Sensitively designed and beautifully crafted, this extraordinary stone house is set in a pastoral landscape of rolling hills on an 850-acre estate. Madison Spencer, of Train and Spencer Architects of Charlottesville, Virginia, who won the commission over two other firms, selected the site. Rather than placing the house on a hilltop where it might have overwhelmed the setting, he placed it on a lower ridge, a sheltered spot where an older homestead once stood. Major elements are conceived as pavilions, thus breaking up the mass and allowing the 12,000-square-foot house to rest lightly on the landscape. The main block, guest wing, and garage surround a courtyard, while the master suite is angled to accommodate a rock outcropping. Its roof and that of the main block are gently curved, further relating the house to the
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Allen House
1995, R. Madison Spencer. At end of private road, reached from east side of Kingsville Rd. (Randolph County 17), approximately 2 miles south of intersection with U.S. 33
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