantern's
    In such case is the great entrance hall reproduced herewith from the architect's drawing. The room will be done in rough plaster with limestone trim, a flagged floor with an inset of a Persian tile panel in iridescent glazes upon which will fall the light of a great window in the western wall filled with stained glass of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The ceiling will be of patterned plaster carried on great wood beams with polychrome decoration in the Italian manner, very low in tone. At the east end is the gallery in carved and polychromed oak and Spanish chestnut, giving access from the owner's apartments in the southwest wing to the stair hall and the east body of the house. The walls will be hung in tapestries and rare fabrics and the room will be lighted with big wrought-iron Medieval Italian lanterns suspended from the ceiling.  


North Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Northwest side, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Northwest side, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Porte-Cochère, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
South Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
South Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

East Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

East Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Southeast view, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Southeast view, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Southeast view,, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Southeast view, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
South Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Stained-glass window on tower, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
View showing tower, chapel and recessed porch of the breakfast room.
South side, East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
South side, East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Stained-glass window on tower, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Wrought-iron light fixture on tower, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Gable, South Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Gable, South Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Gable detail, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Niche on East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Carving detail, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Approach to the East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Carved balustrade,East Terrace, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Sitting Room Bay Window,  Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
West Front, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The tower on the southwest corner has a spiral staircase that connects the master bedroom suite with the grounds below.
Southwest corner, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Door to Small Tower, South West Angle, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Southwest corner, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Southwest cornerr, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Connecting the west wing to the original structure is a Gothic-style staircase and a round reception room.
Porte-Cochère, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Vestibule, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Vestibule, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Newport Through Its Architecture  -  "The cavernous halls and antiquarian rooms of Sea View Terrace lack the polish of the other palatial mansions on Ochre Point. They seem redolent of clanging chains, medieval jousts, and noisy banquets. Dutch sixteenth-century stained glass, ornamented with Renaissance armorial designs, adds a quasi-ecclesiastical air. Close inspection reveals that each window amalgamates fragments of glass from disparate contexts, assembling them somewhat illogically into the equivalent of stained-glass patchwork quilts—not uncommon among glass collections of the era. As known from period photographs, the now-lost original furnishings included bearskin rugs, hunting trophies, Renaissance cassone or chests, wrought-iron torcheres, Chippendale chairs, arms and armor, and exotic hanging lamps."

The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Great Hall is 38-foot-high and has a floor with Hispano-Morcsque floor tiles.

The stained glass in this window has been assembled to create a “gothic” effect regardless of provenance.

The panel originally belonged to the cycle of the Passion of Christ a section of the New Testament window still extant in situ in the Milan Cathedral.

Stained glass window from the Camelite Church at Boppard-on-the-Rhine

Outside view of  the Great Hall.

The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Great Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Great Hall and passageway into the Drawing Room.


Passageway looking from the Great Hall through the Chapel into the Breakfast Room.
Passageway looking from the Great Hall through the Chapel into the Breakfast Room.
Passageway leading from Chapel into the Great Hall.

The Great Stairway, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Great Stairway, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Great Stairway, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Great Stairway, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Drawing Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York


The Drawing Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
English Renaissance-style decorative plaster ceiling and a fifteenth-century French stone fireplace surmounted by a carved Byzantine over-mantel from the twelfth century.
The Stair Hall was originally part of the Kernochan structure. The eastern end was extended to create the largest space in the new house, the Solarium
 

The sculpted wooden and gesso ceiling was moved from the Bradley's Washington D. C. home, "Aladdin’s Palace".
Stair Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Stair Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Stair Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Stair Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Window detail, Stair Hall, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

Breakfast Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Breakfast Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Chapel doorway into Breakfast Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Chapel, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Outside view of chapel window and recessed porch of the breakfast room.

Entrance to Dining Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Dining Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

    The paneled main dining room has a Tudor strapwork ceiling, sixteenth-century Flemish tapestries, and English Chippendale style furniture.


Outside view of dining room and the "Great" stairway windows.

Inside view of the Great Stairway window.

The solarium has a terra-cotta-tiled floor and a wall fountain backed by decorative tiles. Used as a dining hall during the Salve years.
Wall Fountain, Solarium, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
Solarium with windows facing the sea.
Fireplace Alcove, Solarium, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Music Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
The Music Room, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The Music Room had a mixture of Louis XVI and Robert Adam detailing.
Service Wing, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York

The upper levels of the service wing contained twenty-three staff bedrooms that shared four bathrooms.
   
Servants' Porch, windows of the Music Room in the background.

Kitchen, Residence of Mr. Edson Bradley, Newport, Rhode Island
Howard Greenley, Architect, New York
    The second floor contained a master suite of two bedrooms, a sitting room, two bathrooms, a dressing room, and a room for Mrs. Bradley's personal maid. An additional five bedrooms were on this level, embellished with carved woodwork and antique marble fireplaces. Located on the third floor were five guest rooms, storage rooms and a trunk room. 


https://www2.bc.edu/~kuchar/collinwood.htm
"The upper floors seem to have been totally made over to the point that very little of the original architecture remains...., just imagine a typical college dorm hallway: dented walls, pealing institutional off-white paint, dark worn carpeting, stapled posters on doors and walls."

