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Books:
Florida Architecture 15th Annual Edition
Brazilian
Personification at Sailfish Point
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Ba rry
Sugerman waterfront homes are wonderfully distinguishable.
Elements include strong architectural exteriors, see-through
views upon entry, open-space floor plans and garages
that are totally secret. After all, a garage door at
an entry is anathema to architects. But in this home,
the garage door is the entry feature, and rooms are self-contained.
Even the front doorway is atypically hidden and the entry
view doesn't sweep onto a waterfront panorama. "This
is one of the few homes where the owner took such a strong
position that it directed the way I pushed the pencil," says
architect Sugerman.
The
same held true for interior designer Louis
Shuster and landscape architect Walter Taft Bradshaw.
But the talented design team welcomed the input from
their cosmopolitan Brazilian clients. Their impeccable
taste and the husband's expertise in building and landscaping
was downright inspirational.
"We'd
arrive here in the morning after a flight from Brazil
and we'd be meeting far into the night," says Sugerman. "He
had infinite energy and non-stop enthusiasm. Everyone
else was dropping, and he was still going strong."
His
face-to-face involvement was a new twist for the design
team, whose vacation home clients ordinarily establish
their requirements, make several on-site visits, communicate
telephonically, and move in when the house is complete.
But
not this couple. "These clients flew in from South America
at the drop of a hat," says interior designer Louis Shuster. "They'd
bring colors fabrics, items to use in the house. They
even flew me to their home to learn their lifestyle."
The
result is a home that is a personification of the owners.
Abundant gardens linked to the living spaces bear witness
to this.
So
do the lagoon-like swimming pool and tropical foliage
reminiscent of their homeland. The same for earth tones
that harken to their passion for the environment. And
certainly the unconventional placement of the garage.
"I
always point out features to my clients that I don't
think are in their best interests, like a garage in front," says
Sugerman. "But if that's not what they want, I give them
what they want. They're the ones who will he living in
the home."
So
when it came to the garage, Sugerman gave them copper
sheathed acid-washed, turquoise doors. Then landscape
architects Walter Taft Bradshaw and Joe Gordon handsomely
embellished them with a series of horizontal planters
with the drip line on top.
As
a result, when the doors tilt up, the lush green vegetation
remains intact. "My client had seen this 'vegetated door'
idea in Brazil, with attached orchids and bromeliads." says
Bradshaw "He was very conscious about a tropical look,
and very definitive about what he liked and didn't like.
I had never landscaped a garage door before, so it was
quite a feat. "
Small
wonder that the designers clearly echoed the wishes of
the clients even when they were unorthodox. When Shuster
visited both their primary home in Sao Paulo and their
Brazilian beach house, he gleaned the essence of their
lives. First-hand he saw how meals were served to the
family of eight, what size chairs they liked, the different
collections they valued and which local artists and artisans
they admired.
Expansive
living room seating for the large family is anchored
by an antique kilim rug, while a similar rug was transformed
into fringed pillows. Chinese antique horses share the
spotlight with family photos.
"They'd
bring colors fabrics, items to use in the house. They
even flew me to their home to learn their lifestyle. "
LOUIS
SHUSTER


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