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TRENDSETTING PRODUCTS AND MATERIALS FOR DISTINCTIVE RENOVATIONS 35 SA RY th ANNIVE R fresh RENOVATIONS before ColoradoHomesMag.com JANUARY. FEBRUARY 2015 after A Renovated Retreat Rustic barn wood and luxe furnishings bring this dated mountain escape into the here and now By Elisabeth A. Sullivan Photography by David Patterson W e’ve all seen them. Across the country, homes constructed circa 1995 share a few telltale characteristics: beige walls with honeystained molding, blond floors or wall-to-wall carpeting, white tile, touches of travertine and brushed-nickel fixtures. The look is all too easy to date, but it doesn’t readily suggest any particular location or personality. These days, however, many homeowners and designers want to banish the generic in favor of a look that’s more personalized and geographically specific—and interior designer Melissa Greenauer and her adventurous Beaver Creek clients are definitely in that camp. The well-traveled interior designer works with clients from Colorado to points far beyond, operating out of her offices in Vail, London and Dubai to design homes and commercial spaces that reflect their surroundings. before before (opposite) The addition of wood paneling to the sloped ceiling draws more attention to the living room’s beautiful wooden beams and trusses, visually warming up the room and bringing the ceiling down to human scale. A Paul Ferrante chandelier adds a graceful note, and a collection of art from Santa Fe adorns the room. Comfy custom sofas and sectionals from Greenauer Design are streamlined and neutral so as not to compete with the room’s imposing architecture. (this page) A tall and bulky cabinet once partitioned the main living space, but interior designer Melissa Greenauer removed the awkward piece and replaced it with a clever, sleek console that conceals a pop-up TV, allowing a brighter and more unified living area. 83 before 84 (above) Walls clad in barn wood serve as a rustic, tonal backdrop for the kitchen’s custom metal hood and dramatic backsplash. Greenauer refinished the oak floors to create a darker, neutral base for the home’s design. (opposite) Contemporary sconces and a chandelier from Hammerton modernize the cozy breakfast nook. Their sleek forms stand in contrast to the room’s forested views. before “I started as a landscape architect, so I always design from the outside in, thinking about how a home should connect with the property,” Greenauer says. “This was an existing home, though, so I was working from the inside out.” As many renovations do, this project grew exponentially as work got under way, spiraling outward from kitchen and bathroom remodels to include topical renovations in nearly every room and outdoor space. Work began in the kitchen, and once the demolition was complete, the homeowners decided that cosmetic updates and minor tweaks to the floor plan just wouldn’t do. Greenauer seized the opportunity to reorient the kitchen toward the stunning mountain views, and then she selected tone-on-tone materials to highlight the room’s new feature element: a statement-making metal hood and backsplash. Those tired beige walls and brushed-nickel fixtures were replaced with reclaimed barn wood and oil-rubbed bronze. 85 before In fact, barn wood became a major design feature throughout the house. “We used a ton of it,” Greenauer says. “Sometimes, when we would have a blank wall, that just became the solution. You know that urban, recycled look that you’re seeing in some homes these days? This is kind of Colorado’s alternative to that.” The barn wood turned bland guest rooms into rustic retreats, offering an earthy counterpoint to elegant bed frames and metallic accents, lush carpets and faux-fur bedcovers. The master suite, now clad almost entirely in reclaimed wood, transformed into a cozy aerie featuring floor-to-vaulted-ceiling views of a stand of birch trees and a refined canopy bed dressed simply but luxuriously, and paired with contemporary nightstands. In the master bath, Greenauer (opposite) The master bedroom is a tall, compact space, and after the client settled on a canopy bed from Ferrell + Mittman, Greenauer made it the focal point for the space and then filled in everything else around it. She kept the colors and furnishings to a minimum so as not to visually clutter the room, directing the attention toward the views. (above) Contemporary side tables from Bernhardt are a refined counterpoint to the rustic barn wood backdrop, and the plush bedding and sumptuous rug provide soft texture notes. 87 “ As with most renovations, the scope of this project is much bigger than originally planned. The homeowners loved the home just as it was when they bought it, but once they started working on some updates...we all decided to make the house feel more authentic. ” —Melissa Greenauer pushed the design to cool contemporary, adding sleek vanities and a streamlined, glass-walled shower, but barn wood and oil-rubbed bronze fixtures once again make an appearance to unite the room with the rest of the home’s mountain-inspired design. In the main living space, Greenauer adorned the vaulted ceiling with wood paneling to highlight the heavy beams and ceiling trusses, and to offset the stone on the fireplace surround, creating a room befitting a mountain lodge. She also layered in ample seating for entertaining, with custom sofas and sectionals designed to be weighty enough to balance out the room’s strong architecture, yet streamlined enough that they don’t compete for attention. before before Greenauer gave the 90s-era, honey-blond master bath a radical update, in keeping with the home’s new rustic-luxe mood. “The master bath used to be that classic ‘open the door and look at the tub’ kind of thing, and the clients didn’t even want a tub,” Greenauer remembers. So she updated the color palette, materials and layout, creating a crisply tailored space perfect for the homeowners’ needs. “We used clean, modern tiles and sleek lines, and then combined that with reclaimed barn wood and oil-rubbed bronze fixtures.” The space is now clad in Athens Silver Cream marble, with an accent wall of Idyllwild tiles from Ann Sacks in the spacious shower. 89 “As with most renovations, the scope of this project became much bigger than originally planned,” Greenauer admits. “The homeowners loved the home just as it was when they bought it, but once they started working on some updates, I think we all decided to make the house feel more authentic. We took it from ’90s contemporary to something more rustic and modern at the same time,” she explains. “And the work isn’t done. Now I have to get going on the yard.” Because this beautifully updated Colorado home definitely knows—and shows—its place. (this page, top left) “We wanted to have more of an earthy feel to things, so we chose traditional, Western-designed patterns and mixed them with modern case goods,” the designer says. The drapery and pillow fabrics are from Beacon Hill; the area rug is from Ralph Lauren. (left) To complement this guest bedroom’s rough barn wood walls, Greenauer incorporated tactile elements such as luxurious bed coverings on curvy Bernhardt beds and a polished fourdrawer dresser from Ambella Home. “In the guest rooms, all four walls were barn wood, so we wanted to make sure that we had some bigger-impact draperies to downplay the walls, and we layered in carpets on top of carpets to add more softness to those spaces,” Greenauer says. 90 (opposite, top right, and this page) The home’s second master suite originally had a wall divider that blocked the views and natural light offered by the room’s many windows. Greenauer removed the unnecessary barrier in order to unite the room’s cozy sleeping and sitting spaces. The dramatic four-poster bed from Bernhardt features an upholstered headboard with nailhead trim. It’s matched with a bedside table that echoes its shape. Rich, warm shades of rust and mahogany are repeated in the drapes, armchairs, benches and sumptuous bedding, joining the glow of the mellow fireplace to give the room a welcoming comfort at the end of a mountain day. before Design Details Interior Designer Melissa Greenauer Greenauer Design Group greenauer.com {m ore @} coloradohomesmag.com/RetreatReno 91