    On the surrounding property were greenhouses, a garage for six cars (with rooms for the chauffeur), a separate seven-room staff cottage, and the original stable that was converted into a garage for an additional ten automobiles.

The gate located on Marine Avenue was originally the main entrance. These gates opened to a long, winding drive that created the illusion of a much larger estate.

http://www.seaviewterrace.org/index.html
"Along the Cliff Walk in Newport, Rhode Island, 'Seaview Terrace', also known as the Carey Mansion, stands as the largest privately owned Summer Cottage of the Gilded Age.  At approximately 40,000 square feet, it is the fifth largest of the Newport mansions, only after the 'Breakers', 'Ochre Court', 'Belcourt Castle' and 'Rough Point'. 


Ripley’s Believe it or Not
     The majority of the house was originally built in DuPont Circle in Washington, DC by liquor baron Edson Bradley in 1907, taking 4 years to complete. The house occupied an entire city block and was  known as 'Aladdin’s Palace', due to its sheer size and grandiose nature.  The Bradleys then decided to move to a Newport, Rhode Island in February of 1923. They had the house dismantled and shipped to the new location over the next two years, accomplishing what is believed to be one of the largest homes to be relocated by road and rail. This remarkable feat was featured on Ripley’s Believe it or Not.

Follow THIS LINK to see the Washington D. C. mansion before its relocation.

     Howard Greenly, the architect of 'Seaview Terrace', won several awards for his work on the French Gothic chateau in 1928, including the Second Mention for General Work by the Architectural League of New York and the President’s medal from the American League of Architects.  Greenly incorporated the pre-existing Elizabethan-Revival mansion into the house, which had been owned by James Kernochan and known as 'Sea View'.  The earlier 'Sea View'  is still visible, encased in the East Wing of the house and was renamed 'Seaview Terrace'. The roofline of the turrets and conical domes were derived from 'Chambord', a famous French Renaissance chateau in the Loire Valley, and impart a picturesque unity to the whole. 

     A housewarming was held in the summer of 1925, as Greenly continued to move rooms fully intact from France, as well as contents of the DuPont Circle house for installation at the seaside locale. At the end of that year, the 63 room manor was completed at a cost of two million dollars. It featured a chapel, whispering gallery, an Esty  organ and Dutch sixteenth century stained glass, ornamented with Renaissance armoral design. Included in the stained glass collection is the ‘Flagellation’ circa 1545, which is documented in the national archives. Original furnishings included bearskin rugs, hunting trophies, Renaissance cassones, wrought iron torcheres, Chippendale chairs, arms and armor and exotic hanging lamps.

     In January of 1930, the Bradley’s daughter, Julie Fay Bradley Shipman, was deeded the property by her father, the same year her husband, Rt. Rev. Herbert Shipman, the protestant Episcopal bishop of New York and a World War I army chaplain passed away.  

    ***On August 17th, 1941 a  "Ball for Britain", the last major social event held at the house was attended by eight hundred patrons.***
    



"NEWPORT MANSION TO GO AT AUCTION French Chateau of the Late Edson Bradley Will Be Offered Nov. 29 ANTIQUE PIECES INCLUDED Fifty - Room  Residence Was Erected by the Noted Art Collector in 1925."



How Newport Became America's Richest Resort
"The customary assortment of expensive tapestries and paintings found plenty of buyers. But the highest offer on the house was only $25,000, and that came from a Providence man who was rumored to be a gambler, so Shipman turned him down." 


    
     On July 24,1942 the City of Newport took title due to back taxes and during World War II, the house served as army officer’s quarters.

    In 1949 Edward J. Dunn bought the property for $8000, transferring title to Mrs. George Waldo Emerson Sr., who in turn leased it to Lloyd H. Hatch, making it headquarters for The Hatch School during the fall and spring semesters from 1951-1961. During the summers, Mrs. Emerson Sr. operated Burnham-by-the-Sea, a private all-girls boarding school which ran in association with the Mary Burnham School for Girls in Northampton, MA. After the Hatch school vacated the property  it was then rented to The Newport School for Girls  who enjoyed their summers there until the early 1970's. 

     During 1966-1971 the  turreted profile became the icon for the cult classic TV show 'Dark Shadows', which continues to draw thousands of loyal fans annually."  

