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The Kitchen Issue - February 1998
The New World Pathfinder
Architect Donald Billinkoff builds a linear seaside getaway that links
indoor and outdoor spaces
ANYONE WHO thinks a Mitteleuropa shtetl and a new, shingled house
in East Hampton, New York, don't have much in common has not spoken
to
Donald Billinkoff since his student days, the New York-based architect
had wanted to design a modern house "that was basically a path
along which you had rooms attached." Last year, two successful
women, an investment banker and a psychologist, gave him the chance.
When the house was finished, a neighbor likened the architectural cluster
of rooms to the tightly grouped houses of the Jewish villages that
once dotted the rural areas of parts of Europe. Billinkoff designed
the 5,500 square-foot house, with its step-down living room, so that
the public and private zones would be separate but linked by a dramatic
two-story kitchen. "Together, the pieces of the house create a
village," he says.
The ingenious plan unfolds from the front door. To the left,
French doors lead to the spacious master bedroom wing, which
includes a
bedroom and sitting area, a large bathroom, an exercise room, a
private deck,
and an office for the psychologist. To the right, a cabinet-lined
corridor leads from the dining area to the soaring two-story kitchen,
the guest
bedrooms, and an upstairs office for the investment banker. "She
likes to be in control," says Billinkoff, "so her office
was designed to be like those in factories where the manager sits above
the floor." In this case, she has a bird's--eye view of the kitchen,
pool, decks, and tennis court. "She works a lot on weekends," adds
the architect, "and this way she can be on the phone and still
feel part of the activities."
The long, galley-like kitchen is a light--filled open space that
links the wings of the house and functions as its anchor. The
floor is blue
slate; the tall, glass--fronted cabinets made from two woods,
maple and walnut, are stained to look like driftwood. "I have a notion
that no matter what you put behind glass, it looks good," says
Billinkoff. "Glass makes the pieces one displays feel precious."
The color scheme throughout the house is based on the natural
elements to which the psychologist was drawn--sand, water,
sky, and grass-and
which the architect interpreted in pale blues, greens, grays,
and beiges. "They
are all extremely neutral colors that work as shadows for themselves," says
Billinkoff of the serene palette. "None of them screams at you." There
are, however, a few surprises. In the dining area, the schoolhouse
chairs are stained purple and red; the mosaic-tiled fireplace in
the master bedroom is a bolt of blue; and the floral wallpaper that
frames
the front door is the kind of whimsical design detail that makes
visitors stop in their tracks. Any doubts they might have had are
gone: they're
definitely not in the old country anymore.
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