The only assembly on this Lexington Green property appears to be of seating. It musters throughout the grounds of the updated 1972 contemporary, which soldiers on in Memorial’s Bunker Hill Village. The spit-and-polished property’s relisting on Monday trimmed the asking price by $50K to $1.575 million. A previous listing spent a month on the market at $1.625 million. A pool, landscaping, and outdoor venues help populate the lot, which occupies nearly half an acre near the cul-de-sac end of a street off Memorial Drive where it makes a sharp turn north, a bit east of Gessner Rd.
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Renovations by the current owners rolled through in 2007 and 2010. They aren’t called out in the listing, but a Mod expert could probably sniff out what’s newish. The home’s front door (above) and 2-story foyer face north:
Floor-to-ceiling windows, Saltillo tile, and parquet flooring appear in many of the well-seated common rooms:
More full-height windows form a wall in the family room, where the view takes in a pool and patio:
The 3,999-sq.-ft. home has 4 bedrooms. In the master suite . . .
there’s a sitting area at one end of the room, which has a vaulted ceiling and one of the home’s 3 fireplaces:
Natural light in the master bathroom appears to be from a skylight:
Secondary bedrooms each have a bathroom (and there’s a powder room downstairs).
At least 2 of the bedrooms upstairs appear to open off a skylit hangout:Â
If venturing around the large yard proves too taxing, just take a seat. Under a tented pergola . . .
on the adjacent open air terrace . . .
by the pool . . .
or peeking over the landscaping:
Still tired? Head to the hammock:
- 12011 Pebble Hill Dr. [HAR]
I like this house. The two-story entrance and the outdoor space are gorgeous. I don’t care for the flooring though. Why do people think tile throughout the house looks good? In my opinion it belongs in laundry rooms, bathrooms and occasionally in kitchens.
Michelle – It wasn’t tile throughout. The bedrooms all seemed to be carpet. The dining room seemed to be wood.
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Tile just seemed to be in many common areas. Other than kitchen and bath (which are common for tile), you have just the living room and entry.
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But eh, I’m with ya. I only have tile in my bathrooms. The rest is wood. Even in the kitchen.
The tile – Saltillo – was The Bomb! in the late 70’s early 80’s.
Like granite countertops today: Started as a pricey upgrade and became de rigueur for new homes…
IMHO it’s very nice stuff with a beautiful color palette and warm on the feet
(though ‘bumpy’ and easy to chip)
yall should try adding some HDR images…
Love the outdoor spaces.. Inside is nice also…