THE ARCHITECT MAY 1928
                                                - Josettes Music Box From Dark Shadows -



     "In 1945 cities from around the world were invited to promote themselves as the ideal site for the new location of the United Nations Headquarters. 'Ochre Court', 'Seaview Terrace' and 'The Breakers' would serve as offices and embassies, and a plethora of underutilized and abandoned mansions throughout Newport would be available for purchase. The international search committee rejected all proposals and chose free Rockefeller land in New York City for the headquarters." By Newport Historical Society


    "In 1974 the estate was bought by Martin Carey, brother of former New York governor Hugh Carey, who dreamed of finding oil off George's Bank and reportedly bought this for his oil company headquarters. Not finding oil he leased the property to Salve Regina University for use as a dormitory." Rogues and Heroes of Newport's Gilded Age By Edward Morris 


"Seaview_Terrace"
 "The mansion's Drawing Room, used by the university for performances and practice, was renamed Cecilia Hall, for the patron saint of music (Saint Cecilia). During the 1980's 'Seaview Terrace' housed the American syndicate of The Americas Cup.

On August 31, 2009, Salve Regina University terminated the lease with the Carey family. 

The Syfy network featured the mansion in the first season, second episode of its paranormal reality show Stranded on March 6, 2013.

'Seaview Terrace' is privately owned and is not open for tours or tourist visits." 

    The Rhode Show interview with the author of IN THE SHADOW OF A NEWPORT MANSION.

    Stranded (TV Series) "Seaview Terrace" (2013) Plot Summary.

   wikimapia.org LOCATIONBING. 

    Flickr - Carey Mansion, Pinterest - Burnham by the Sea, Pinterest - Collinwood, Pinterest - Dark Shadowshttp://seaviewcares.org/.

9 comments:

  1. LOVE ALL THESE PHOTOS OF SEAVIEW TERRACE.>> It's my favorite house in the world! I have many photos of the inside and outside of the mansion that I have taken over the past 35 year, but these are just stunning. Thanks so much for posting these beautiful photos!

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  2. Completely lovely! I actually went to Mary Burnham School for girls in 1962-1964!

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  3. The history contains minor errors. It should read "After the Hatch school vacated the property it was then rented to the Newport School for Girls who enjoyed the mansion for the academic year. The Emersons continued to use the house in the summer where they ran "Burnham-By-The Sea" each summer until the mid 1970's.

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  4. This mansion is absolutely Breathtaking!

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  5. Beautiful house, and as of Oct., 2021, it's for sale! Sadly (or nor, depending on your views) the mansion is typical of similar homes from the period in that wealthy owners bought parts of ancient European buildings and had them shipped to the US, where they incorporated them into their new houses. This was not always done n the up and up. Chapel interiors, garden cloisters and other architectural features were often bought and sold illegally, without the knowledge of the often rural towns where the structures once stood. On the one hand, these things were possible saved from destruction. ON the other hand, their acquisition as a form of plundering.

    In Seaview, we see many items from Catholic churches. A pair of elaborate, gothic wall niches meant to hold statues now hold potted trees. Several of the chandeliers are actually sanctuary lamps that once hung above church or cathedral altars. The upper half of a fireplace, carved with religious figures, is actually the upper half of an altar called the "reredos". That said, I love this place! Not sure who the nw owner will be but I hope they respect it's history and keep it intact, not divide it up into condos.

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    Replies
    1. While I love this house also, as so many of us do, if it were mine, (when I hit lotto) I'd get rid of all the religious things, I am not catholic, and I don't like religious things in the house.
      The stained glass windows are gorgeous, obviously, but I would donate them to a church and have my own windows installed, I don't like them for a house.
      It is almost like living in a church, which I wouldn't want to.
      But, oh what fun it would be to re-landscape this plot of land, re-stucco the house and a new slate roof, replace all the windows as they are in horrific condition. The solarium would make a gorgeous kitchen for todays standard of living, with the arched windows verlooking the land and sea, oh, that would be just amazing. I just sit here and think in my head allthe things i can do to this house. I do love the medevil feel of the front hall with the wrought iron chandeliers and beams across the ceiling, the tiles floor and so on....

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  6. For $30,000,000, and probably another $30,000,000 to renovate this white elephant, you end up with a dungeon-like house that is a maze of ill-connected spaces. I have a book with the original floor plan of the mansion and the layout is simply scary. you have to walk thru the chapel to get from one end of the ground level to the other. it’s simply not a nice house. albeit I’d love to tour the house, to me it is an abomination created by someone trying to impress his neighbors.

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    Replies
    1. I agree with you also. While I love the outside of the house, the flow of the inside leaves something to be desired, especially in the year 2022, it isn't functional at all. However, in my fantasy mind I re-configure things, replace all the windows, sandblast the outside, replace the roof, re-landscape, and the list goes on and on... The solarium should be the kitchen with the huge arched windows looking at the sea, not tucked away on the inside of the house, but that's what they thought of a kitchen back then, purely a servants work space, where as in the year 2022, everyone congregates in a kitchen.

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  7. My first priority would be to rip off that hideous fire escape on the back of the house. Utter eyesore! Turn the ridiculous tennis courts into a garden. Whatever damage done to the upper floors when it was a dorm would be uppermost

    too! Then, just soak in the magic of this grand home! And ...feel the dark shadows lurking about!

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