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  Photos by Steven Brooke and Barbara Banks

Feature: Out of the Blue

Joan Altabe

July 2, 2004

Along a sleepy stretch of beachfront homes near Sarasota, on Florida’s Casey Key, a lone residence tucked behind walls rises in mystery a dozen feet above the sea. To passersby, there is no indication that this seaside house stands in the swim of modernism. A host of sharp right angles and four interlocking cubes of glass connecting the structure’s two halves render this residence a virtual Mondrian painting in the round.


Architect Guy Peterson turned a humble beach cottage on Casey Key near Sarasota, Fla., into a modern dream house without altering the home’s basic footprint. A wood deck, fringed by wild sea oats, dune daisies and ornamental grasses, leads down to the ocean.  (Click images to enlarge)

In a monumental overhaul of a modest, single-story 1960s ranch house, distinctive only for its location, Sarasota architect Guy Peterson gave Hadassa and Harvey Morris, a retired psychologist and business consultant, respectively, a dream house that boasts unobstructed views of the water and a 50 percent increase in living space.


Landscape architect David W. Young took his cue from the geometric forms of the house to create a modern garden. Cambodian pots sit on white gravel; a row of bamboo leading to the front door is planted in black river rock.  (Click images to enlarge)

“The house exceeded our hopes and expectations,” Hadassa says. The Morrises’ basic requirements included a plan that screened the house from the road; an elegant entryway; 10- to 15-foot ceilings instead of the existing 8-footers; a second-floor master suite; and, in place of small windows, expanses of glass that accommodate sweeping views of the Gulf of Mexico.


A  fountainhead spills water into the reflecting pool.  (Click image to enlarge)

Not surprisingly, the challenges were daunting. Peterson was forbidden to alter the home’s foundation because it straddled the state’s coastal construction control line. So in response to that single restraint, he changed everything else. “Had I been given a clean slate,” he says, “I would have been proud to have come up with this same house.”


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