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A Home Built for Warmth

By Debbie Kane
Photography by Rob Karosis

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The family room is a perfect example of what Jeffery Adams of Cebula Design calls “modern living”: an open concept room off the kitchen where the couple can relax, read, watch television and create a friendly space for their grandchildren. The windows and high ceilings allow for ample light and the furniture can be easily moved around to accommodate young children and their toys.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Looking inside from the porch, the family room provides a comfortable retreat for the family. The patio drops down from the door, allowing for an unobstructed view out the windows.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Sitting high on a hill, the four-bedroom, Shingle-Style home is accessed by a switchback driveway landscaped with rock found on site. Visitors pass through a curvilinear exterior patio to reach the front door.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Sitting on a four-acre lot and oriented to take advantage of the sun’s energy, the home features energy-efficient windows, a solar hot-water thermal collector and photovol-taic laminate panels mounted on the southern roof that convert solar radiation into electricity.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Opened on three sides to create easy access for entertaining and family members, the kitchen features polished granite countertops, custom-glazed white cabinetry and Viking appliances.
Photo by Rob Karosis

The floor-to-ceiling windows in the dining room showcase hilltop views that include downtown Boston on a clear day. The comfortable upholstered chairs can be brought into the living room or family room if necessary for extra seating.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Primarily designed for comfort, the living room features upholstered furniture by Pearson as well as artwork by different New England artists, including a pair of antler horn sculptures. The flat-screen television over the fireplace adds a graphic element of its own.
Photo by Rob Karosis

The light-filled front hallway features high ceilings as well as curved architectural details that lead visitors into the home’s main living spaces and upstairs to the second floor.
Photo by Rob Karosis

The quarter-sawn oak bookcases, custom built by Telaran Construc¬tion, that line the library feature many mementoes meaningful to the homeowner. The oak desk is from Bausman & Company, and the tufted leather chair from Hancock & Moore.
Photo by Rob Karosis

The light-filled front hallway features high ceilings as well as curved architectural details that lead visitors into the home’s main living spaces and upstairs to the second floor.
Photo by Rob Karosis

Resources

Cebula Design, Inc.
Michael Cebula and Jeffrey Adams
18 Liberty Street
Newburyport, MA 01950
(978) 462-6984
cebuladesign.com

g2+1
Doug Greiner
70 New Road, PO Box 117
Salisbury, NH 03268
648-6434
g2plus1.com

Teleran Construction, Inc.
14 Brown Avenue
Stratham, NH 03885
926-6444
teleranconstruction.com

TMS Architects
Shannon Alther
One Cate Street
Eldredge Park
Portsmouth, NH 03801
436-4274
tmsarchitects.com

This spacious home is fueled by both the sun and family memories.

High on a wind-swept hill in southern New Hampshire sits a home uniquely positioned to take advantage of its wide-open vistas. In addition to spectacular views that stretch to Boston, the 6,300-square-foot house has the capacity to turn a sunny day into energy savings for its owners, with solar panels, energy-efficient windows and a unique hot-water heating system. There's also plenty of living space inside and out to accom­modate family get-togethers with the homeowners' adult children and grandchildren.

"This home is really what you call modern living," says Jeffrey Adams of Cebula Design, Inc. Fine Interiors in Newburyport, Massachusetts, which designed the interiors. "It's just large enough for every one in the family-from the owners to their grandchildren-to enjoy."

Let the sun shine in

Seeking a gracious, family-friendly home that incorporated energy-saving features, the owners turned to TMS Architects of Portsmouth, who had already designed a home for the family on the New Hampshire Seacoast.

"We wanted to create a good living space inside while utilizing all the sunshine that the property gets," says architect Shannon Alther of TMS Architects.

Working with Teleran Construction of Stratham, TMS created a multilevel, open-concept home with "a New England style," Alther says. The six-bedroom, cedar-shingled home sits on four acres (originally two housing lots), oriented to let the sun shine in.

The home's sustainable features include energy-efficient windows, a solar hot-water thermal collector and photo-voltaic laminate panels that convert solar radiation into electricity. Mounted on the house's south-facing metal roof (the remainder of the roof is asphalt shingles), the panels generate electricity to support a radiant-heating system in the home's five bathrooms as well as the ground floor game room and fitness area. The system also heats the home's water. From his computer, the homeowner can control the heating and cooling system, or even check on his electric and water usage.

To Alther, the home's "envelope," or structure, is what makes it energy efficient. "The home needs to be tight," he says. "If it has the right walls and windows, it will have lower heating and cool­ing costs." The structure has a high R-value, which measures the thermal resistance of a material to heat transfer. R-values are used to rate insulation products; the higher the R-value, the greater the insulation's effectiveness. In addition, insulation used in both the wall and roof cavities keeps the home warm in the winter and cooler during the summer.

Outdoors

The home's hilltop location, buffeted by wind in bad weather and unprotected from the sun, initially presented a challenge to landscape architect Doug Greiner of g2+1 in Salisbury. To accom­modate the area's windy, dry conditions, Greiner designed a gar­den and two patio spaces along the home's south-facing side. The upper patio, finished in bluestone with a curved granite edge, invites access to the surrounding hilltop. The lower patio and flower garden are accessed by granite steppingstones framed with ground-cover plantings. Access to the home is via a switch­back driveway stabilized with rock found on site and finished with native shrubs, grasses and wildflowers. The front entrance is reached through a small shade garden.

Indoors

Inside, the home's open floor plan includes many windows with sunny views. Michael Cebula, of Cebula Design and a long-time TMS collaborator, says the owners wanted room to entertain fam­ily and friends so primary living spaces flow easily. "They didn't want anything to be off-limits to the grandchildren," Adams says. "They wanted everything to be comfortable and roomy enough to accommodate everyone."

The kitchen opens to the dining area and family room on two sides; a bank of windows along one wall as well as the windows from the dining and family rooms provide plenty of natural light. A bar area faces the family room, making it convenient for casual dining. Granite countertops, custom-glazed white cabinetry and a decorative tile backsplash make the kitchen pretty as well as practical.

Four, floor-to-ceiling windows in the dining room over-look a large stone patio. Custom-made drapes and woven wooden shades help keep the room cool in the summer. Focusing on comfort, Cebula Design had the dining chairs fully upholstered. "They're very tactile, and you can use them as extra seating in the family room when you're entertaining," Adams says.

The family room is noteworthy for its high ceilings, numer­ous windows and detailed woodwork. A comfortable seating area in front of a large fireplace is the perfect spot to relax, read or watch television; the leather furniture can be easily moved or cleaned to accommodate young children. The living room is also open-concept, with high ceilings and furniture grouped around a second fireplace. Fine art and sculpture, most by New England artists, are placed around the room.

With its energy-saving features and spacious interiors, the house has become a gathering place for the homeowners' extended family. Beauty combined with energy conservation is a perfect formula for modern living.


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