A 200-year old Italian farmhouse is reimagined for a fashion designer and naturalist by Jonathan Tuckey Design
Briefly

"We discovered the house in a jaded state," Elena recalls. Cascina consisted of three original stone buildings: a two-story farmhouse, a large barn with a hay loft, and an enclosed, first floor bridge that connected the two. The brief from the client—a fashion designer and naturalist—was simple: "to rediscover the property's agrarian soul and establish a connection to the beautiful surrounding landscape."
The interiors were "gloomy" and an ill-conceived '90s renovation needed unpicking: "The spaces with the best vantage of the panoramic views were underutilized and not well connected," Elena explains. The '90s had also had an ill effect on the stone facade, which had been heavily treated, masking the "textural beauty" of the material.
"Our challenge was to rediscover [the building's] character and a relationship with the landscape by opening up the facades, stripping back finishes, and blurring the definition between inside and outside, old and new," Elena says.
The "textural beauty" of the lime-washed stone facade has been rediscovered.
Read at Remodelista
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