Peek Inside This Chicago Retreat Serving Up A Feast For The Senses

Details

Family room with vaulted wood-beam...

The four-seasons room takes its design cues from Blackberry Farm in the Great Smoky Mountains with comfortable pieces like the Luminaire sectional, ottoman fabricated by Ace Covering Upholstery—both with Romo Fabrics material—and lounge chairs from Burton James. The custom rug is from Davis & Davis.

Upholstered window seat next to...

In a corner of the four-seasons room, illuminated by an Allied Maker wall lamp, a Romo-covered built-in bench by Ace Covering Upholstery captures the rustic-but-refined materials palette the homeowners wanted. Builder P.J. Murphy installed the wood paneling from Creative Millwork.

Kitchen with patterned rug, island...

Kitchen appliances include a Sub-Zero refrigerator and a Blue Star range and oven, all purchased at Grand Appliance and TV. Designer Amy Storm sourced the pendant from Lightology, and the vintage wool runner is from her eponymous homewares shop.

Kitchen with upholstered stools, stone-topped...

The Arteriors stools complement the kitchen’s countertops and backsplash, both from Calia Stone Boutique. The custom metal shelving, hearth drawer and firewood insert were fabricated by G&M Ornamental Iron Work. Subway tile from The Fine Line clads the hearth wall.

Secondary kitchen with custom shelving,...

The secondary kitchen space is used for prep work, baking, storage and a coffee bar. The cabinetry was constructed by Arbor Mills and features a quartzite countertop from Calia Stone Boutique. Storm had the cart made at Old Plank.

Primary bathroom with vintage rug...

The primary bathroom’s cabinetry was crafted by Arbor Mills, and its countertops, tile and shower stone were sourced at Global Marble & Granite Importers. The vintage runner is from the designer’s shop.

gray bedroom with vaulted wood-beam...

Storm repurposed the clients’ existing bed for the primary bedroom, adding linens from Orchids Lux Home and a nightstand from Arteriors. A striped Phillip Jeffries wallcovering cocoons the space.

The backyard of a stone...

Landscape designer Brian Casey gave the yard a secluded feel. Cedar cabinetry by Arbor Mills and Diresco countertops were chosen for the alfresco kitchen. The pool was built by Anchor Spa and Pool.

It’s a rare client who references Scottish golf courses, the Great Smoky Mountains’ Blackberry Farm, and the tradition of open-hearth cooking all as design inspiration. Embracing the challenge, architect Richard Olsen and designer Amy Storm set off to create a clever, suburban Chicago residence that taps all these touchstones. “This couple loves to entertain the people they care about, and they want their guests to feel at home,” Storm says. And from the moment visitors arrive in the wide and welcoming foyer, the house begins to reveal a series of joyful destinations, indoors and out. 

“This home has traditional roots, but it’s got a clean aesthetic,” Olsen says. The visual simplicity of its forms—steeply pitched roofs, modern dormer windows—belies the complexity of the sloped and narrow lot, which required much consideration (including a civil engineer and lots of retaining walls) to prepare the site for the multistory structure, as well as its pool and pool house, all of which were constructed in collaboration with builder P.J. Murphy. “The clients came to us with Pinterest boards that drove the style of the home,” Olsen continues. “With natural materials like white oak and stone from Wisconsin, we created a play of rough and smooth, dark and light.” 

For the interiors, first things first—the couple’s artwork, which they’d collected during their world travels. Because much of the art was quite large, Storm made the point of incorporating the pieces early on in the design. But it was the kitchen that truly needed to anchor the home, offering a main workspace focused on a large island, a wood-burning oven and an adjoining hybrid dining room-cocktail bar, as well as an ancillary kitchen.

Storm then took her cues from the couple’s interest in sports and nature. “They didn’t want an all-white house, they wanted earthy hues,” the designer recalls. “The beautiful quartzite slab on the kitchen island—with its dark green, blue, gray and rust tones—is at the very center of the home, and it’s what ties the palette together,” she adds, pointing to the green tiles that line the cooking hearth and the green-leather ottoman in the living room. “With the vaulted ceilings, wood beams and skylights, it’s the living room that most captures the Blackberry Farm vibe. The room is meant to feel cozy and comfortable,” she explains, noting subtle details, like the steel elements that run through the abode, creating a raw edge but not an overly industrial feel. 

In the couple’s bedroom, which they requested be on the ground floor with direct access to the pool and garden, features a dramatic, wood-beamed ceiling much like the living room’s design, but here it was painted a soft white to create “a less woodsy feel,” Storm says. Luxurious details like a teak floor in their shower add a decidedly spa-like ambience. 

The basement takes the couple’s entertaining goals to the next level. “The husband is an avid golfer and wanted this space to feel like a Scottish pub,” Storm recalls. A golf simulator established the room’s green palette, which the designer augmented with dark woods and a plaid carpet. “It’s a comfy lounge, an extension of their hosting space.” On the wall near the shuffle-board table, she and Olsen even designed niches where guests could place their drinks when it was their turn to play. “It’s the details,” Storm muses. 

Meanwhile, landscape designer Brian Casey created outdoor spaces that are just as equally engaging. Fulfilling a wish list that included raised vegetable beds and a lawn for their dog, Casey also brought in plantings comprised of “flowering trees, shrubs and perennials in a palette of lavender and pinks, as well as evergreens and low-maintenance fescue grasses,” he explains, noting the aid of his design director, Bryan Eastman. “It looks similar to a golf course with the greens and the roughs.” There are fire pits, too, including one perched on the property’s highest point. “We made it a destination,” Casey adds. “Up there, you get a fun, drone-like view of the house.”

“The goal of this home was to offer friends an experience similar to traveling on a vacation,” Storm says. And the result, like a wonderful holiday, leaves everyone wanting to return.