A historic meeting house in Salisbury, CT — built in 1959, with wide-plank floors, original beams, and walls that had absorbed decades of Connecticut light. The clients wanted their home to feel worthy of the architecture: warm, considered, and completely livable.
Working within the building's historic bones meant every decision had to serve two masters. The original structure set the tone — natural materials, muted colors, nothing that competed with the architecture. We layered in custom upholstery, period-appropriate case goods, and window treatments that let the light do what it always had: define the rooms by season and hour.
A home that feels like it grew into itself. Rooms that look as though they were always meant to be this way — because nothing was imposed on them. Just good design, working with what was already there.












