Split-Level Satisfaction | House Profiles | Hudson Valley | Chronogram Magazine
Split-Level Satisfaction
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
Sun floods into Oldenburger and Smykowski’s kitchen,even on winter days. The thriving wall garden adds layers ofgreen to the beige-on-white design. Oldenburger found twoof the Vernor Panton chairs by Vitra at a vintage shop andmatched them with a round table and pillar pedestal base.The wall pots and hanging lamp are both by West Elm. “I dolove plants,” she says. “I try to have live plants throughoutthe house and encourage my clients to also.”

Megan Oldenburger has mastered the art of not breaking the mold—rather, instead, redesigning it. The founder of Dichotomy Interiors, Oldenburger has spent a decade taking the Hudson Valley's outdated Colonials, worn-out farmhouses, and funky, falling apart hand-built homes, as well as myriad other vernaculars, and transforming them into livable, flowing, thoroughly modern spaces. "Most places up here haven't really been updated and still have `70s-, `80s-, or `90s-style interiors. I basically go in and completely gut them," she explains. "But some of my favorite compliments come from clients who thought their homes were beyond saving and then ended up falling in love with them when we were done."

The 3,400-square-foot split-level home she shares with husband Richard Smykowski, a graphic designer, superbly showcases Oldenburger's considerable renovation savvy, her eye for design, and the artful aesthetic she's honed as both designer and artist. Flowing between three staggered levels as well as a fourth sunken living area, the home manages to blend myriad elements into one harmonious composition. "I like to curate a space more than decorate it," says Oldenburger, who attended the San Francisco Art Institute as a painting and drawing major. "I like furniture, art, architecture, and objects to create an overall composition. Each individual piece and decision becomes a singular expression." It's a home characterized by lovely contradictions. A sitting area with soaring ceilings remains cozy. An elegant chef's kitchen is comprised of handmade, earthy ingredients. In a neighborhood where the homes were built for a singular purpose, it's distinct. On a cold winter day, art and objects make summer seem right around the corner.

This masterwork was no overnight sensation. "It was a long, seven-year process," explains Oldenburger of the home's design. "We did things a little bit at a time because both I and my team had to work around our schedules. If we were working on my job, we weren't working on another job. I'm always last." But being last in line had its upside. "The good thing was that I knew exactly what I wanted to do when I found the time to do it."

The Smarter Cookie

Like many before them and many more to come, Oldenburger and Smykowski originally moved to Woodstock in 2009 to escape "the craziness of city life." "We loved the landscape, the food, and the spirit of Woodstock," says Oldenburger, an Illinois native. Smykowski is originally from South Dakota. "We were both used to solitude and quiet," she explains. "The chance to create our own businesses and opportunities was also a large draw—we both have an entrepreneurial spirit."

In 2014, they found a five-bedroom, 3.5-bath house in a mixed enclave of Mediterranean- and Colonial-style homes just outside of Woodstock. Part of one of the IBM executive neighborhoods that was built in the late 1970s, the home stood out for its classic shed-style architecture, with steeply pitched roof lines and gray-painted wood siding. "It was the last house that was built in the loop, and was designed by a different architect, from outside the area, than the rest of the neighborhood," says Oldenburger.

It was that mix of interior and exterior spaces that entranced the couple. "We loved a lot of things about the house," remembers Oldenburger. "But what initially drew us was the layout. It had just the right amount of openness, effortlessly flowing from the entry in and out of entertaining spaces and out to the deck and pool." Like many of Oldenburger's projects, however, it hadn't been updated since its IBM days and needed a total overhaul. "We had to completely renovate pretty much every part of this house," she says.

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (7)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
Like the rest of the house, the master bedroom showcases Oldenburger’s design influences. “I have always been attracted to Midcentury Modern design and Modern architecture,” she says. “I am really influenced by contemporary design movementsin California, Australia, and Mexico that focus on minimalist design and incorporate their respective environments.” The 1968 painting above the bed was bought from an antique dealer. “We are on the hunt for the artist because the signature is nothing werecognize. It’s one of our great mysteries.”

Some Guts, All Glory

Both the kitchen and master bathroom were in need of immediate attention. "The kitchen was original to the house and hadn't been cared for," says Oldenburger. "And the appliances were really old as well." Oldenburger is an accomplished cook, and both she and Smykowski love to entertain. "Having entertaining areas and a large kitchen was very important." In the master bathroom, both the shower and tub had been similarly neglected, and were no longer functional. Working with long-time colleague and local builder Tom Mayone, she set to work making both spaces that they could love.

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (5)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
Oldenburger loves to cook. “I love all types of cuisine— Indian, Thai, French—and I try to cook everything,” she says. “In this regard, the pandemic wasn’t a huge changefor me because I’m pretty much always cooking at home.” Originally, she considered opening the space between the breakfast nook and kitchen, and then installing an island. “But the fact is, I like it when people stay out of my way in the kitchen,” she says. “With the U-shaped counter, we can still hang out while I work.” The kitchen features white Carrara marble counters, a custom range hood by Tom Mayone, and walls of handmade Moroccan tiles.

