Beyond This New Nashville Home’s Stately Front Door Are Collected Interiors That Honor The Past
In the den, an L-shaped Lee Industries sectional creates a cozy niche in front of Shaker-style paneling by Custom Cabinetworks. Plush pillows in a mix of motifs—among them, Zak+Fox’s Cloudband cotton-linen and a Ralph Lauren for Kravet tartan—boost the room’s cozy quotient while Kelly Wearstler’s Alta table lamps for Visual Comfort & Co. enhance its masculine mood.
If a general contractor’s own home is any indication of the level of detail delivered to clients, Nathan Lyons’ may be Nashville’s best example. From the beginning, he and his wife, Keri, knew they didn’t want their new residence to feel, well, new. Building in the traditional enclave of Belle Meade would mean responding to the neighborhood’s classic touches, but, “when it came time to plan the house, we decided we wanted something a little different,” Lyons says. “So, we looked for a team that would share our vision and help us push the envelope a bit.”
That search led Lyons to residential designer Richard Long and designer Rachel Halvorson—talents he viewed as fellow risk-takers. In joining the project, Long says, he felt a similar sense of alignment: “Nathan was very open to trying new things and wanted to create something special that would honor the history of the neighborhood while looking forward at the same time.”
As homeowner and general contractor, Lyons was naturally very involved in specification of materials and architectural elements, wanting each to feel storied and special. “I’ve always been drawn to revitalization, whether restoring a home or commercial project,” he says, pointing to his penchants for classicism and quality. So, the hallmarks Long specified for the home transcend any single discipline, ranging from vaulted ceiling beams and Shaker-style millwork to Roman columns, leaded-glass windows and a Tudor-influenced front door that set the tone for the entire residence. “It looks like it could be 150 years old,” Lyons says, “but set against stark white stucco and blackened steel windows, it takes on a more contemporary feel.”
Just beyond that stately front door, antique Spanish marble tiles laid in a checkerboard pattern make a case for patina against a sweeping staircase with a wrought iron and unlacquered bronze railing. “The tile itself feels like a form of art,” Lyons says. “Keri and I love reclaimed as much as we do sleek, modern touches, and when we saw this, we knew it was the right fit for this house.”
Lyons’ expertise also was instrumental when liaising with Long and landscape architect Gavin Duke—along with project manager Mamie Finch—on the home’s private interior terrace and pool. Opening the doors permits seasonably mild breezes to pass all the way through, prompting Long’s comparison of the home to a Bahamian retreat. The addition of casement windows underscores this resort-like quality. “The pool is centered on our master bedroom and directly under the windows,” Lyons says. “You could jump right in.”
Balancing elegance with restraint, Halvorson was happy to let Long’s architecture act as protagonist, selecting well-edited furnishings and art that are high impact yet never scene-stealing. Responding to the couple’s love for historic, she chose pieces that would read as romantic and old world—but with modern twists. “The only way for a new house to feel old and timeless is for it to look collected over time,” the designer says. “We pulled in layers—vintage elements for patina; art that appears to have been gathered over the years.” Referencing an array of works culled across the Southeast, Lyons adds: “Rachel really opened our eyes to the whole art world; a majority of the pieces you see were selected by her.”
Supporting the art and softening the home’s high-contrast bones is an unexpected palette. “I wanted rich, cozy, earthy colors to warm the cool, clean lines of the house,” says Halvorson, describing how strokes of olive green, camel, cognac and rust meander throughout, punctuating the predominantly black and white background with painterly depth. “We pulled tobacco velvets, the color of the bottom of the ocean, and the deepest bittersweet chocolate brown; I like colors that can’t be summed up in one word.”
Highly reflective surfaces mix with ones Halvorson describes as “tumbled and warm”—to the point that Lyons and Keri let their two young children ride their bikes around the kitchen’s rustic limestone floors. “Keri and I appreciate that things will scratch and tarnish,” Lyons explains. “We want our home to feel like it’s aging naturally and has character.”
While homework might be tackled at the kitchen table, the cocooning dining room—with its radiated corners and cradling curved banquet—is tailor-made for the adults, who love to entertain. “We wanted it to feel like a Parisian café,” he says of the speakeasy-like space.
If the master bedroom offers direct connection to the pool and terrace, then this lounge provides a front-row seat for another of Duke and Finch’s elegant concepts: a pea gravel courtyard punctuated by plantings of Fastigiata European hornbeams and Green Velvet boxwoods. “Just imagine what this house would be without its landscaping,” Long expresses, praising a team effort to realize the couple’s dream retreat. “The tumbled stone, the perfectly aligned trees in the courtyard combine with a contrast of materials and colors for a home where the family can grow and entertain for years to come.”