This text is a part of our Design particular part about new interpretations of vintage design kinds.


One may describe Andrew Trotter’s ardour for Puglia, in southern Italy, as a sluggish burn. The British-born, Barcelona-based designer first visited the area, which types the heel of Italy’s geographic boot, a few decade in the past. His shut buddy Carlo Lanzini deliberate to create a boutique lodge that will cater to the rising variety of vacationers lured by Puglia’s charming medieval villages, its sun-bleached panorama dotted with historical olive groves and its almost 500 miles of shoreline, that includes picturesque coves with limestone cliffs and beautiful sand seashores.

Mr. Lanzini enlisted his assist in discovering and renovating a masseria, the identify of the normal whitewashed farmhouses discovered throughout the Pugliese countryside. “We went twice, each instances within the winter, and I didn’t truly prefer it very a lot,” mentioned Mr. Trotter. “It’s a spot that’s grown on me quite than a direct love.”

At the moment Mr. Trotter, who’s 51, had lately left a profession in vogue, launched a short-lived Barcelona design store and co-founded Openhouse, a boutique and gallery that advanced right into a semiannual interiors and life-style journal, together with his buddy Mari Luz Vidal, a photographer. Having studied inside design and spent a yr on the London agency of Anouska Hempel within the early ’90s, it was a return to his roots.

When Mr. Lanzini in the end determined to assemble a brand new masseria-inspired constructing for his lodge enterprise, close to the city of Ostuni, Mr. Trotter put himself ahead to supervise its design. After some convincing, he acquired the gig, and the ensuing six-guestroom Masseria Moroseta “in a short time turned slightly bit well-known,” as Mr. Trotter put it, resulting in different commissions designing and renovating trip houses in Puglia, together with for Mr. Lanzini in addition to new purchasers who admired Mr. Trotter’s minimalist but heat aesthetic.

Whereas Studio Andrew Trotter quickly had tasks in places all over the world, Mr. Trotter and his home companion — the agency’s enterprise supervisor, Marcelo Martinez, 31, who’s Spanish — continued to journey to Puglia repeatedly. They determined to search for a residence within the area that would function their base and as an income-generating rental property after they weren’t utilizing it. Their search led them to the southern Pugliese city of Soleto, within the coronary heart of the Salento peninsula, the place a centuries-old home, tucked right into a cobbled alley, caught their consideration. “The city may be very sleepy, and it’s one thing I really like about the true south of Puglia, which may be very untouristic. Within the smaller villages you are feeling such as you’re in a film, like ‘Cinema Paradiso,’” Mr. Trotter mentioned, including, “We’re the youngest folks in Soleto.”

Although a proposal had already been made on the home, the couple satisfied the agent to allow them to take a look. Behind the entrance wall and arched stone gate with giant wood doorways, an open-air courtyard served because the entry to the two-story residence. Expanded in levels over time, the home integrated two vaulted chapels, one estimated to be 400 years outdated, whereas elements of the higher flooring had been believed to have been added as lately because the Nineteen Twenties.

The household that beforehand owned the property hadn’t used it in a very long time, however a lot of their belongings remained, untouched. “There have been garments and furnishings, paintings, photographs of the household,” mentioned Mr. Trotter. “However for about 20 years, no one had come to the home. Nothing labored. There was no operating water, no electrical energy. There was a gap within the again backyard the place the sewage went to.”

To not point out, there was just one toilet, the partitions had been wonky and decaying, and the one method to climb to the second flooring was by an exterior staircase within the entrance courtyard. “That quirkiness is what offers attraction to the home,” Mr. Martinez mentioned. Options like a 15-foot vaulted ground-floor ceiling gave the inside a personality and temper {that a} mere glimpse at plans and snapshots didn’t reveal.

Additionally, the home was precisely the dimensions they wished, and it had a backyard with sufficient house for a small pool. When the opposite supply fell by, they “simply went for it,” Mr. Trotter mentioned. (He declined to disclose how a lot the couple paid for the property.)

