Before & After: A Family of Four Gives a Derelict Catskills Farmhouse a Whimsical Revamp
The MacDougalls use reclaimed materials, found objects, and a sunset-inspired palette to bring the 1800s property back from the brink.
When Geoffrey MacDougall decided to buy a quaint, circa-1815 farmhouse in the Catskills, he was standing in six inches of water in the basement, surrounded by its crumbling stone foundation and rusted-out mechanical systems.
"You could walk in from the outside through the holes in the walls," Geoffrey says with a laugh—but the Canadian-born (now Harlem-based) fundraiser and activist was miraculously undeterred. He and his wife, art dealer and appraiser Powell MacDougall, approached the project with "trepidation" and "massive due diligence," they say.
Before: Exterior
The pair initially planned to purchase land and construct a prefab retreat, but a deal fell through. "Then our real estate agent called us to look at a teardown," he says. Upon first visit, they learned that the foundation was in dire straits—and remarkably, 200 years old. The pair thought, "we can’t tear it down," Geoffrey says. "We fell in love, and it became a restoration effort."
After: Exterior
See the full story on Dwell.com: Before & After: A Family of Four Gives a Derelict Catskills Farmhouse a Whimsical Revamp
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