"Seafair" (Newport, Rhode Island)
USA /
Rhode Island /
Newport /
Newport, Rhode Island /
Ocean Avenue, 254
World
/ USA
/ Rhode Island
/ Newport
World / United States / Rhode Island
residence, French Renaissance (architecture)
Terre Mar, Hurricane Hut, Seafair, the Verner Zavola Reed, Jr, House (1934-35, 1986; William MacKenzie [British] (1934-35) and The Newport Collaborative (1986), architects):
An impressive brick-and-limestone 1½- and 2½-story, slate-hip-roof, Louis XIII-revival house with curved quadrant wings extending east and west from the main block part way around the elliptical forecourt leaving only the northernmost third open. The main block has a 2½-story, 3-bay, center-entrance, high-hip-roof projecting pavilion, reached across a semi-circular-plan urn-balustraded terrace, and is flanked east and west by 1½-story, 2-bay, high-hip-roof pavilions; the double-leaf glazed entrance has a large transom light as do the flanking 1st story full-height casement windows, and smaller casement windows are on the 2nd level in both central and flanking pavilions, within a full 2nd story on the central block and as standing-seam hip-roof dormers on the flanking pavilions. The 3-bay east and west quadrant wings have center entrances flanked by full-height windows and oculus dormers. Symmetrically placed tall brick chimneys punctuate the roofline, 2 each on each side of the 2½-story central pavilion, 1 each at the intersection of the 1½-story pavilions and the quadrant wings, and 1 each near the north end of the quadrant wings; finial cresting occurs at the ends of the ridgelines of all the rooflines. The seaside elevation of the main block has 1½-story, 1-bay, hip-roof pavilions flanking a bow-plan, 1-story, flatroof, glazed central section overlooking a small paved terrace and a low-wall-lined grass terrace with central hemicycle extending toward the rocky beach. A 2nd terrace extends from the west wall of the south elevation’s west pavilion, and the axis thereby established culminates in a walled formal garden, with 4 parterres, central circular fountain, and colonnaded pavilion to the north.
Reed (1900-1986), heir to the Cripple Creek, Colorado, gold-mining fortune and Greenwich, Connecticut, resident, became a vice-president at Chase Manhattan Bank; in 1981 President Reagan appointed him Ambassador to Morocco. Following his death, the house was divided into condominiums.
The last of the high-style summer cottages of Newport’s golden age, this château is a stunning valediction. It achieves a monumentality disproportionate to its actual size, thanks to the visual trick of its imposing roadside entrance gate and its location near the south end of its 5-acre site at the end of a long, curving entrance drive. It is a highly visible building that dominates this section of the district.
An impressive brick-and-limestone 1½- and 2½-story, slate-hip-roof, Louis XIII-revival house with curved quadrant wings extending east and west from the main block part way around the elliptical forecourt leaving only the northernmost third open. The main block has a 2½-story, 3-bay, center-entrance, high-hip-roof projecting pavilion, reached across a semi-circular-plan urn-balustraded terrace, and is flanked east and west by 1½-story, 2-bay, high-hip-roof pavilions; the double-leaf glazed entrance has a large transom light as do the flanking 1st story full-height casement windows, and smaller casement windows are on the 2nd level in both central and flanking pavilions, within a full 2nd story on the central block and as standing-seam hip-roof dormers on the flanking pavilions. The 3-bay east and west quadrant wings have center entrances flanked by full-height windows and oculus dormers. Symmetrically placed tall brick chimneys punctuate the roofline, 2 each on each side of the 2½-story central pavilion, 1 each at the intersection of the 1½-story pavilions and the quadrant wings, and 1 each near the north end of the quadrant wings; finial cresting occurs at the ends of the ridgelines of all the rooflines. The seaside elevation of the main block has 1½-story, 1-bay, hip-roof pavilions flanking a bow-plan, 1-story, flatroof, glazed central section overlooking a small paved terrace and a low-wall-lined grass terrace with central hemicycle extending toward the rocky beach. A 2nd terrace extends from the west wall of the south elevation’s west pavilion, and the axis thereby established culminates in a walled formal garden, with 4 parterres, central circular fountain, and colonnaded pavilion to the north.
Reed (1900-1986), heir to the Cripple Creek, Colorado, gold-mining fortune and Greenwich, Connecticut, resident, became a vice-president at Chase Manhattan Bank; in 1981 President Reagan appointed him Ambassador to Morocco. Following his death, the house was divided into condominiums.
The last of the high-style summer cottages of Newport’s golden age, this château is a stunning valediction. It achieves a monumentality disproportionate to its actual size, thanks to the visual trick of its imposing roadside entrance gate and its location near the south end of its 5-acre site at the end of a long, curving entrance drive. It is a highly visible building that dominates this section of the district.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 41°27'15"N 71°19'54"W
- 25 Price's Neck Road 0.7 km
- Wrentham House (Indian Spring) 1 km
- Avalon 1.3 km
- Berry Hill (1885) 1.5 km
- Edgehill 1.7 km
- Brenton Point State Park - The Reef 2.1 km
- Hammersmith Farm 2.4 km
- "Armsea Hall"/"Annandale Farm" 2.6 km
- Shamrock Cliff - OceanCliff 2.6 km
- Broadlawns 2.6 km
- Gooseneck Cove 0.6 km
- Indian Spring, the LeRoy King House / King-Glover-Bradley Plat 0.9 km
- Beacon Hill Estate 1 km
- Ballard Park (1990) 1.4 km
- Surprise Valley Farm, Swiss Village (SVF Foundation) 1.4 km
- Newport Country Club (1894-95 et seq.) 1.4 km
- Brenton Point State Park - The Reef 1.9 km
- Fort Adams State Park 2.5 km
- Castle Hill Inn & Resort 2.6 km
- Newport County, Rhode Island 14 km
Gooseneck Cove
Indian Spring, the LeRoy King House / King-Glover-Bradley Plat
Beacon Hill Estate
Ballard Park (1990)
Surprise Valley Farm, Swiss Village (SVF Foundation)
Newport Country Club (1894-95 et seq.)
Brenton Point State Park - The Reef
Fort Adams State Park
Castle Hill Inn & Resort
Newport County, Rhode Island
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