The marble and glass bar surrounded by Philip Enfield-designed chairs completes the entertainment-living room area. The dining mom has two round glass tables with Karl Springer bases. The painting above the buffet is by Yanko Ginsberg. A reproduction of a French black deco table is in the foyer. Flowers by Michael Fulhvood. handpainted fabric in ivory with gray and seafoam by local artist Mara. The dining room is anchored on either end by two custom- made French reproduction deco cabinets by Gill Plus. Two architec- tural stainless steel-based lamps with copper lamp- shades by Arc stand atop each cabinet. "I saw them in a store window," says Born, and knew they be- longed right there. The entertainment area, with a large seating area and an entertain- ment center, is the own- ers' combination living room and family room. The white lacquered wood built-in houses a 'IV with surround sound and has rounded edges which echo the architecture. "We can get a lot of people in this seating area," says the homeowner, of the large and small sofas in off-white with tiny taupe dots. The Tibetan rug was custom-made to fit the large space, in a tropical leaf pattern in shades of turquoise, rose, seafoam and gray. The oversized cock- tail table is glass-topped goatskin, and the large sofa is flanked by antique Ming Dynasty wood end tables with cane tops, providing a great, livable mixture of contemporary and antiques. To the side in the living room is a read- ing area. Two large reading chairs in ivory chenille with a matching ottoman provide cozy refuge. "You have the din- ing room; you have the reading room; you have the music room, and then you have the pub," says Young of the multi-use room and its focal point. An enormous bar, facing the windows and the lake is made of the Carrara marble. Floating petal-shaped glass with five beveled edges sits on top of the marble, and the bar ap- pears as a large, ripe, open flower. "The bar was part of the architec- ture," says Born. "The glass was my idea be- cause marble stains, and Fm real tickled by this." At the bar, imbibers and teetotalers alike can cozy up in five Philip En- field-designed chairs in oyster leather on stain- less steel swivel bases. "You could spend the whole night in these chairs," says Born. The marble continues into the powder room, where Born designed a floating, stepped cabinet which mirrors a stepped ceiling de- sign and skylight The cabinet is contrasted by a Venetian glass mirror and flanked by sconces. "We found these fixtures early on," says Born, "and felt that something old would be great" Innocuously to the side, in black tile and granite, is a shower. Artisan Jim Starr cus- tom-made polished stainless steel hinges for The sophisticated kitchen has European-styled cabinets and the latest appliances. 30• SPRING 1993 • STYLE the shower door. A metallic-speckled wall- paper in black with subtle gold and taupe "picks up the marble colors in reverse," says Born. Rounding the corner is the kitchen. The marble continues on the floors and is con- trasted by black granite on the counter tops. Sleek European-styled cabinets in pearl gray lacquered bird's-eye maple are by Downsview, from Kitchen Studio in Birmingham. Two set- in stainless steel sinks, Sub-Zero refrigera- tor and freezer, and a cooktop by Miele in the island provide a highly-functional, sophisti- cated work area. "The kitchen is intentionally sophisticat- ed," says Young, "because there are no walls or doors to seal it off." Born continues, "It's part of the living space, in the flow of things." The kitchen table, a glass topped table on a manufactured base in black with turquoise, is as sleek and sophisticated as the rest of the kitchen and is accented by six seafoam chairs on chrome bases. The leaf motif changes as you approach the master bedroom. Above the steps to the mas- ter suite floats a skylight whose three steps of etched glass change from the leaf design to free-form swirls. The carpet below echoes the swirls, with Berber carpet from the lower lev-