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Find Sanctuary In This Wine Country Haven With A Serene Palette

exterior wild natural entrance with fire retardant materials

After a wildfire, residential designer Chris Cahill renovated this multi-structure residence to feature fire-retardant materials, such as Boral Building Products’ TruExterior siding. “In all three buildings we used a cement-board siding to provide fire protection, but also because it can replicate wood in appearance when painted,” says Cahill. Benjamin Moore’s Cape May Cobblestone gives the structures a modern look.

The owners of this Sonoma County compound—composed of the primary residence, a guesthouse and a garage with sleeping quarters above—know that even the best-laid plans can sometimes go sideways. “When we purchased the property, we considered it a long-term project. But we also thought we could do some light-touch upgrades in the main house and have it become move-in ready,” the wife says. “Looking at all that happened and where we are now, I’m laughing.”

That’s because those “light-touch” upgrades became a full renovation engineered by residential designer Chris Cahill and designer Regan Baker, transforming the primary dwelling—constructed in 1977 with small rooms and a steeply pitched roof— into an open, light-filled getaway dressed in a refreshing palette of whites, grays and blues, and punctuated with black accents. Just off the expanded living room, a new wrap-around porch overlooks a small vineyard and offers views of a conifer forest and the Mayacamas Mountains. Although the setting is peaceful today, its creation story is rather dramatic.

Initially, work began away from the main structure, with remodel efforts focused on the original guesthouse by the pool, a place the growing family hoped friends and relatives would stay during extended visits. But those plans were abandoned when wildfires swept through the region, destroying the building just as renovations were about to begin. The action caused the owners to pivot, abandoning their initial plans. “We decided to focus on the main house instead,” says the wife.

Although the primary dwelling was untouched by flames, the design team, working with general contractors Jon L. Curry and Erio Brown, decided to change its nature, using fire-retardant materials in the process. “We stripped it down to the studs,” Cahill says. First, they expanded and opened the main floor by incorporating the existing garage into the living space, making way for a new entry hall, office and guest suite. Relocating the staircase behind the dining room fireplace allowed for an expansive, open-plan living and dining area. Upstairs, above what was once the garage, Cahill designed an addition housing the children’s room, making a loft-like space by adding a new dormer to match the ones already in place. The team also rebuilt the guesthouse, plus a new garage with a guest unit above, and unified all three buildings with gray siding that puts a modern twist on traditional board and batten.

The homeowners hired Baker after admiring her family-friendly work for mutual friends. “They really wanted a comfortable yet elevated style,” says the designer, who created a family-first look that’s also appropriate for hosting guests. “For example, there’s no television in the living room or anywhere downstairs,” she says. “It’s more about entertaining with adults on the first level, and then the upstairs is dedicated to kids.”

The husband and wife both love design and are decisive and informed about the subject, which made the project collaborative, with Baker presenting schemes, such as dark versus light, to help the two narrow their direction. “My husband skews more modern and stark, and likes pops of bright color,” says the wife. “I gravitate toward old-world detail, vintage items, found objects—rich textures with an eclectic feel.” While working with Baker on a plan, she says, “We met somewhere in the middle.”

Baker appointed the house with clean-lined furniture in neutrals and shades of blue, mixing in some of the wife’s collected pieces and accenting it all with black metal in bases, hardware and lighting. Touches of aqua and teal provide notes of color, as seen in some of the kitchen’s cookware and bowls, which are displayed on open shelves. Upstairs in the main bedroom, the headboard wall is covered in a high-contrast teal grass cloth “to draw your eye up,” notes the designer. “We used color to highlight the gabled ceiling.” Baker also brought warmth to the primarily white palette with wooden pieces such as the vintage console in the living room and an antique pharmacy cabinet in the entry. “The tonal palette keeps things about the view,” she says.

Looking back, the owners are glad they focused on the main house first. For them, a sudden change in direction led them to exactly the right place. “Had we followed our original plan, we wouldn’t have done it this way,” notes the wife. “It’s really an amazing and special home.”

Home details
Photography
Suzanna Scott
Architecture
Chris Cahill, CahillStudio Sonoma
Interior Design
Regan Baker, Regan Baker Design
Home Builder
Jon L. Curry and Erio Brown, Landers Curry, Inc.
Landscape Architecture
Paul Rozanski, Rozanski Design
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