FRENCH COUNTRY RETREAT
New construction turns up the heat on old world charm
It’s
a home that is easily recognizable by those who have driven through
Shreveport’s Pierremont neighborhood. The grand pergola above the front
patio and the custom gates flanked by turret columns are quite distinct.
The
custom home, located on Gilbert Drive, took a couple of years to
complete, according to builder Jonathan Hamilton of Hamilton Builders.
He says the style of the home is European Cottage and was designed by
architect Jack Arnold of Tulsa, Okla. – one of the country’s leading
architects of French Country style homes.
Passing
through the gates at the front of the property, a circular driveway
leading to a square parking area with inlaid brick and a copper water
feature presents itself. A Pennsylvania bluestone walkway and patio are
topped with a pergola. The pergola adds a unique element to the face of
the home. Hamilton says it has steel bases and the wood is morticed down
into the steel. "The reason we did that is because the architect said
the bottom of pergolas always rots out. So, the wood posts go partially
down in [the steel] and are bolted in. The bottom ten inches is just
steel,” said Hamilton.
The
arched entryway on the opposite side is limestone quarried in France.
Hamilton had it shipped over, and it was put together on site. The door
is an antique that came from an antique dealer in Dallas, and the gas
lanterns are from Bevolo Gas & Electric Lights in New Orleans.
The
front entry leads into a foyer. French antique pillowed limestone
floors laid in a Versailles pattern line the long gallery. Hamilton says
the limestone is specially quarried, ”You order it and they quarry it
in France and mill it per your specifications,” he said.
The
gallery stretches from one end of the home to the other. Steel and
glass doors are at each end, and antique timbers run the length of the
ceiling.
A
sitting vestibule is located off of the foyer and gallery, and there are
niches on each side. The formal living room and dining room are across
from one another further down the gallery. The floors in the living room
were made on site from antique white oak. "We take old beams and we
mill the wood out of them and we literally hand scrape them,” said
Hamilton. “We pillow the edges and then run each piece through a planer
to make it a different thickness. That’s part of the beauty – the
imperfectness.”
The
living room's two built-ins were crafted by local carpenter David
Hollingsworth. They were hand-carved and a custom finish added on site. A
12- foot steel window overlooks the lush landscaping of the front of
the home. The ceiling is antique cypress with a light wash, while the
timbers are waxed antique pine. Hamilton said he sources his antique
lumber from Custom-Bilt Cabinet & Supply of Shreveport. “Carl Bretz,
one of the owners of Custom-Bilt ... has different sources. He will buy
old barns in Canada and the Carolinas and south Louisiana ... and then
ship them up here,” he said. “We bring them out to the job - and they’re
all nasty and dirty - and we clean them up, take the old paint off of
them, all the bolts.” The 200-year old limestone mantle is an antique
reclaimed from France. It was purchased from an antiques dealer in
Houston. The mantle was shipped in pieces, and Hamilton Builders put it
together and retrofit it to work for the house. The firebricks are also reclaimed from an old house in France.
Heavy
wood and glass pocket doors were built for the dining room. The walls
are Venetian Plaster with a medium polish. There are antique pine
timbers and a speckled gold wallpaper on the ceiling. Contemporary steel
windows, with doors leading into the backyard, encompass the back wall.
The
remaining walls in the home are smooth with a bullnose edge. The
rounded corners soften the home and add a finished look to the trimless
doorways. “One thing that we did in this house – and every house that we
build – we have what we call a level 5 finish on the walls. It’s very
slick. Most houses have the orange peel texture on the walls,” said
Hamilton.
The bar area has poured pewter countertops with a rope detail edge. The cabinetry is made of Knotty Alder wood. Some of the cabinet fronts are chicken wire.
Back
in the gallery, an elevator is hidden behind a clever set of large,
sliding doors. A butler’s pantry on one side of the elevator and stairs
on the other can be closed off to disguise the elevator’s location. The
butler’s pantry has a built-in refrigerator, sink, oven, and microwave
and a small storage cabinet for china, glassware, and serving pieces.
