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From Burst Pipes to Buzzards Bay

REMODEL  ·  WOODS HOLE, CAPE COD  ·  2025 GOLD BRICC AWARD WINNER

Burst pipes. Wood rot. No insulation. A damp basement. What started as a daunting list of problems became the foundation for one of the most thoughtfully reimagined homes on Cape Cod.

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Featured in At Home Magazine, Winter 2025  ·  Photography by Dan Cutrona

Some homes don’t whisper their problems, they announce them. When the new owners of a 1950s cottage perched on a rocky cliff overlooking Buzzards Bay in Woods Hole first walked through their property, that’s exactly what they found: burst pipes, wood rot, a total lack of insulation in the exterior walls, and a damp basement that had quietly accumulated decades of neglect.

But beyond the damage, there was undeniable promise. The location was remarkable, a breathtaking bluff overlooking the bay, a world away from their home in the Boston suburbs. The footprint was right. The bones, once repaired, could support something truly extraordinary. All they needed was the right team and a clear vision.

 

A Vision Worth Building

The owners’ brief was specific and, in many ways, beautifully demanding. They wanted to transform the dated Cape Cod cottage into a serene, modern retreat, without abandoning what made it a Cape cottage in the first place. Contemporary architecture and old Cape charm would need to coexist, not compete.

One requirement stood above the rest: acoustic performance. Both homeowners are molecular scientists with a genuine, professional appreciation for silence. They didn’t simply want a quiet home, they needed it measurably so. That expectation went on to shape nearly every material selection, every construction method, and every finish decision made throughout the project. Energy efficiency, smart home technology, and a seamless visual connection to the panoramic water views beyond were equally non-negotiable.

“Whole house renovations of aged homes often present a host of inherent challenges due to existing conditions. This 75-year-old house was no exception. It had been somewhat neglected and had experienced additional damage from burst pipes. Considerable work was required to correct existing problems before new work could commence.”

— Christian Valle, President, The Valle Group

 

The Right Team for the Job

The Valle Group of East Falmouth was selected to lead the whole-house renovation. Few firms know Cape Cod’s aging housing stock as intimately, or approach its particular challenges with as much confidence. For the architectural vision, the homeowners turned to Epstein Joslin + Picardy of Somerville, an award-winning firm renowned for acoustically refined spaces at the highest level, among them, Seiji Ozawa Hall at Tanglewood, the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra’s Strathmore Music Center, and the expansion of Boston Symphony Hall.

It was a deliberate choice. For homeowners whose professional lives are built on precision and quiet, selecting an architect celebrated for designing the world’s finest concert halls wasn’t a creative flourish, it was the most logical decision they could have made.

 

Rebuilding from the Inside Out

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Before a single design element could be introduced, the existing damage had to be honestly confronted. The entire interior was stripped down to the studs. The CMU block foundation was sealed with foam, and the basement floor epoxied to eliminate the moisture problem at its source. Only once the structure was fully stabilized could the real work, the transformation, begin.

The most technically demanding challenge came next: the introduction of a large three-story foyer tower in the middle of the existing structure. The roof had to be opened during a winter nor’easter, and four substantial structural steel beams lowered with surgical precision through three floors onto footings in the basement. It was a high-stakes operation, one that demanded exact coordination between the Valle team, their project engineer, and a network of trusted subcontractors.

“This was a complex operation that relied on the expertise of the Valle team, the project engineer, and Valle’s trusted subcontractors.”

— Rob Oberton, Site Manager, The Valle Group

 

A Home That Feels Different

From the street, the home makes its intentions known immediately. A large, richly-hued mahogany front door signals a clear departure from the traditional Cape cottage, and it’s only the beginning. Step inside and visitors are bathed in natural light, streaming down through the curious geometry of a glass pyramid above the three-story foyer tower, as if entering a modern, minimalist cathedral.

The interiors strike a rare and considered balance between Scandinavian restraint and Asian calm. Calm white walls, white oak floors, custom built-ins, and mahogany trim create a palette that feels simultaneously warm and disciplined. Mid-Century Modern furnishings share the space with original art and a curated collection of three-dimensional pieces displayed throughout in gallery style, a home that invites you to look, and to slow down.

The living room is the undisputed heart of it all. Wide banks of glass dissolve the boundary between interior and the panoramic view of Buzzards Bay beyond, sky, sea, and living space unified into a single, breathtaking composition. This design philosophy, simple, meditative spaces defined by strong geometry and an unwavering connection to the natural world, carries through every room in the home without exception.

 

Designed for Real Life

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The home’s layout was organized around how the owners actually live, not how a house typically works. A primary suite opens directly onto the bluff overlooking the ocean, offering a private retreat within the retreat. Three additional bedrooms and baths were added, along with a generous upstairs home office that serves two professionals who work primarily from home.

The kitchen and glass-enclosed dining area were thoughtfully refreshed rather than rebuilt, their original footprints preserved, but elevated with new paint, updated trim, and a rich polyurethane finish on the existing mahogany cabinets. The result feels both familiar and completely renewed: a quiet acknowledgment of the cottage’s past, firmly rooted in the present.

 

Smart, Efficient, and Genuinely Quiet

Every mechanical system in the home was replaced with energy-efficient alternatives: heat pumps, hydronic forced hot air with humidification, and limited electric baseboard, all fully digitally controllable. A Lutron RadioRA smart lighting system gives the owners a virtually unlimited number of lighting scenes, operable from keypads throughout the home or remotely via smartphone. An advanced water leak detection system monitors for any unusual conditions during the off season, a quietly intentional response to exactly how this project began.

The acoustic engineering was equally thorough. Mineral wool was packed into interior walls. Resilient channel soundboard was installed beneath the blueboard plaster. Gaskets were fitted around every door in the home, with rubber drop-down threshold sweeps underneath each one. The finished home is as close to genuinely silent as residential construction allows, exactly what was asked for, exactly what was delivered.

 

Where Craft Meets Coastline

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The exterior received the same level of attention as every room within. New solid body stained cedar shingle siding was applied on all four sides. A new roof was installed, and every window replaced, the result is a refined coastal presence that honors the cottage’s modest original scale while projecting something unmistakably considered.

Landscape design by Zen Associates of Boston introduced water features, coastally appropriate plantings, and one of the project’s most memorable touches: a large coral-like stone sculpture that stands beside the home like a piece of bold, site-specific modern art. The slab stone patio on the ocean side, complete with a grand pergola, was fully refreshed, creating an outdoor gathering space as carefully curated as any room inside.

 

A Recognized Transformation

The finished home earned a 2025 Gold BRICC Award for Best Remodel: Home & Large Addition Over $1 Million, a tie with PSD, Angels Too, in recognition of the craftsmanship, collaboration, and vision that The Valle Group and Epstein Joslin + Picardy brought to every phase of this project.

What began as a neglected cottage burdened with water damage, rot, and decades of deferred care has been completely reimagined into a peaceful, beautifully appointed, and technologically advanced coastal retreat. And in the stillness of its rooms, with the panoramic view of Buzzards Bay stretching out beyond the glass, one thing is unmistakably clear: the challenges were never the end of the story. They were the beginning.

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