December 24, 2024

A MODERN TAKE ON GREEK ISLAND LIVING IN SERIFOS

In trade and conquest, religion and nutrition, life in Greece has long emerged from the sea. It seems fitting, then, that it was from the Aegean that I first set eyes upon the humble one-room house on Serifos that I would end up buying and transforming into a retreat for my family.

My wife, Helen, and I had been vacationing in the Cyclades for many years and had fallen in love with Serifos, home to a creative community of artists and writers. That summer, we were renting an apartment in Chora, the ancient fortified town built to repel marauding pirates in medieval times.

Greek Island Home
Ricardo Labougle

One day, we chartered a yacht and set sail around the island. Squinting in the midday sun, I noticed the unassuming structure on a rise above the water. A grove of silver-leafed olive trees dappled sunlight onto the soil below. A stone path meandered down from the house to a pristine stretch of coastline, past prickly pears, fig trees, and bougainvillea bursting from the earthen palette.

Greek Island Home
Ricardo Labougle

The living room’s cocktail table and banquette are custom, and the striped pillows are in a Les Toiles du Soleil fabric. The Queen Elizabeth II print is by Andy Warhol.

I resolved to make this lovely cove into a sanctuary for my family and friends. The timing was right. My daughters, Alexia and Isabel, were immersed in their working lives. My interior design firm, Pembrooke & Ives, was operating at full tilt on projects around the world. We were eager to build a getaway for ourselves, a respite from all of our frenzied lives back in Manhattan.

I have always loved Greece. My first trip was in the 1970s, as a 13-year-old from England, when a friend invited me to sail around the Aegean with his family. Later, I married Helen Tsanos—a beautiful Greek-Cypriot writer, chef, and yoga instructor.

“NOW THE STARS ALIGNED FOR ME TO TAKE ON THIS MOST PERSONAL OF PROJECTS.”

The property was owned by an Atheniancouple who had built the house in the early 1990s. With the assurance that we would nurture the land and keep the original structure at the heart of any additions, they agreed to sell it to us in 2005. In expanding the architecture, we were inspired by the traditional Cycladic design vernacular, from the whitewashed walls to the raw-stone exterior that blends into the landscape.

Greek Island Home
Ricardo Labougle

Custom furnishings create a seating area in the outdoor lounge. 

Like most traditional Greek dwellings, this home is designed to draw guests outdoors. A series of sundecks and terraces fan out organically from the structure. They are the scene of many hours of quiet reading, napping, yoga, and sunbathing.

Indoors, the kitchen is our center of gravity. Though stainless steel, Carrara marble, glass fixtures, and a customized Dutch stove lend an air of refinement to the space, it is designed to be a workhorse. My wife—whose cookbook-cum-memoir, Love Laughter and Lunch, is filled with delicious Greek recipes—can often be found preparing feasts that are then served on the outdoor dining patio. A wood-burning oven bakes pizzas garnished with olive oil from our own grove, and if we wake up in time to meet the boats, we’ll enjoy a lunch of freshly caught fish roasted in salt.

Greek Island Home
Ricardo Labougle

The kitchen’s custom island is in stainless steel, the sinks and fittings are by Marcel Wanders for Boffi, and the wall cabinets, counters, and backsplash are in Carrara marble. The ceiling is clad in bamboo and walnut, and the light is custom.

At night, the only lights visible are those of cars winding along mountain roads on the distant island of Sifnos, or a passing ferry gliding to and from the nearby port. Clocks are scarce, so the ferries are our only indicators of the time of day. That and meals, of course.

Greek Island Home
Ricardo Labougle

The beds in the guest room are covered with blankets by Andrianna Shamaris and draped with mosquito netting. The curtains are of a custom fabric edged with pom-poms.

Serifos was once mined for magnetic iron ore. According to folk belief, this accounts for the island’s allure among artists and seekers. Superstition aside, the house is indeed my family’s lodestar, keeping us connected with the elements, our senses, and one another, and always pointing us in the right direction.

For more read the full of article at The Elledecor

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