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This 1910 Tudor Revival-style house required a comprehensive program: restoration, landscape design, reconfiguring of interior spaces, and the addition of a new wing containing a two-car garage, guest room with bath, formal dining room and a second-floor family room—all of which were seamlessly integrated into the original house. In the dining room, old wood paneling and a mantel we rescued from an historic New York City church were salvaged and reinstalled by master carpenters. New leaded-glass windows were crafted by one of our stained-glass artisans, and antique sconces and chandelier were added to make the room look as if it had always been there. Period details continue at the bar off the billiard room where a large round leaded-glass window with a grape motif dramatically terminates a hallway axis, and in the billiard room where a library bookcase with a specially latched "secret" door swings open to reveal a powder room. Exterior photo: Emily Gilbert