Boston Sunday Globe

In a Craftsman the color of terra cotta, natural beauty of woodwork is on display

215 WASHINGTON ST., BELMONT

- By John R. Ellement

Only two families have cared for this Craftsman since it was built for Edward H. Shaw 111 years ago, and their mutual devotion for it shows.

There are multiple original features throughout the four-level home — the cedar closet in the primary bedroom, the copper downspouts, the hardwood flooring, and the stucco exterior — intermixed with updates that address household life today — stainless steel kitchen counters, high-end appliances, and remodeled baths.

As was the case when Shaw, who was running a successful greenhouse farm providing produce to Boston, lived here, there is a wide walkway to a covered front entrance. Just inside, one finds an enclosed foyer with benches and coat hooks. A French door here opens into a hall with the living room on the right, stairs straight ahead, and the dining room on the left.

The living room is a front-to-back space nearly 25 feet wide. A wood-burning fireplace with a wood mantel and a granite surround is the attention-grabber. Exposed beams cross the ceiling, built-in bookcases fill the corners, a trio of windows offers a view of the backyard, and white oak original to the home sits underfoot.

French doors painted a moody black to match the fireplace surround open to a 187-square-foot sunroom with a terra-cotta-colored ceramic tile floor and wood on the walls and ceiling. The windows have been updated, but they were designed with muntins to match the dining room windows, which are original to the home.

The 163-square-foot dining room also features thin crown molding, a chair rail, a built-in china cabinet, white oak flooring, a period light fixture hanging from chains, and a bump-out with a window seat. All the lighting in the home is a homage to the turn of the last century.

A swinging door in the dining room opens to an updated kitchen with recessed lighting, a bay window, a pot rack hanging from the ceiling, Shaker-style cabinetry with a warm-wood finish, and an island with a butcher-block top. The countertop­s here are a mixture of wood and stainless steel. The backsplash and appliances are stainless steel and high-end.

The home’s half bath, traditiona­lly found on this level, is halfway up the stairs to the second floor. It has a pedestal sink and a hardwood floor.

The second level houses the primary bedroom,

two secondary bedrooms, the laundry room, and a sitting room — most of which radiates off an Lshaped hallway.

The sitting area (75 square feet) is actually one of two on this level; the primary bedroom has one, too. The one everyone in the home shares offers a curved window flanked by two double-hung ones, ensuring a sunny spot for contemplat­ion.

The main bath has a single vanity with a Carrara marble countertop, a whirlpool tub/shower combinatio­n behind a curtain, and walls, flooring, and a shower surround of porcelain tile.

The secondary bedrooms are 106 square feet and 159 square feet, and each one has a single-door closet and two windows with full-length wood shutters.

The primary bedroom takes up the entire right side of the house on this level. The bedroom (which alone measures 134 square feet) has thin crown molding, white oak flooring, and several windows, and it flows into a 115-square-foot sitting area. Full-length wood shutters ward off the sunlight on lazy mornings.

The space also features a 41-square-foot walk-in cedar closet that affords the only entrance to a laundry room with space for a stacked washer and dryer.

A carpeted stairway leads to the fourth level: an attic converted into a bedroom and office space with a nook for the bed — an area totaling 442 square feet.

The walkout lower level has a private entrance and offers a kitchen, bath, bedroom, living room, and office, but it cannot be rented, per the listing broker. The flooring throughout is ceramic tile, and the bath comes with a pedestal sink and a shower with white subway tile walls.

The house sits on a 0.43-acre lot filled with mature plantings and includes a big bluestone patio.

According to a 1982 survey by the Massachuse­tts Historical Commission: “Overall, the scale of 215 Washington St., its stucco walls and plantings (numerous trees and shrubs) all combine to illustrate the Belmont ideal of a rural, comfortabl­e, healthful environmen­t.”

Patrick Murphy of Coldwell Banker Realty in Belmont is the listing broker.

The property is on the National Register of historic homes, Murphy said, but “there are no restrictio­ns to modificati­ons to the interior or exterior.”

Follow John R. Ellement on Twitter @JREbosglob­e. Send listings to homeofthew­eek@globe.com. Please note: We do not feature unfurnishe­d homes unless they are new-builds and will not respond to submission­s we won’t pursue. Subscribe to our newsletter at Boston.com/address-newsletter.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JACK LOURENCO/DRONE HOME MEDIA ?? FROM TOP The kitchen, which has been updated, features recessed lighting, a bay window, an island with a butcher-block top, and a pot rack; the home, a Craftsman, sits on a 0.43-acre lot; and the wood-burning fireplace with the wooden mantel is the focal point of the living room, which has French doors to the sunroom.
PHOTOS BY JACK LOURENCO/DRONE HOME MEDIA FROM TOP The kitchen, which has been updated, features recessed lighting, a bay window, an island with a butcher-block top, and a pot rack; the home, a Craftsman, sits on a 0.43-acre lot; and the wood-burning fireplace with the wooden mantel is the focal point of the living room, which has French doors to the sunroom.
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States