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Learn How This Luminous Build In Georgia Endears With Its Charm

Light-filled salon with center table, consoles flanking front door, antique worktable and white sofa

Benjamin Moore’s White Dove swaddles this light-filled Columbus, Georgia, entryway. Both the antique Portuguese worktable and high-back chair—the latter reupholstered in Rose Tarlow Melrose House’s Fleurette hemp fabric from Jerry Pair—came from designer Ashley Gilbreath’s signature store, Parish. The sofa is by Lee Industries.

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Set on the banks of the Chattahoochee River, Columbus, Georgia, is counted among the South’s most charming small cities. Boasting the largest urban whitewater rafting course in the world, it also beguiles adventure seekers galore. But for a local family of four, Columbus offered a thrill of a different sort: the opportunity to construct a forever home where cherished memories would be made. And a sloped, wooded lot provided the prime location for such a dream to take shape. “The draw of this property is its beautiful setting; you’re very much in the city, but it feels like a vacation home because it’s so tucked away,” explains designer Ashley Gilbreath, who dressed the interiors in her telltale curated, comfortable style. “We wanted to play up that connection to the land as much as possible.”

Architect David Baker’s quest to craft the perfect envelope began with the wife’s requests. Specifically, her heart was set on a classic white-brick house organized around a central courtyard. Fulfilling her wish, Baker sketched a multigabled two-story abode augmented by a few Belgian-inspired notes. “A house is a lot like us; we travel the world, we see beautiful things, then we bring them home,” observes the architect of his inspirations. Translating Baker’s vision from paper to framing was general contractor Ray Brinegar. “Although this was the first time Ashley or I had the opportunity to work with Ray, his craft proved vital in erecting a home that perfectly fit this family,” Baker shares. 

Tucked into the hillside’s embrace, the residence follows a modified H-shaped layout, which happens to impart its most intriguing characteristic: Most spaces are just one room deep. Keeping the structure intentionally narrow allowed for 360-degree views to nature, a quality Baker emphasized via multipaned floor-to-ceiling windows that flood the interiors with natural light. The architect amplified this effect with a wealth of corner windows and a transom over the kitchen’s plaster range hood that further tie the home to the landscape. “Your gaze never stops at a corner or a dead-end space,” Baker explains. With every quarter turn, “You’re visually invited into the next room and the next—whether that happens to be inside or outside.” 

Since there is no formal foyer, from the moment you enter, “you get a taste of the entire home,” Gilbreath notes. And although open layouts can sometimes lack a sense of mystery, this one holds a few enigmatic twists. Namely, both the kitchen and the office are part of the main thoroughfare, yet they sit discretely tucked away. Because of this, happening upon each feels like an act of profound discovery. “You’re in the center of the action but very much in your own private world,” Gilbreath says. “That’s the magic of David’s work; he can create that kind of duality within a space.” This aspect also underscores one of the guiding forces of the project: that it become a long-haul home meant to mature with the family. Comments Baker: “There’s an adaptability to this residence; it allows for rearranging or editing furniture to accommodate how the clients want the rooms to evolve.” 

To complement the architect’s selections of white oak floors and defining ceiling beams, Gilbreath swaddled the interiors in a palette of creams, watery blues and greens, taking her creative cues from the cerulean sky and rolling hills outside. Nature-inspired art and classic silhouettes put the focus on gracious comforts, while black-iron chandeliers introduce crisp punctuation points to the predominantly neutral backdrop. Meanwhile, heirlooms with pedigree, including the entry salon’s bleached-wood Portuguese worktable, impart gravitas without fussiness—a combination considered a must in Gilbreath’s playbook. “We believe furniture can have dings and marks and still be beautiful,” she says. “You can love on it, and it only adds more texture and patina to the space, proving that everything doesn’t have to be perfect.” 

For a family with two teens, two dogs and two cats, approachable finishes and fabrics like these were a prerequisite. The wife was adamant about having hard-wearing quartz in the kitchen, using stain- and fade-resistant upholstery throughout the home and laying down soft synthetic-fiber rugs that could handle the pets running to and fro. “Everything we chose was durable and life-proof, designed to hold up over time,” Gilbreath adds. 

In fact, that practical mindset could sum up the entire project’s warm, family-centric aesthetic. “I don’t think there’s a square inch of this house that didn’t have some massive intention behind it,” the designer says. “It’s a house that will evolve along with the owners themselves. It’s timeless and everlasting—a truly inheritable home.” 

Home details
Photography
Emily Followill
Styling
Eleanor Roper
Architecture
Interior Design
Home Builder
Ray Brinegar, Ray Brinegar, Builder
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