The
kitchen has 3-centimeter thick marble countertops with a laminated
mitered edge made to look like a 3-inch piece of marble. The white oak
cabinets are Bentwood and came from a supplier in Dallas. Warm antique
cypress adorns the ceiling, while the beams are reclaimed pine. The Wolf
appliances and Sub-Zero refrigerator came from the Kitchen & Bath
Cottage. The industrial vent hood was crafted locally and is made from
zinc with copper strapping. Over in the hearth room, the floors are hand
scraped pillowed antique planks. A limestone mantle and more antique
pine beams complete the room.
Hamilton said a lot of work was invested in the study and its hand-carved
wood panel walls. A custom limestone mantel is mounted flush with the
firebricks inside. Another window overlooks the award-winning landscape
design created by Cadence of Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. It melds French country
garden design with classic Louisiana garden design details. Cadence
developed all the hardscape and exterior wall and gate elements.
A
hallway off of the gallery leads to the master suite and can be closed
off. The en-suite bath has a pink marble tub surround and a walk-through
shower that connects his and hers dressing and closet areas. The “his”
side is masculine with many built-in elements – shoe racks, a tie rack,
and even a pull-out along with bookshelves.
The
“her” side is very feminine with pink floral wallpaper, plenty of space
for clothing and accessories, and houses a stacked washer and dryer.
The
bedroom itself has vaulted ceilings with intricate beam work. The
fireplace mantel came from their previous home. Off of the bedroom lies a
reading retreat. It is a round windowwalled reading room overlooking
the backyard and swimming pool. The flooring is reclaimed Jerusalem
stone. Antique beams adorn the cypress ceiling and are also inlaid into
the stone walls. The hardware on the doors is Ashley Norton Hardware.
The
ceiling in the outdoor living area/kitchen is a dirty-top reclaimed
pine, and the beams are hand-hewn. “You can shelf to set a suitcase on
when packing, see
the hatchet marks in them because they date before sawmills," said
Hamilton. "They were chopping them out of an old log.” The wood came
from an old barn in Canada. The stone in this area is limestone quarried
in Oklahoma and laid in a dry stack style to create an appearance more
like an old French house. There are limestone countertops in the outdoor
kitchen, and the hood is custom built. “We used an old handhewn beam,
put a vent up in there, and used antique wood on the face,” said
Hamilton. Louvered doors – designed for winter – can be closed to make
the space more like an indoor room.
The
stonework in the backyard is sandstone quarried in South America. There
is also a pool by Waterscape Pools with an automatic cover, an outdoor
sitting area with a fireplace, and an arbor built from cedar timbers
with a copper roof.
The roof is Vermont slate staggered to give it a cottage look. “This is a lifetime roof. A shingle roof is a 20 to 30-year roof,” said Hamilton. “This one is forever. This has a beautiful look, too.”
The
home has four fireplaces and the chimneys are topped with copper pots
from European Copper. There is a cupola on top of the garage and
decorative louvered vents in the roof.
“That’s
what you’d see in an old European house. We tried to mimic everything,”
said Hamilton. “I do a lot of research on different types of
architecture when I’m building and do everything to match the
architecture of that time.”
– Melissa Airhart

The kitchen is a stunner by
any measure. A double-size island with a marble top, hand-crafted woods
and top-of-the-line appliances make it a dream. The open-concept area
overlooks the den and back gardens.

A sitting area is warmed with wall niches featuring demi lune consoles on either side.
The sweeping exterior of
the home on Gilbert Ave. is a definite showstopper. Its linear design is
an outstanding example of its architectural type in the established
South Highlands neighborhood.
In the richly paneled den,
wildlife art and sculptures are prominent among classic elements such as
the marble fireplace, matching torchieres and twin sofas.

Outdoor living space
includes an outdoor kitchen and louvered shutters that can enclose the
area for privacy or inclement weather.

This outdoor oasis has a rock fireplace surrounded by a low stone wall.


The inner courtyard is
enclosed in an envelope of privacy. A romantic backdrop of pine trees
lends an air of mystery to the focal point.