LAKESIDE LUXURY The living is easy in a million plus Virginia vacation house. P HOTOGRA PH S BY CHRI STOPH ER WA LLE ■ BY BARBARA PASH ho says money can't buy every- thing. It sure seems to help in vacation homes. For example, lakeside living at its most luxurious is found in a vacation home on which more than one million dollars was spent — on the interior decoration alone. The vacation home is in a picture perfect setting, nestled in the woods and overlooking Lake Anna, located southwest of Fredericksburg, Va. From the spacious outdoor deck, steps wind down to a two-slip boathouse. The owner, a Washington, D.C. devel- oper, wanted a place where he and his two teenage children could relax and casually entertain friends. He chose the man-made Lake Anna, which has become a popular resort area for upscale D.C. residents, as the Visible from the site for his vacation house. two-story great Barbara Halsted, room is the entry an associate at the foyer. A bridge connects parts of local H. Chambers Company, the in- the house. terior designer for Furnishings are sophisticated but the house, recalls that originally, it low key. was going to have a rustic, cabin-in-the- woods look. But plans change and the interior became formal, "more more sophisticated than that but still comfortable," she says. Designed by architect Sy Samaha, of the Annadale, Va firm Strang and Samaha, the 6,500-square foot con- temporary house makes the most of the tranquil setting. A sweeping two- level 1,000-square foot deck wraps around three sides, and almost every room in the house has access to the outdoors. The house is filled with sunlight from the many windows, skylights and glass doors. Skylight shades and drapery rods operate by remote control. The contemporary house is organ- ized around a three-story stairtower with wings on either side. Each wing has three levels but the levels are staggered; thus, the house has six levels altogether. Made of cedar painted gray with white trim, the house took two years to design and build. Everything in it is new, says Mrs. Halsted, who esti- mates that $1.5 million was spent on interior decoration, a figure that also included such incidental architectural features as the granite fireplace in the living room. "The idea was largely to make it a fun place," she says. The client liked the idea of having "surprises as you went from room to room. So one room is contemporary and another is classical. Normally, I'd make a house more homogeneous, but this house is a mix of decorating styles." The client didn't have any particular requirements for the furnishings. Nor was he concerned — naturally enough — that the house be low maintenance. But the amount of sunlight in the rooms and the woodsy setting were important considerations for Mrs. Halsted in picking fabrics and colors. "They are intended not to fight with the view outside. I didn't want to duplicate nature's colors — say, do a room with 'fall colors' — but to com- plement them," she explains. The house contains a great room, family room (with kitchenette), kitch- en, billiard room, study, four bed- rooms, and four full and two half- baths. Many of the rooms open onto each other. The two story-high great room con- sists of a living area, 25 feet by 28 feet, and a triangular-shaped dining area, 14 by 18 by 11 feet. Walls are white; the floor is three-foot squares of travertine stone outlined with wal- nut strips, the same floor as the ad- jacent entry foyer. A pale green Italian leather sec- tional sofa and chrome-and-glass cof- fee table sit atop a Jack Lenor Larsen pastel-colored rug. The cinnamon- colored granite fireplace is outlined in brass. The dining area has an octagon-shaped glass-and-rattan table. Wall lights in the great room have adjustable, pierced metal shades FALL '91 61