~ Holiday House Tour ~

November 24, 2007

The East Hampton Historical Society conducts an annual house tour in East Hampton. The houses are selected for their historic or architectural significance. Below are the houses of the 2007 House Tour.

House 1 - Village Dream House
House #1 What happens when a young local couple decides to build their dream house close to the village, and he is the owner of a well known landscape firm? For the owners of this much admired property, it started with finding an appealing site. After looking at lots, and lots with houses already on them, in December 2004 they purchased this nearly flat one acre rectangular parcel just outside the village limits. Razing the existing two story 1960’s suburban house didn’t faze them – they had a vision of what was possible.

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House 2 - Serene Renovation
House #2 Having admired this property for several years, the current owners purchased it in 2002. It was a typical 1970’s traditional house, somewhat tired looking but on a very attractive lot. They lived in the house for three years while they considered several scenarios for a major renovation. In 2005 they moved out for a year, and the house was stripped down to its basic shell.

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House 3 - "The Butterfly House"
House #3 The Butterfly House, a 1000 square foot retreat which takes it name from its unique roof design, sits on five oceanfront acres. The site was originally the lower third of a large field which stretched from Further Lane to the dunes. Owned for years by the late Evan Frankel, the property was subdivided and sold by his estate. A decade ago this was the last of the three lots to sell. The buyers, and previous owners, were an East Hampton couple who wished to build a basic getaway where they could have some privacy, entertain casually, and enjoy the magnificent views.

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House 4 - A House Move
House #4 One of East Hampton’s most intriguing traditions, dating back two hundred years, is moving buildings from their original sites when they become threatened. In 2004 this seven year old house, designed by Francis Fleetwood and built by Pat Trunzo, was moved in one piece from an adjoining parcel to the southeast.

The previous owners, in creating a family compound of modern structures, decided they had no need for a traditional house, but

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House 5 - "Beach Shack"
House #5 Beach Shack, an intimate cottage tucked away on a sun drenched flag lot, is the home to the interior designer Tom Samet and his partner Ross Meltzer. The structure was built in 1901 as a barn for the main house in front. The barn was remodeled in the 1940’s when the original owner sold off the front of the property and moved into the barn. Later it housed the town’s fire chief, and the current residents are the third occupants in 60 years. Downsizing from a larger house in Georgica two years ago, they undertook

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House 6 - "Windy Dune"
House #6 By tradition, East Hampton’s summer colony has always been closely tied to New York City. Surprisingly, the creators of two of its largest early 20th century estate complexes were members of Cincinnati’s business community. The legendary Wiborg estate (1895) to the west of the Maidstone Club, and the four summer cottages and dependencies that came to be known as the Devon Colony (1908) east of Amagansett, were built on a scale unrivaled even in East Hampton. At Devon, William Proctor, President, the Proctor and Gamble Company; Richard Levering, President, Indian Refining Company; William Rowe, President, First National Bank of Cincinnati, and Joseph

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