A beautifully preserved mid-century house on Maine's Down East peninsula

On the lip of a granite rock in Maine’s storied Down East peninsula, Maura McEvoy celebrates a beautifully preserved mid-century house by the architect Emily Muir, in an exclusive extract from The Maine House II
Image may contain Indoors Interior Design Home Decor Chair Furniture Wood Couch Lamp Rug Table and Dining Table
Maura McEvoy

‘Take a rugged piece of nature and build a dwelling to blend in with it (not dominate it)—what a challenge!’ she wrote. The Evanses’ sensitivity is evident everywhere, from the fresh coats of paint matched to the original on the kitchen cabinets, to the sheets of the same Formica on the counters and the new flooring chosen to match the old. A pair of back-to-back sofas allows the enjoyment of the best of Muir’s architecture; one looking out over the sound, the other towards a roaring fire.

Image may contain Indoors Interior Design Wood Lamp Hardwood Sink Sink Faucet Clothing Hat Adult Person and Desk

Muir looked to her environment for subject matter and art materials; a sand mural depicts iconic Maine subjects

Maura McEvoy

Such sensitivity to perspective is exactly what Muir was after. ‘You can just feel her commitment to working with the land, whether you are looking at the house from the water or looking at the water from the house,’ says Evans. That commitment inspired Evans to the point of devotion: she relented on a long-held insistence on straight lines and left the curved vanity in the bathroom just as it was. ‘What was important to her is now important to me,’ she says.

The Maine House II by Maura McEvoy, Basha Burwell and Kathleen Hackett (published by Vendome Press) is out today.