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Waterfront Home & Design – Spring 2007.
Barefoot Sophistication.
A vacation house in Key West, Florida, blends the easygoing with
the elegant for a beach-going family.
Key West is, legendarily, an island of dramatic sunsets. Few houses
are better situated to capture the moment than this one, which
looks out over the Gulf of Mexico. Don and Erika Wallace bought
the house as a “shell,” under construction but not
completed. They turned to the husband-and-wife team of William
and Phyllis Taylor to finish it off.
“
The house is unusual in that it’s on the beach, and a very
pretty beach at that,” says Phyllis Taylor. The Wallaces
have a growing family and a permanent home in Tampa. This is their
weekend house, a refuge from the daily hustle and bustle. It is
tucked away, just a launch ride from town on a 27-acre private
enclave in the gulf aptly named Sunset Key. Indeed, the house offers
a fine vantage point to watch the sun as it slips into the water
each night.
The Taylors, whose Miami Beach architecture and interior design
firm is called Taylor & Taylor Partnership, are known for creating
houses that are once sophisticated and amenable, and very personal.
They are a perfect match for a beach house and the one for the
Wallaces is bright and colorful, easygoing yet elegant. “I
thought about being barefoot,” recalls Phyllis Taylor. “That
was my inspiration.” Thus, sisal rugs sit on polished walnut
floors, making the house always tactile underfoot. “Everything
feels good on bare feet in this house.”
You can walk into any room straight from the sand.
As the designers of the Wallaces’ Tampa residence, the Taylors
had the advantage of knowing the tastes and interests of the family. “They
live a very intense life in Tampa, so this is where they unwind,
a place to hang out and fish, a place to hang out on the beach,” says
Bill Taylor. “As sophisticated as the house is for adults
and children, he notes, a primary focus was storage – places
to put sand shovels and games, snorkeling equipment and fishing
gear, all the accessories a beach house requires.
The color scheme derives from a single piece of furniture: A weathered,
painted country chest in sea blue and lime green led the Taylors
to a palette that ranges from those blues and greens to a deeper
cobalt and a paler aquamarine – all hues that are apt for
the beachfront location. The chest was a prize purchase at an antiques
show during a shopping trip the designers and their clients took
to New York and it soon became the centerpiece of the design.

The
interiors convey a simple ethos of color and country simplicity.
The antique furniture is mostly wood, much of it – including
the marble-topped dining table – in mahogany. “You
might call the furniture old-fashioned, even countrified,” said
Phyllis Taylor. “It’s very Victorian, actually, and
yet the house is modern light filtration, clear and sunny. There
aren’t any shadows.” The design is more than just
the brilliant infusion of light, however; it is a studied mix
of old
and new, as well as pieces from diverse places that somehow blend
together. Thus, there are offerings from around the globe, including
a chest from Korea and a folding chair from India.
Clearly reflected in the rooms is Phyllis Taylor’s astute
eye for mixing styles and playing with scale. She placed a child’s
rocking chair in the 20-foot-high living room, for example. An
inveterate thrift shop scavenger, she also turned up priceless
finds that translated into sophisticated design. In this case,
she sought out the nautical and turned up an antique thermometer
and a barometer, both mounted on the wall between French doors
opening to the waterfront. Real shells, model ships and artists’ interpretations
of fish sit atop tables and chests to reinforce the seaside theme.
The house’s architecture was largely finished when the Wallaces
bought it, and the architect of record is Jeffrey Harrell of Naples,
Florida. The Taylors, however, added their own architectural touches
along with the interior design. Bill Taylor designed all interiors,
from floors to staircases to railings. The stairs and the second
floor landing – really another room, kind of a mezzanine – are
significant shapers of space in the house, and the floor-to-ceiling
built-in shelves and cabinets add to the shipshape feeling.
George Peace, a master cabinet maker in Miami, fabricated the
bookshelves and storage. The custom kitchen cabinets are painted
blue by keeping
with the color scheme throughout the house. The kitchen and dining
area (“There wasn’t enough space for a full dining
room.” Notes Phyllis Taylor) both open into the living
room in what is essentially an open plan for the first floor.
The insistent conditions of a waterfront home are present here
of course, and the Wallaces did not want to live at the beach
in a house that was sealed up and air-conditioned. Because they
prefer
the soothing sounds of the sea and the hum of palm-found paddle
fans above, humidity-resistant materials came into play. The
tongue –in-groove
ceilings are limed oak that was sandblasted, painted white and
then sanded – a three-part procedure to distress the wood
and give it a weather-worn feel. Walls are covered in grass cloth
not only easy to clean and care but also humidity-tolerant. Upholstered
furniture is slip covered in white cotton.
“ They are the
easiest to maintain,” says Phyllis Taylor. “You can
wash them. You can bleach them. Just pull them off and put them
back on.”
Maintenance was a key. The Wallaces need to be able to open the
house up and live in it and then close it up and leave, all without
much worry.
The second-floor bedrooms –the two children share a bunk
room and their parents, a retreat with a British Colonial feeling – offer
a fitting end to a day at the beach, weather it has been spent
fishing, swimming or sunning. Like the rest of the house, these
rooms were designed with a refined eye, but intended for ease
of barefoot living.
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