Connecticut
Every Room in This Connecticut Farmhouse Has Its Own Vibe, Thanks to Thom Filicia
Updating the interiors of a standard 176-year-old farmhouse may be tough, significantly when it’s lived—and grown in measurement—throughout three centuries to change into a sprawling amalgamation of additives that don’t retain the house’s authentic integrity.
Fortunately, that wasn’t the case when the New York–primarily based designer Thom Filicia’s shoppers requested him to reimagine their basic 8,400-square-foot Connecticut nation home. “Sometimes these previous properties develop and ramble, making the layouts extremely difficult,” Filicia says. “This truly has a very nice stream, contemplating the way it’s advanced.” Whereas preserving the 1846 Greenwich dwelling’s conventional vernacular and historical past intact, Filicia was tasked with making it really feel recent and younger for these empty nesters, who spend a lot of the 12 months at their downtown Manhattan pied-à-terre.
“A key factor individuals have to grasp—particularly once they have older properties with loads of rooms—is that it’s actually necessary to offer each room a objective,” explains Filicia. “By giving every area a definite use, persona, and vibe, it turns into the place you go if you’re on the lookout for a specific feeling or expertise.” One such reimagining for the six-bedroom, seven-bathroom home included turning an unused closet within the couple’s library right into a full-service bar. “Even earlier than it was a closet, it was most likely a doorway that went into one other room. Now it’s an area that companies the second—a spot the place they’ll take pleasure in a scotch or glass of wine with out having to enter the kitchen to arrange it first.”
For Filicia, the practically three-year redo—which started in fall 2019—couldn’t have achieved a greater consequence. “Their children are scattered throughout, so that is the place the place everybody comes collectively—and I’m blissful to say they use each room, and it’s a house that’s actually cherished.”