By ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½app
December 20, 2009
Long before the Vanderbilts ever arrived, the romantic landscape at Hyde Park had already earned renown for its beauty. Previous owners had established ornamental flower gardens, and the influential Belgian landscape architect Andre Parmentier (1780-1830) had created one of the nation’s first expansive romantic landscape gardens here.
White retained the Paris based Jules Allard to design the dining room with its Flemish tapestries, marble walls, and late-eighteenth century reproductions of eighteenth century French furniture. The library is more English in style with gilt and oak paneling. Many of the original furnishings are still here: family portraits, tea sets, extravagant fabrics in various states of repair. We get a sense of the Old Money Ruth Livingston married to the New Money Ogden Mills, whose father had made a fortune in the California Gold Rush of 1849. We are told that this house was the inspiration for the great Hudson River country house described by Edith Wharton in The House of Mirth. We can see how.
The public rooms on the main floor are on a formal, north-south axis. The elegant but understated private rooms upstairs flow comfortably from one to another. In the basement, herringbone patterned bricks, laid in sand, extend throughout the clean-lined kitchen and eating area, into a garage area, framed by two free standing Greek columns. On the third floor there is a beautifully designed, meticulously cataloged 10,000-volume library.
Impeccable is the word. Everything at Edgewater seems perfect, but very comfortable as well. It has exceeded all expectations.
Our final adventure for the afternoon is Astor Courts (1902-4) in Rhinebeck, on 50 acres overlooking the Hudson River. Just a few days before our trip, it has been written up in the real estate section of The Wall Street Journal. Asking price: $12 million. John Jacob Astor IV originally commissioned this as a sporting pavilion with guest bedrooms, as part of his 2,800 acre Ferncliff Estate. It is a Stanford White design with indoor clay tennis court, and a white marble indoor swimming pool, reportedly the first ever built for residential use.
Brooke Astor, who had lived here for a while, gave the estate to the Catholic Church in 1964. It passed into private ownership in the early 1980’s with the current owners, Arther Seelbinder and his wife, Kathleen Hammer, buying it in 2005. Sam White, great-grandson of the original architect, has worked with them on the restoration.
We enter the vast main living area: 15,000 square feet with elaborate ceilings and molding, but somehow it feels homey. At a reception in the foyer of the family living spaces, we hear stories of the couple’s purchase, regrets, and, ultimately, deep pleasure in not just bringing this place back—but, indeed, taking it beyond what it originally was, to a warm, welcoming, eminently livable home.
-Richard Holt
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