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Committed
to Preserving the Historic Visual Character of Lake Forest, IL |
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This Howard Van Doren Shaw house was built in 1922 as a summer residence for J. O. Hinckley. In 2007 Laura and Fred Fellows purchased the property. Original materials were meticulously researched and replaced in kind. Mercury glass window panes, no longer available here, were imported from England. The home’s exterior sand finish stucco was carefully repaired but not washed lest the near century old patina be lost. The focal point of the restoration is a sunken English garden and patio. Set below two massive elms, the decaying bluestone garden and patio surfaces were removed, cement repoured and stone reset. A fountain, which had not operated in years, was rebuilt and a bronze statue of a playful girl skips atop the bubbling water.
This residence, which is sited on property that was captioned as the Devilo Holt subdivision, was built about 1895. The original owner of the home is not known. A comparison of Sanborn fire insurance maps for the years 1917 and 1929 indicate a front porch was added to the home and what appears to be a garage was erected at the rear of the property. The years that followed were not kind. The dwelling fell into disrepair and could have been classed as a “tear down.” The homeowners, however, recognized an opportunity to restore a period residence’s charm and undertook a masterful rehabilitation of the home.
This colonial Connecticut farm-style house and landscape are located along West Laurel Avenue, comfortably compatible in scale and materials with neighboring homes and adjacent Open Lands preserves. Completed in 2008, it drew inspiration from the 1926 David Adler designed summer home built for William and Helen Blair at Crab Tree Farm. The exterior building materials include Halquist Wisconsin limestone, cedar roof shingles, and beaded siding, which echo the residence’s colonial design. The detailing is in character with the home’s design and includes dormers, copper gutters and downspouts, detailed cupolas and classically dimensioned columns. Becky Nagel wrote of her home: “The house is meant to be simply elegant but emphasizing its interrelationship with nature, especially as we are situated within preserved land and are lovers of the out-of-doors.”
This house was designed in 1938 by Louis Bouchard, an architect of office buildings, as his personal residence. A subsequent owner clad the dwelling’s cedar siding with aluminum. The current homeowners have restored the façade to reflect its original intent and appearance which included removal of the aluminum siding and restoration of a porch entrance.
The homeowners undertook a three-year project to preserve the character and appearance this 1928 Stanley Anderson designed home. The grounds, which include portions of a ravine, were restored by Clifford Miller.
Built a century ago in 1910, this was the Gardener’s cottage originally for the estate of Henry Rumsey at 900 Illinois Road. The estate was subdivided and sold off in the 1950s. The eight-gabled cottage was moved 100 yards east to its current location at the northeast corner of the estate--a site approximately where the kitchen garden/orchard was situated. The current owners undertook a massive rehabilitation of the dwelling. The foundation was stabilized and previous north/south additions were removed or altered to fit more harmoniously with the wooded areas and the home’s proximity to the Mayflower ravine.
This English manor style home was built 100 years ago on eight acres for Henry Rumsey, a Chicago commodity trader. The architect for the home was Charles Coolidge, who designed the Art Institute of Chicago. The original gardens at 900 East Illinois were designed by the famous Midwest landscape architect, Jens Jensen, known for his "prairie style" design work. This would often consist of open spaces and pathways, which allowed one to stay in the shade while viewing the light. Working with original planting and garden design plans, Kettelkamp & Kettelkamp has returned the grounds to a Jensen design and planting character. |
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400 East Illinois Road, Lake Forest, Illinois, 60045 • Phone: 847-234-1230 • Fax: 847-234-9250 • Email |
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