Days of Wine and Rhododendrons

Amid the rolling hills of southwestern Michigan, a classic Cape Cod provides a refuge for two city dwellers

(page 1 of 2)

: : : View Photo Gallery

Hydrangeas, black-eyed Susans, day lilies, and sweet autumn clematis surround the garden shed; hidden under the arbor at right is an outdoor shower.

From the moment Mark Pfleger laid eyes on Beech Run, he was a goner.

Located on a winding country road in Buchanan, Michigan, the bucolic three-and-a-half-acre property overlooks the rolling hills of a local winery, providing views more akin to California's Sonoma Valley than typical Midwestern farmland. "It's the sort of thing where you don't want to appear too excited, because we hadn't even agreed on a price," Pfleger recalls. "There were the unbelievable, mature Chardonnay grapes of Tabor Hill vineyards right there and this 150-year-old beech tree. We were like, ‘We don't even need to see the house.'"

: : : View Photo Gallery

Many of the home's furnishings were ordered through Lovell & Whyte in nearby Lakeside, including the hand-finished map table that serves as a coffee table. Just beyond the French doors is an expansive deck with a built-in swimming pool.

Pfleger, vice president and national client manager for a management-services company in Chicago, bought the place in 2001. Working part of the week in the city and part at Beech Run, he says, has brought balance to what used to be an all-consuming career. His longtime partner, Jim Kershner, works in the city and has a condo there; he joins Pfleger in Michigan on weekends. Renovating homes clearly is a creative outlet for the couple; they've rehabbed at least ten properties together.

Beech Run was built in 1983 as part of a cluster of homes meant to evoke an old New England neighborhood. Named in honor of the three mature beech trees standing sentry at the front of the property, the house is a classic Cape Cod, its design based on plans from the archives of Country Living magazine. At the time Pfleger bought Beech Run, it had excellent bones and some lovely flourishes, such as 100-year-old salvaged-pine floors throughout the downstairs. But it also had a decidedly unfinished feel. "Parts of it didn't have a coat of paint, just primer on the walls," Pfleger says. "It needed a new roof. None of the landscaping, none of the stonework was here."

Pfleger and Kershner love to entertain large groups, so one of the first orders of business was to update the kitchen. Working with Doug GeBraad and Jim Fitzmaurice, owners of Lovell & Whyte in Lakeside, Michigan, they came up with a plan to improve traffic flow and accommodate an oversized six-burner Thermador stove and grill. Where the previous owner had a table, a narrow freestanding island now serves both as a place to congregate over cocktails and as a buffet. New white paneled cabinets and marble countertops give the room an appropriately traditional feel, as does one of the home's most charming original details: a fireplace made with salvaged bricks and a limestone hearth set flush to the floor.

: : : View Photo Gallery

Rustic antique-market finds mingle with newer pieces throughout the house. An old jelly cabinet in the dining area stores china, while the table is made from reclaimed barn wood.

Just beyond the kitchen, Pfleger converted a screened-in porch to a four-season TV room (and occasional guest quarters) by adding wood floors, ductwork, and casement windows with drop-down screens. The original wainscoting on the porch walls inspired the addition of wainscoting to the ceiling in the adjoining living room, an open, airy space that runs the width of the house.

The two sets of French doors in the living room were original, but the view they offered of a small deck and a white picket fence that enclosed the house, along with large swaths of mud and weeds, was uninspiring. Given that most of the property's acreage is to the rear of the house, removing the fence opened up ample space to replace the little deck with a huge one, and even to install a swimming pool in it. Built on the same level as the living room floor, the new deck feels like a natural extension of the house.

Pfleger also had a large picture window installed between the doors overlooking the deck. "It's pleasant to open the French doors in the summer and barbecue outside, open a bottle of wine, and jump in the pool," he says. "At night the pool is lit up, it's blue, it's pretty-who wants to have it 40 feet away?"
 

Related:

: : : Buyer’s Guide

: : : Photo Gallery

 
May - June 2007
  • Cottage Cool »

    Bold patterns, sleek shapes, strong colors—these hot accessories turn anyplace into a sophisticated home away from home

  • Days of Wine and Rhododendrons
  • Small World »

    Lewis and Susan Manilow—Chicago’s First Couple of the Arts—drop a playful modern prefab onto their Wisconsin...

  • House Party »

    A Saugatuck retreat that’s stylish, warm, and inviting—ideal for entertaining, or just laying low

  • The Comfort Zone »

    Spend a little—or a lot—on the perfect spot for lounging on a lazy afternoon

  • Eco Chick »

    Green-design trailblazer Jill Salisbury on why sustainable, healthy design is no fad

  • Five Uses for . . . »

    We asked interior design students at Harrington College of Design, how they would turn galvanized-steel parts bins into useful...

  • The Hang of It »

    Professional art installers show us how to create an eye-catching arrangement of family photos

  • Form Over Flower »

    The bloom’s off the rose: Create a modern garden out of minimalist containers and architectural foliage

  • Game On »

    A high-concept wedding planner throws a couples shower with a competitive twist

  • Buyer's Guide »
  • Second Bases »
  • Good Seed »

    Our feelings for Sprout Home just keep growing.

  • Lap of Luxury »

    Jeffery Smith sells image in his 4,000-square-foot showroom

  • Independence Day »

    Morlen Sinoway, commander-in-chief of the annual Guerrilla Furniture and Art Truck Show on Fulton Market

  • Need to Know »
  • Viva La Cucina »
  • We Love Lucy »

    Lucy Rose Singh recently opened a showroom on the second floor of Crosell & Co. in Bucktown, where she offers—exclusively in...

  • Mozer Made »

    Jordan Mozer created a whole line of cast metal and cast resin accessories for the East Hotel in Hamburg, Germany.

  • You're Welcome »

    Sixteen superior gifts for the design-conscious, all clever enough to get you invited back for the weekend—or a week