This Summer Home Fuses Fire Island Modern With Family Function
Designer Oliver Freundlich revamps a Brooklyn family’s seasonal retreat and pays homage to Fire Island’s legacy architecture
By Hannah Doolin
Photography by Trevor Tondro
Styled by Kiera Coffee
August 28, 2019
a living room with a black fireplace and wood walls and a large sofa
Even under ideal circumstances, gut renovations are an enormous undertaking. Add to the equation a tight, nine-month timeline, a remote location reachable solely by ferry, and a rambunctious family of five to design around—then you’ll begin to grasp the enormity of the task at hand for Oliver Freundlich. A longtime friend tapped the SoHo-based architectural designer to transform an ’80s-era house situated in Seaview, an isolated yet intimate beach community on Fire Island. She and her partner snatched up the spot in hopes of building a summertime retreat from their life in Brooklyn, reminiscent of the island home where she’d spent her childhood summers.
Freundlich had his work cut out for him for his first-ever vacation home project. Fire Island’s strict building limitations and time-consuming approval processes—not to mention the logistics of transporting materials on an island void of motor vehicles—presented significant hurdles along the way. Luckily, Freundlich, an avid ocean lover himself, delighted in balancing the site’s unique challenges with his friends’ aspirations for an authentic summer escape to call their own. “There’s a strong element of nostalgia in this place, so it was a very intimate process,” says Freundlich. “Knowing the clients and having actually witnessed childhood life in Fire Island gave us a deep foundation to draw from to make it very personal.”
two kids and a man sit by a pool next to a wooden house
Ipe decking surrounds the home’s renovated pool—a special find amid Fire Island’s notoriously small lots. A custom arbor with a cedar brise-soleil overhang is supported by a single column, leaving plenty of open space for poolside entertaining. A cedar wall enclosing the space offers privacy from the street and neighboring homes. Painstakingly sourced patio furniture by Paola Lenti gives the outdoor lounge area vibrant splashes of color.
With its weathered wood siding, the exterior of the existing home conveyed the mood of Fire Island’s iconic Modernist architecture, but a serious spruce-up was in order. Drawing inspiration from the work of famed local architect Horace Gifford, the Oliver Freundlich Design (OF/D) team enlisted Island Contracting to strip the structure down to its skeleton and re-side it in clear cedar. Guided by lead designer Will McLoughlin, and in a nod to Gifford’s legendary designs, the home’s windows were enlarged and reconfigured to frame the surrounding landscape, incorporating as much glass and light as the structure would allow.
The original footprint and proportions of the home still remain, including its three distinct volumes, which intrigued Freundlich from the start. “The house had all these amazing suggestions, and we just capitalized on them,” he says. “That’s really where the exciting, transformative opportunity lay, to dramatically change the character of the house while amplifying its best qualities.” In the updated structure, an open living, dining, and kitchen area with 11-foot ceilings is transformed into a double-height, glass-enclosed atrium in the center of the home. The third section of the house splits into two floors—a luxurious master and guest suite upstairs and a closed-off corridor on the lower level, housing the three kids’ bedrooms, with space to spare for the family’s frequent summer guests.
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a woodclad kitchen with tall black stools
In doubling the size of the kitchen’s east-facing window, Freundlich embraces architect Horace Gifford’s tendency to highlight Fire Island’s stunning landscapes. Glass stretches from the ceiling to the countertop, framing a gorgeous snapshot of the Japanese black pines in the distance. Natural light pours in from all angles, complemented by Alvar Aalto pendants overhead. Absolute black granite carries over to the kitchen island and countertops and deep, sea-blue laminate by Abet Laminati covers the cabinetry, ensuring durability and longevity. Playful pops of color come from the clients’ vintage collection of Dansk kitchenware and a photograph by R.A. McBride—one half of the homeowning couple.
Inside, lead interior designer Emily Lindberg did away with the stark, white-on-white tile, laminate cabinetry, and drywall covering every surface. Douglas fir wall panels and white oak flooring brought warmth and material richness to the spacious home, which Lindberg filled with an eclectic mix of vintage and contemporary pieces and vibrant textiles. Personal accents, including Danish Modern furnishings from the couple’s collection and colorways inspired by their favorite hues (mustard yellow and Pinot-like purple) allow the home to more accurately express the family’s aesthetic within the original proportions of the space.
Between Labor Day and Memorial Day, the OF/D team worked tirelessly to prep the house for move-in, just in time for the start of summer. The end product is the ideal hub to bring together this lively family’s nostalgia for the past with new memories created on the island. “It was the ultimate renovation in some ways,” Freundlich reflects. “It captures the character and spirit of the people who inhabit it, and that’s thematic in what we do.”
Oliver Freundlich | Summer Home 火岛传统建筑 Fire Island Traditional Architecture
来自纽约设计师Oliver Freundlich改造了布鲁克林一家的季节性度假屋,并向Fire Island的传统建筑致敬。
Designer Oliver Freundlich from New York revamps a Brooklyn family’s seasonal retreat and pays homage to Fire Island’s legacy architecture.
Oliver Freundlich为他的第一个度假屋项目做了大量的准备工作。Fire Island严格的建筑限制和耗时的审批流程,一路上都遇到了巨大的障碍。幸运的是,Oliver Freundlich自己也是一个狂热的海洋爱好者,他很高兴能够平衡网站的独特挑战和他的朋友们对真正的夏日度假的渴望。“
Oliver Freundlich had his work cut out for him for his first-ever vacation home project. Fire Island’s strict building limitations and time-consuming approval processes, presented significant hurdles along the way. Luckily, Freundlich, an avid ocean lover himself, delighted in balancing the site’s unique challenges with his friends’ aspirations for an authentic summer escape to call their own.
这里有一种强烈的怀旧情绪,所以这是一个非常亲密的过程,Oliver Freundlich说。“了解客户,并亲眼目睹了火岛的童年生活,为我们打下了深厚的基础,让它变得非常个人化。”
“There’s a strong element of nostalgia in this place, so it was a very intimate process,” says Freundlich. “Knowing the clients and having actually witnessed childhood life in Fire Island gave us a deep foundation to draw from to make it very personal.”
住宅的原始足迹和比例仍然保留下来,包括它的三个不同的体量,这从一开始就引起了Oliver Freundlich的兴趣。这是一个激动人心的、变革性的机会,它可以戏剧性地改变房子的性质,同时放大它最好的品质。
The original footprint and proportions of the home still remain, including its three distinct volumes, which intrigued Freundlich from the start. “The house had all these amazing suggestions, and we just capitalized on them,” he says. “That’s really where the exciting, transformative opportunity lay, to dramatically change the character of the house while amplifying its best qualities.”
在更新的结构中,一个拥有11英尺高天花板的开放式客厅、餐厅和厨房区域被改造成两层高的玻璃围合中庭,位于住宅的中心。房子的第三部分分为两层,楼上是豪华的主卧和客卧套间,楼下是一条封闭的走廊,里面是三个孩子的卧室,有多余的空间留给这家人经常来这里避暑的客人。
In the updated structure, an open living, dining, and kitchen area with 11-foot ceilings is transformed into a double-height, glass-enclosed atrium in the center of the home. The third section of the house splits into two floors—a luxurious master and guest suite upstairs and a closed-off corridor on the lower level, housing the three kids’ bedrooms, with space to spare for the family’s frequent summer guests.