Mr. Trotter and Mr. Martinez, who mentioned the mission over Zoom from Barcelona, set about updating the home for up to date dwelling, making it comfy and easily trendy, whereas retaining as many parts as doable to protect the house’s distinctiveness and historic feeling. They dubbed it Casa Soleto.

For comfort and rentability, they added three upstairs baths so that every bed room has its personal, plus a powder room on the bottom flooring, all of which meant placing in intensive plumbing. New electrical techniques had been put in, although lighting was stored minimal. Most of the vintage doorways and current flooring — terrazzo tile or polished concrete — had been preserved, and parts of the roof and partitions had been repaired.

On the bottom flooring, the place the country partitions had been constructed with stones and earth as much as three ft thick, Mr. Trotter and Mr. Martinez needed to change expanses of cement plaster added within the final century that had been trapping moisture inside. All through the home the partitions have been refinished in subtly textured lime plasters or washes, in earthy tones from dusty beige to chocolaty brown to pale inexperienced. All had been made by Domingue Architectural Finishes, one among a handful of corporations the couple partnered with on the mission.

The Scandinavian furnishings firm Frama supplied an assortment of clean-lined wooden tables, chairs and stools that complemented the combination of antiques and easy upholstered seating clad in stable, impartial linens. The Australian carpet maker Armadillo supplied the jute rugs which can be present in most rooms. (In alternate for his or her contributions, the businesses can use Casa Soleto’s photos and story of their advertising and marketing.)

Mr. Trotter and Mr. Martinez, who spoke by cellphone and over Zoom, stored a few of the furnishings left by the earlier homeowners, together with giant wood gun circumstances they repurposed as espresso tables, a number of beds with distinctive headboards and, within the largest bed room, a glass-front cupboard full of outdated books gathered by the physician who as soon as owned the home.

Resisting the urge to contemporize the kitchen, they as a substitute labored with native craftsmen to revive the wooden cupboards, replicating them for extra storage, and to create fronts for a built-in fridge and dishwasher. They put in an ILVE vary that’s “fairly old skool,” mentioned Mr. Martinez. “The objective was to make all the things useful and up-to-date, however with out making an attempt to do one thing too up to date or misplaced.”

The couple used a good quantity of the paintings that had been left hanging on the partitions, a mixture of unattributed landscapes, nonetheless lifes and portraits. However in addition they commissioned new works from Eleanor Herbosch, an Antwerp-based artist who made three summary work mixing ink with soil excavated from beneath the house and from the backyard.

Ms. Herbosch’s works dangle prominently within the atmospheric eating room, which occupies the later of the 2 chapels, on the entrance of the home, and a comfy lounge within the older chapel on the again, the place they opted for a darker, moodier palette. “We wished it to be a bit like a cave the place you go and watch a movie or simply hang around, learn a e book,” Mr. Trotter mentioned.

The backyard has been utterly reimagined, with a plunge pool and plantings chosen with recommendation from the London panorama designer Luciano Giubbilei. A terrace linked to the most important bed room overlooks the backyard, whereas a smaller balcony off the entrance bed room provides views of the close by Gothic bell tower commissioned by the medieval nobleman Raimondo Orsini del Balzo. “It rings at 6:30 each morning, and on Sundays it’s not only a easy bong-bong-bong,” Mr. Trotter mentioned. “It retains going, each 20 minutes.”

Accomplished in July, the renovation of Casa Soleto took two years, and there’s nothing else prefer it on the town. “The mayor and the priest got here to see the home,” Mr. Trotter mentioned. “Italians prefer to make all the things new and ideal, and we’ve carried out it in a approach that it nonetheless feels outdated, so I believe they don’t get it.” However for him and Mr. Martinez, he added, “true luxurious is just not about being in super-polished perfection.”



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