Pushing The Limits Of Tradition, A Georgian Residence Gets A Youthful Twist
To put a youthful twist on this Charlotte home’s traditional hallmarks, architect Matt Benson applied asymmetrical paneling to the entryway as designer Barrie Benson painted the wood floors in a graphic motif. A 1950s Roche Bobois settee, updated in Schumacher velvet and Fortuny silk, holds court with framed artworks and textiles gathered on the owners’ travels. The stair runner is by Stark.
The classic hallmarks and gracious oaks were reasons alone for a couple to move to Foxcroft, a storybook Charlotte, North Carolina, neighborhood dotted with five-four-and-a-door charmers. The dynamic homeowners and their two teenage daughters were immediately drawn to a traditional Georgian residence there—a “saltbox,” as the wife describes it—particularly for its high ceilings and straightforward façade. In their former home, the family of four had frequently found themselves contained to only a couple rooms, so they knew tailoring this one to their unique needs would be necessary.
Having befriended designer Barrie Benson (and, by extension, her architect husband, Matt Benson) 25 years before, the wife knew just who to tap for the home’s transformation. Thanks to their close familiarity, the designer innately understood her client’s traditional taste—right down to a noticeable affection for her formal dining room. Evident above all was her abiding love for Imari, the Japanese export porcelain that would come to inspire the home’s entire color palette. But first, the couple looked to Benson’s husband to improve the layout.
“The clients appreciated the formality of the house, but the spaces were disjointed and separate,” says the architect, who worked with project architect Julius Richardson to revise the floor plan and widen doorways, ensuring every inch of the home would be livable, purposeful and inviting. “Matt also knew we should be able to see straight through the house to the patio and our backyard with its 300-year-old oak trees,” says the wife, referencing a point of pride in a city famed for its tree canopy. “By removing a wall, he opened up the space, filling it with light and beauty.”
The Bensons worked hand-in-hand as they retrofitted rooms, tweaking interior architecture to accommodate special artworks and fourth-generation heirlooms. “It’s so much fun to watch Matt and Barrie work, because they feed off each other creatively,” says the wife. “Matt is the methodical one; he asks first, acts later. Barrie is all instinct.”
Recasting the formal living room as a library created a cozy spot for the adults to enjoy cocktails in the evening, so the Bensons dialed up the detailing, tucking an oxblood red bar behind wood paneling reminiscent of that in the wife’s parents’ home. “The room’s recessed bookcases create a sense of rhythm and depth,” says the architect, to which his wife adds: “We backed the shelves and inset the panels with hand-blocked wallpaper made in small batches with foil accents.”
The designer’s scheme—achieved alongside designer and project manager Elizabeth Dooley—benefited from an armload of objets d’art gathered on her clients’ travels to India, Italy, Australia and beyond as she refreshed old treasures such as an inherited lamp updated with a colorful shade and Lucite base. Given their close connection, the designer understood antiques would become the cornerstones of the new design. “My goal was to mix all these family pieces together with little punches of modern that feel youthful,” she says. But it wasn’t the wife’s heirloom secretary or childhood dressing table that garnered the highest rankings. It was the Imari. “I inherited my most cherished pieces from my mother and grandmother, but also have several flea-market finds and one-offs that I hold dear,” the wife expresses. “I’ve picked them up along the way and can name where each came from.”
Unearthing them from drawers and exhuming them from boxes, Barrie Benson cleverly arranged the collections in high-contrast groupings throughout the house. “She loves jewel tones,” notes the designer, who pulled the dining room’s saturated sapphire and a bedroom’s bold chartreuse directly from the plates. Since neither woman shied from pattern (“You can keep going and going with it if you know how to play with scale,” Barrie Benson reveals), the designer was quick to combine overscale florals with plaids that speak to the couple’s sportive passions, plus a classic houndstooth to nod to the husband’s tastes.
Still, nowhere are graphic motifs bolder than in the entry. “Georgian homes are known for their black-and-white checkerboard floors, but marble seemed too formal and predictable,” says the designer, who went with a painted approach. “I found a historic pattern in an old Colefax and Fowler book and tinkered with it until it felt fresh, but familiar.” The daring move represents just another way the designer made old things feel new again—much in the same way an improved environment allows the homeowners to appreciate their most cherished items. Says the wife: “Though we once used only one or two rooms, now, we use them all.”