This Old House

Past meets present

INSPIRING SPACES, DESIGN DETAILS, AND FINISHING TOUCHES

With a vintage Beatles LP playing in the background and dinner simmering on the stove, Megan and Lincoln Pasquina relax with their two young sons in their new great room, its floor-to-ceiling windows inviting in views of the rolling meadow, woods, and pond on their three-acre property in Concord, Massachusetts. The family moved in just a couple of weeks before, and “the tree-house room,” as Megan has dubbed it, is already their favorite hangout space.

The couple’s renovated Cape, built in 1880, wasn’t always so in tune with the land: When they purchased the place, it was a jumble of small rooms with an awkward flow and lackluster additions from the 1950s and 1960s. “We loved the coziness of the old

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from This Old House

This Old House2 min read
Luxury Vinyl Floors
Maybe you’ve been impressed by photos of the wide oak boards lining a friend’s kitchen only to learn they’re actually vinyl. Or have enjoyed the whitewashed planks—and easy care—of wood-look vinyl floors in a beach-house rental. This “luxury vinyl” i
This Old House3 min read
Concrete-top End Table
Industrial-modern design is every-where these days, with its blend of warm wood and metal or concrete. Having admired a table with a sleek tapered base and a simple concrete top, I wanted to try my hand at a similar mixed-media build. I was nervous a
This Old House2 min readArchitecture
Fanciful Italianate With Good Bones
THE HISTORY This 4,159-square-foot house was built circa 1870, when the small city was a booming manufacturing center and grand homes were constructed on its most elegant street. In the early 1890s, the house was home to local postmaster Charles Week

Related