In the kitchen's exterior islands, vertical sapelle leads up to an enormous glass recess just below the Seafoam granite countertop. "The glass has a color fused into it so that you can't see through it, but it gives a reflective quality and looks like it's glowing from within," says Schaerer. "There are no windows in the kitchen. I wanted to play with the light so you wouldn't miss the fact that there's no daylight." The same glass is repeated in the cabinets that flank the cookstove and hood and along the top of the wall cabinets while a glass mosaic backsplash runs up the wall. To the right of the ovens, what looks like another wall cabinet is actually a door that pushes into a walk-in pantry. The lower level, with a guest suite and changing room, walks directly out to the lake and pool for easy access to outdoor entertainment. The homeowner wanted a media room but didn't want it tucked away from the rest of the lower-level fun, which includes a bar area, an activities room with games and a full kitchen and dining area. The home theater's swivel chairs from Arkitektura in Birmingham are covered in an iridescent fabric from Knoll that also is used for wetsuits — to easily wipe away spilled drinks and greasy popcorn — while a wall divider is covered in silk to match the chairs. A sitting area is two steps down; above, each light fixture has four individual prisms that can be dimmed, similar to the technology on a sailboat's deck lights that disperse light below. "If you could fly over the lake, you would see the most gorgeous seafoam green — like a sheet at the bottom," says Bob Schaerer. "We found a stone from Brazil called Seafoam that's the exact color of the bottom of the lake. And the entire palette of the home grew out of that Seafoam — but grayed down a bit. It's almost like Jack Frost came and added this gray silvery shimmer to everything." That's where Vogue Furniture came in, he adds. "When I realized how subdued this palette would be, I knew I needed a lot of texture to make it interesting," says Schaerer. "Vogue really helped bring out those textures — some sleek, others more rustic, by using a metal brush." In this breakfast room, the Seafoam granite on the floor is acid-edged for texture, cut in a ring and surrounded by large format tiles. "Every single tile was drawn on a piece of paper by my staff so we could tell the tile guys where to start the layout, how to line it up, how to interface it with the circle," says Schaerer. "There is no distraction." The design is set off by the flat edge of the thick stainless-steel table base, which is topped in ribbon sapelle wood (which is repeated on the walls that frame the windows). The recessed ceiling is a perfect mimic of the table. "Because I was involved so early in the process, I knew where the furniture was going and could create shapes in the ceiling to relate to the furniture," says Schaerer. 40 January 8 • 2015 _ In the foyer, a frosted-glass-floored bridge connects the bedroom suites upstairs. Inspired by Southwest Indian blankets that are draped over walls and railings, Schaerer commissioned a 30-foot-long unframed canvas that could flip up over the balcony into a scroll. Verde Bamboo stone creates contrast on the floor.