NSIDE A STUNNING ITALIANATE TOWNHOUSE IN SAVANNAH
Chuck Chewning reimagines one of the grandest townhouses in Savannah, Georgia, for one of the city’s top restaurateurs.
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BY DANA THOMAS AND STYLED BY LILI ABIR REGEN
SEP 12, 2019
Green chairs around marble table with blue banquetteRicardo Labougle
Sometimes it takes time to find where your heart should be. Just ask Savannah, Georgia, restaurateur John O. “Johno” Morisano and his wife, Carol A. Sawdye. In 2010, the New York couple took a road trip through the American South. When they arrived in Savannah, they fell so hard for the historic port city, with its grid of formal squares and centenary live oaks dripping with Spanish moss, that they bought a house and began to split their time between there and Manhattan.
Four years later, Johno and Mashama Bailey, the sous-chef of the highly regarded restaurant Prune in New York’s East Village, opened the Grey, an award-winning Southern brasserie set in the town’s long-abandoned Art Deco-era Greyhound bus depot. The Grey hit big, and not only with locals—the New York Times praised it as a place “that compels customers to linger willingly”—and it launched a culinary renaissance in Savannah.
Long gray sofa with orange chairs and sheer curtains
In the living room, the Vladimir Kagan sofa, in a Donghia fabric, is from Ralph Pucci, the Warren Platner chairs, in a Rubelli fabric, are from Knoll, and the custom Natasha Baradaran ottoman is from R Hughes. The window shades are in a Dedar fabric, and the walls are in Sherwin-Williams’s Passive.
Ricardo Labougle
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Life was almost perfect. But Sawdye, who is COO of PricewaterhouseCoopers as well as a keen swimmer, longed for a pool, and their home had no place for one. The couple snooped around and found an 8,500-square-foot antebellum townhouse steps off the city’s famed Monterey Square, with a 40-foot-long lap pool in the courtyard and owners who were considering a move. The two families quietly traded properties.
Soon after, the couple called their friend, the Savannah-based interior designer Chuck Chewning, a former creative director of Donghia and design director of Studio Rubelli in Venice, to take a look. Chewning, who had recently renovated the Gritti Palace on Venice’s Grand Canal, was aghast. From the street, the 1880s house is handsome, with a stucco-and-stone facade and airy Charleston-style porches along the side. But inside, it was dark—brown walls, brown moldings, brown doors. When asked what he thought, Chewning was blunt. “It’s dreary and depressing, like the Munsters live here,” he told Morisano. A few days later, he had a solution: paint the interior stark white, “so I could see the architecture, the light and proportions,” he recalls. “Then I could start building.”
LOOK INSIDE A SAVANNAH TOWNHOUSE DECORATED BY CHUCK CHEWNING
GARDEN ROOMThe homeowners with their Rhodesian ridgebacks, Anchovy (left) and Otter. The Living Divani sofa is topped with pillows in fabrics by Hermès and Dedar, the ClassiCon table is from Switch Modern, and the pendant is by Avrett.Ricardo Labougle
Traditional Savannah-style decorating?—heavy on Victorian, swathed in rich fabrics?—did not feel right for this project. Chewning instead set out to combine the clients’ cool New York vibe with a contemporary Southern zeal. That meant midcentury-modern pieces mixed with good Continental antiques and a cheerful palette that accentuates Savannah’s warm light. Thanks to the Savannah College of Art and Design, the city has a vibrant art scene; much of the artwork in the house was locally commissioned.
As a nod to Morisano’s profession, the dining room was designed to feel like a gourmet restaurant, with a banquette-like sofa below the window and an oval table. The upstairs floor-through master suite incorporates a home office for Sawdye. “It’s a world unto its own,” Chewning says.
Muted lilacs and grays on the headboard, coverlet, walls, rug, and seating
In the master bedroom, the coverlet and curtains are of Dedar fabrics. The Magni chair is in a Pierre Frey fabric, and the French chaise and Italian dresser are antiques. The chandelier is by Coup Studio, and the walls are in Sherwin-Williams’s Unique Gray.
Ricardo Labougle
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The heart of the house, however, is the sprawling kitchen-cum-den. “We can have real fun with this space,” Chewning told his clients. Morisano suggested “bringing in elements of the Grey,” Chewning recollects, so they hired Parts and Labor Design, the New York firm that turned the old bus depot into the gleaming restaurant, to design the dining table, barstools, and light fixture over the island. For the rest, Chewning wanted to evoke “a 1970s den—a little European, vintage, and retro,” with terra-cotta walls, charcoal-gray woodwork, and Morisano’s extensive collection of vinyl records. When the couple saw it, they swooned. “This is the first space that we ever felt was truly ours,” Morisano says. “Everything about it is personal to us.”
Chuck Chewning | Savannah Italianate Townhouse 历史悠久的港口城市萨凡纳别墅
位于美国乔治亚州萨凡纳城市的一座最宏伟的联排别墅,由美国Charles H Chewning 设计工作室的Chuck Chewning为一位顶级餐厅老板重新设计的。
One of the grandest townhouses in Savannah city of Georgia, has been redesigned by Chuck Chewning of Charles H Chewning design studio for a top restaurant owner.
2010年,这家餐馆老板John Morisano和他的妻子,进行了一次穿越美国南部的自驾游。当他们到达萨凡纳时,他们对这座历史悠久的港口城市如此着迷。这里有许多正式的广场和百年橡树,树上挂满了西班牙苔藓。于是他们买下了这栋房子,开始在那里和曼哈顿之间打发时间。
In 2010, the New York couple took a road trip through the American South. When they arrived in Savannah, they fell so hard for the historic port city, with its grid of formal squares and centenary live oaks dripping with Spanish moss, that they bought a house and began to split their time between there and Manhattan.
生活几乎是完美的。这对美国夫妇四处窥探,发现了一座8500平方英尺的战前联排别墅,离该市著名的Monterey Square不远,院子里有一个40英尺长的游泳池,室内长长的灰色沙发,橙色的椅子和透明的窗帘,给他们生活空间带来生机。
Life is almost perfect. The American couple snooping around and found a 8500 - Square - foot townhouse before the war, away from the city's famous Monterey near the Square, the courtyard is a 40 feet long swimming pool, indoor long gray sofa, orange chair and transparent curtain, who earns their living space.