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A Fine Line
Delicately restrained despite grand dimensions, this Regency-inspired home has surprises at every turn
The ground-floor windows and door are inset with a relieving arch typical of Regency style, while limestone pilasters frame second-story windows.
(Photo: Jeff Herr)
In deference to the clients' fine antiques, the architecture in the foyer is understated.
(Photo: Jeff Herr)
by Philip Morris
Photos by Jeff Herr


It's a paradox, but the most gracious way to build on a suburban lot may be to use an urban plan. That is just what architect Mark Maresca did with a Regency-inspired house in Greenville, South Carolina.

"This is not a central hall plan with rooms to either side, but a one-room-wide plan that runs front to back," says Maresca. "Instead of extending to within 10 feet of the side property lines, we have a 40-foot setback around most of the property, so the house sits surrounded by gardens."

But it is not a shotgun layout. The front door on the right side of the house opens onto a spacious foyer and hall that leads past a library, dining room, and stairwell to the full-width main drawing room that overlooks the rear garden. Parallel to the hall on the left side of the house, openings between rooms form an enfilade.

"From the front door, you look straight through the house to the rear garden, and as you walk through, there are surprises -- vistas into rooms or out to gardens," Maresca explains. The house is not only rigorously symmetrical, in keeping with Regency inspiration, but also visually engaging throughout.

Reflecting the period's love of shaped rooms, the architect introduced an oval -- on one side, a curved stairway, and on the other, the dining room's curved bay. This cross-axis greatly enhances movement.

At the rear, the plan maintains its central focus but widens. Using what are, in effect, single-story additions, Maresca flanked the drawing room with needed spaces -- a kitchen on one side and a family entrance/utility room on the other. Dual French doors lead to the loggia just beyond. This furnished open-air room repeats the arches found at the front, reestablishing the urban house profile. A small conservatory relaxes the kitchen side and allows garden-view dining.


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