Circles Shape The Look Of A Midcentury Modern Long Island Gem
“I always say that entries are first impressions,” designer Cara Woodhouse says. For her own home on Long Island, a solid-mahogany door with circular windows from Doors4Home sets the tone for the curvy, midcentury mood within.
When it comes to bringing work home, Cara Woodhouse is clearly having a ball. Designing for clients certainly taps her creativity, but a full renovation of the modernist Long Island ranch that she and her young family call home gave the New York-based designer leeway to throw whatever curves she wanted—and there were lots. From the get-go, the front door’s Swiss-cheese cutouts hint at a circle-fest within, then a voluptuously oversized entryway ottoman in elevated, pearly lavender tones creates a sense of Old Hollywood colliding with the Space Age.
Circles, orbs and arcs of every sort bounce around the home, from kitchen cabinet pulls to throw pillows to mirrors and bed frames. “My eye is just drawn to that shape,” says Woodhouse, who likes to place what she calls “eye candy” in every room to provide “an unexpected, surprise moment—not something shocking, but something soothing and cool. For me, that’s often the visual softness of curves.” The former Los Angeles resident also loves midcentury modern architecture, but never imaged she’d find a home so purely in that vein on Long Island. “This style of house in New York, especially an original one, is rare,” Woodhouse notes. When she happened upon the 1961, split-level abode tucked into a hillside in a wooded neighborhood, the designer knew she’d found a gem.
“I walked in and immediately told my realtor “this is it, this is my house,’” says Woodhouse, who, undaunted by the work needed saw potential in the living-slash-dining room’s 11-foot ceilings and the home’s smooth entertaining flow, with living spaces on one side and bedrooms secluded on the other. Plus, the home is right across the street from Roslyn Harbor, with water views visible from the upstairs balcony in the winter. “Even in such a state, I loved the vibe and all the big windows and original skylights. It was like a tree house with such a presence of nature, and there was so much architectural character throughout.”
That character revealed itself more fully after Woodhouse and her husband Dean set about banishing the dated balloon shades that obscured every window, “reddish-orange” Formica countertops and dark paneling, and the shag carpet that was hiding elegant herringbone planks in the main rooms. Meanwhile, a deep cleaning of the foyer revealed glamorous terrazzo floors complete with inset divides that, once cleaned, proved to be real brass. “That was one of those ‘OMG’ magic moments,” she says. The home’s overhaul, however, did not entail changing the footprint or even significantly altering the floor plan (excepting a slight reconfiguration of the children’s bedrooms to add a shared bath). “People really knew how to entertain back then,” says Woodhouse, who embraced how the vintage layout offered numerous gathering spaces, including a super-1960s bar room and groovy outdoor terraces.
While the couple saw eye-to-eye on the gut renovation, the home’s far-out funkiness is all Woodhouse. “My husband appreciates contemporary design, but he’s a Brit—if he had a choice, it’d be English antiques everywhere,” she laughs. Instead, her spirited custom designs, like the pair of curvilinear consoles in the entryway with resin tops commissioned by Canadian artist Martha Sturdy, the mischievous monkey rug that she designed in the living room, and most of the bedroom furnishings, are anything but old school. In fact, the only antiques are the pair of 200-million-year-old, 300-pound each butterflying amethyst geodes gracing the front door. “Ripping out the old radiators left this hole that we couldn’t repair without more terrazzo, and, because I’m obsessed with rock crystals, I thought of geodes,” Woodhouse says. “They’re amazing, plus they add such great energy!”
Indeed, playful energy and whimsy rolls from room to room, including the den of creativity downstairs where sons Cash, age 11, and Lennon, 7, play music, games and do homework amid a plush sectional with art bins at the ready. Imagination is clearly encouraged and prized in this household where shapes, colors and textures overlap in orbits of delight. “I love that all the rooms in this home are so usable and accessible,” Woodhouse says. “We hang out in the entrance and even take turns sleeping in the guest room because we love it so much.”