country home country - Bethel Country Builders LLC
Transcription
country home country - Bethel Country Builders LLC
Sullivan County Democrat july 2010 h o me count ry in the spotlight on contractors For Otto, building homes is a calling Story and photos by Frank Rizzo S usan and Ray Otto occasionally do some weekend driving around the county. Susan will point out some lovely old house and comment on how nice it would be to live in it. Ray’s likely reaction is to say it would be a good candidate – for a thorough bulldozing. Ray Otto has a rare moment of relaxation in the dining room of his “Majestic Oaks”home, the first one he built as a contractor in Sullivan County. “People tell me, ‘They don’t build houses like they used to,’ and I say, ‘Thank God!’ ” Ray chuckles before listing the advantages of modern materials and construction methods. Once, Ray was strictly a plumber (with a “master” rating to boot) but as he put it, “Plumbing is [mostly] hidden. No matter how nice a job you do.” Otto looks at the Manobloc at the house he is bulding on Bernhardt Rd. It’s an elegant and efficient way of organizing the water flow in a residence. But constructing custom houses – now that is leaving one’s stamp on the landscape that is gratifying in a way plumbing and heating work can never match. “It’s nice to look back and say, ‘Geez, I built this,’ ” Otto remarked as he checked out the third residence he has been involved in erecting under the banner of his contracting business, Bethel Country Builders. It is located at Kenoza Lake Estates, and his client asked him to look at several lots in the development – all wooded. He did the walkthrough with the client and, with her requirements in mind, chose the lot best suited for the “house of her dreams.” “You need a bit of foresight to look at the property and figure out what the final job will look like,” he said. As the subcontractors worked on the framing and masonry, Otto pointed out a retaining wall made up of large stones found on the property. It could have been built out of cinder blocks or poured concrete, but the This is the residence Otto is building at the Kenoza Lake Estates. He used stones found on the property to create the retaining wall in foreground. HOME IN THE COUNTRY SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT JULY, 2010 Otto is slowly working on finishing this house, Villa Paradiso on Bernhardt Rd. Once the Ottos sell their residence on Pucky Huddle Rd. they hope to move here, near Susan’s parents and his mother. stacked, rectangular-shaped stones created a more pleasing affect and were in harmony with the surroundings. “The last time the owner was here, [the property] looked like that,” Otto said, pointing to a wooded portion of the lot. “It’s a nice feeling that someone has that kind of trust in you to say ‘Go ahead and build it’ [without looking over your shoulder].” Though his family has owned property in the county since 1965, Otto’s working life, until several years ago, was based in Hunterdon County, NJ. Otto, who graduated from the Ralph R. McKee Career & Technical High School in Staten Island, had long been associated and intrigued with Otto with the fireplace in “Villa Paradiso.” The stones holding the fireplace mantel came from the property as well. the process of building a house. Through a contractor friend, he got his hands-on experience helping to build a “million-dollar” residence in Hunterdon County shortly before making the move to Sullivan County. “I had always wanted to get involved in a complete [house] job,” Otto reflected. “When I moved up here, I decided to concentrate on custom homes.” His moving to Sullivan County was due to having met and courted Kenoza Lake’s Susan Brown, whom he eventually married in 2007. The Ottos live in the first house Ray built, on Pucky Huddle Rd. in Bethel on property his parents bought in the 1960s. “Majestic Oaks” was a finalist in the 2007 Sullivan County Board of Realtors’ Sullivan Showcase Awards for “Best Residence Under 2,500 Square Feet.” Though they love the house and its location, the Ottos eventually hope to move several miles to another one on the site of the old Bernhardt Homestead in Kenoza Lake, near Susan’s family farm and her parents, Ray and Marguerite (and Ray’s mother, Florence). Ray is working on this house – whose outside is mainly finished – in his spare Susan and Ray Otto on the porch of what they soon hope to be their future home, “Villa Paradiso” in Kenoza Lake. time, but once the Ottos sell their residence (a tough task in this current market) he and his subcontractors can finish the Bernhardt Rd. structure in several months. Attention to detail and “exquisite craftsmanship” are the hallmarks of Otto’s work. “Everything with me has to look right and look neat,” Ray said. Otto has found a subcontracting team he feels comfortable with. It includes Tom Buck of Pine Bush (framer), Mike Paciga of Jeffersonville (mason), Kevin Peters of Jeffersonville (excavator), Billy and Eugene Fulton of Kenoza Lake (well drillers) and JS Electric of Narrowsburg. The Ottos recently entered into a relationship with Log Chips, LLC, an authorized representative of Kuhns Brothers Custom Log Homes. “I’m hoping to expand my business into log homes. It’s a personal preference,” Otto said. “I care about how the job gets done,” Otto summed up his work philosophy. “Every home I built I approach like I’m building it for myself.” For info call 845-482-3661 or visit our new website at bethelcountrybuilders.com