Oldenburger approached the kitchen remodel in stages. Its footprint was already generous, with an ample sunny breakfast nook at one end of the room separated from the kitchen's working space by a large U-shaped counter. Vaulted ceilings added height to the ample length. Not wanting to change that footprint, Oldenburger evened out the frames of the room's three entrances, then widened an opening between the kitchen and a formal dining area in the home's main living space, centering it on a bay window on the opposite dining room wall. To accentuate the high vaulted ceilings and add a distinctive backsplash, Oldenburger lined the kitchen's back wall with handcrafted Moroccan Delije tiles of varying texture and shades of white.

She replaced the home's appliances with modern stainless steel varieties and then initially installed IKEA cabinetry and counters. "But I decided it just wasn't me," she says. Two years ago, she updated her update—keeping the IKEA guts, but replacing the cabinetry doors and handles with locally crafted door and drawer fronts and black metal handles bought on Amazon. She also added a custom-made oven hood and marble countertops, as well as custom shelving with a second refrigerator in the breakfast area, to serve as a small butler's pantry. "It's a classic mix of high and low," Oldenburger explains of the kitchen's elegant yet functional design. In the bathroom, she installed a new shower and tub, and then used a combination of white subway and gray hex tiles to brighten the space.

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (8)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
The master bathroom required a total gut renovation as soon as the couple moved in. Oldenburger chose a mix of subway and hex tiles for the walls and theninstalled a tub and sink from Signature Hardware. She found the chandelier at the Chicago-based Etsy shop Hangout Lighting. “Our house is a mix of high and low.”

The Fire Element

To transform the home's rectangular, open concept dining and living room into a space that was warm and inviting, Oldenburger had to muster all her decorator's acumen. "It was a really, really hard room," explains Oldenburger. "It is really long, tall, and narrow so it was super cavernous when we moved in." Oldenburger began by refinishing the heart pine floors (she also matched the planks and extended the pine flooring throughout the kitchen) then sourced rough-cut pine from Rothe Lumber and created a custom floor-to-ceiling bookshelf along one wall. "That really helped," she explains. The formal dining area and sunken living room were divided by two steps running the width of the room—Oldenburger deepened the steps to create extra ad-hoc seating. With its 15-foot-high vaulted ceilings, the space still felt a bit vast.

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (4)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
The home’s media room features a massive fireplace. The painting is by New Paltz-based painter Aaron Hauck (who's work appears on the cover this month). “After renovating the staircase and the rest of the house, we felt we finally had a space worthy of art,” says Oldenburger. Along with another piece by Hauck, the couple hascollected paintings from Samantha French, Lauren Lombardo, and Guy Madden, as well as ceramic pieces by Re Jin Le and Leah Kaplan. “Art definitely influences our decorating style.”

She finally came up with the solution a year and a half ago. "Adding the fireplace was a real game changer for the room," says Oldenburger. "I spent a while trying to work out the proportions of it." Oldenburger began by tearing out a rock wall and then designing a fireplace for the bottom portion. Framed by Mayone, the actual built-in fireplace was installed by Fireside Warmth. Above the dark frame, Oldenburger painted the remaining wall white. "We are huge movie buffs, and I designed the fireplace facade to double as a giant viewing space to project movies on." Low white cabinets in the dining area serve both as banquet and projector stand. The fireplace-movie screen combo helped to cozy-fy the room. "Breaking up that space really created a less cavernous kind of look because you don't look from top to bottom anymore," says Oldenburger.

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (3)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
In the dining area, Oldenburger rescued a table from the old Hudson Library. “We bought it with the etchings from years past still engraved into it and refinished it,” says Oldenburger. “But we left just enough visible that you can trace some of the scars with people’s names and hearts with arrows on it.” She paired the table with Hans Werner wishbone chairs and a replica antler chandelier from Restoration Hardware. The painting on the wall is one of Oldenburger’s own pieces.

Oldenburger took the opposite approach to other areas of the home—opening them up, rather than closing them in. She tore out the enclosed, carpeted, split staircase. In its place, she designed and installed an open concept staircase with custom wooden treads again from Rothe Lumber, then had custom railings and stringers made by local metal worker Steve Cross. Downstairs, "a really weird long, skinny room" lead to two small bedrooms. Oldenburger removed multiple walls and widened doorways to create one large guest bedroom suite, ultimately turning the five bedrooms into four.

Even though she clearly has a talent for it, lately Oldenburger has been feeling like gut remodeling isn't enough. She is now turning her talents to designing homes from scratch. The project, called "The Homes at Live Edge" will feature modern homes and begin construction this year. "We hope they will be reflective of what clients typically love and ask for, and yet are unique to the majority of the houses on the market," she says. "When finished we will be offering them as turn-key furnished residences, ready to move right into."

click to enlarge Split-Level Satisfaction (9)
Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine
Oldenburger painted the home’s front double door entrance a striking yellow to contrast with the dark gray siding. White concrete planters match the vintage globe lights above. Oldenburger relied on contractor Tom Mayone for the majority of the home’s seven-year renovation. “We’ve worked together for the last 10 years on most of my projects,” she says. “And we’ve developed a vernacular and friendship that continues to make creating and renovating fun.”

Mary Angeles Armstrong

Mary writes about home design, real estate, sustainability, and health. Upstate, she's lived in Swiss style chalets, a 1970's hand-built home, a converted barn, and a two hundred year old home full of art. Now she lives with her son in a stone cottage outside Woodstock.
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