The Denver Post

Couple provides luxury beach experience

Weekend home designed for guests to relax and have fun

- By Jura Koncius Photos by Mike Morgan, The Washington Post

In a shingle-style home about a mile from the boardwalk, there’s usually a house party going on.

The weekend home of Washington­ians Shawn Evans and Joe Petrone is designed for friends and family to relax, recharge and have fun. With seven bedrooms, seven bathrooms, three kitchens and a never-ending stream of music, the place is styled to entertain a crowd.

The goal is “to have our guests feel transporte­d to a luxury resort, making them feel pampered in subtle ways,” Evans said. “We appeal to their senses with great food and drink, good tunes and fresh flowers,” things few people have time to focus on in their day-to-day lives.

The 4,800-square-foot home has a U-shaped design centering on a pool. A folding glass wall leads from the pool into a 30-by30-foot great room lined with linen slipcovere­d sofas. You can not only put your feet up on the 5-by-7foot whitewashe­d wood coffee table, you can dance on it. (It’s happened.) This room opens into the main kitchen, where a large marble island and eight chairs beckon guests to hang out or help shuck the corn.

“Every home has a heartbeat. In our house it’s this courtyard, where the pool and great room join. That’s where life happens,” said Petrone, who grew up in Puerto Rico, where this style of airy, breezy architectu­re is popular. “We eat, we talk and we tell stories.”

Evans, 49, a designer who owns suburban design firm P Four, and husband Petrone, 57, a real estate agent with Monument Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty, are expert hosts who strategize meals and party plans in advance so they can also enjoy their time at the beach about 120 miles east of Washington.

The exterior was inspired by New England coastal-style shingled houses, said Greg Sparhawk of GPS Designs Architectu­re, who worked with P Four on the project. “They wanted a space that was wide open, with indoor-outdoor living,” Sparhawk said. “They asked for something that allowed for different levels of entertaini­ng both large and small groups.”

The main floor has the great room, dining room, main kitchen, prep kitchen, butler’s pantry and bar, master bedroom and bathroom, a guest room and bath, mudroom and pool bathroom. The second level has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. There’s also a one-bedroom apartment over the garage.

The furniture Evans envisioned in the two-story great room dictated the room’s size. Evans told Sparhawk they wanted to install two very long sofas and other seating to accommodat­e about 15 people. The dining room table had to seat 12.

The house has a unified look, with white linen window treatments, natural Belgian linen slipcovers and sisal carpets. There are beams reclaimed from a Vermont barn, and the wide-plank floors have a driftwood finish. The rooms are done in a neutral color palette: charcoal gray, white and beige, with the occasional touch of lavender.

The master bedroom on the main floor has an indoor-outdoor shower lined with gray river rocks. The guest bedrooms and baths include amenities such as Turkish bath towels, Kiehl’s toiletries and fresh-cut flowers by the beds, some picked from the hosts’ garden on the property. There are often scented candles burning, a favorite being Jo Malone’s Lime, Basil and Mandarin. There are no clocks or TVs in any of the bedrooms. “People come here to be together,” Evans said. “We want them to disconnect.”

The soundtrack in the home changes throughout the day to match the mood of the hour.

“The key to everything we do here is making sure we provide a place for friends and family to relax,” Petrone said.

If guests decide to leave the compound (a tough call) and head to the beach or boardwalk, Evans and Petrone have a fleet of 10 bikes, or guests can hitch a ride on one of their two white Vespas. (There are also three paddleboar­ds and four skim boards.)

Though they use the house all year, Evans and Petrone look forward to the start of the summer season. Usually, they kick if off with 200 guests at a Memorial Day weekend “white party.” They might toss some floating orbs into the pool or hang clusters of white parasols in the courtyard.

“Everyone wears white,” Evans said. “It’s a wonderful Saturday afternoon.” Next year they’re thinking about hiring synchroniz­ed swimmers. In white bathing suits, of course.

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