Built on an inland lot in the Bell Haven neighborhood in Greenwich, Connecticut, this traditional new American house with Federal style architecture incorporates a cupola and widow’s walk to provide views of the Long Island Sound.
Modern Tudor Style Mansion with Intimate Garden Terraces
The exterior of this elegant Tudor-style home in Greenwich, Connecticut is defined by its terraces, structured plantings and unique water features.
Classic Hamptons Cottage Style Mansion with Curb Appeal
This timeless elegant Belle Haven waterfront estate in Greenwich, Connecticut is a stone and clapboard home with fairy tale curb appeal. The front exterior features a dramatic curved window and turret-like extension.
Rustic Elegant Gambrel Style Estate with Transitional Elements
This luxury stone and shingle house in Greenwich, Connecticut features Gambrel style architecture with symmetrical front façade, cedar roof, dual stair towers, stone veneer and arched windows.
French Country Stone House on the Connecticut Waterfront
This new shore front estate in Greenwich, Connecticut was inspired by Beaux-Arts French classical architecture and Georgian architectural elements.
Elegant French Neoclassical Stone Mansion in Connecticut
Set in a tranquil park-like setting, this elegant estate in Greenwich, Connecticut evokes the architecture of neoclassical French chateau. The exterior pale honey-colored quartzite stone walls and incorporated details such as French windows, scrolling ironwork, and bull’s-eye dormers framed by carved volutes infuse the house with a decisively French character.
Waterfront Stone Mansion with French Country Architecture
This exquisite residence in Greenwich, Connecticut is anchored with native fieldstone and limestone while incorporating French elements such as flared roofs, arched dormers, intricate iron railings and balconies.
Georgian Style Stone Mansion Recreates Old World Grandeur
Greenwich, Connecticut – This elegant stone house on a sprawling estate in Greenwich draws inspiration from the classical architecture of Georgian houses at the turn of the twentieth-century.