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and a master bedroom with en suite bath. Photograph by Eric Roth

    Best Addition

    The thurman house in gloucester

    Tim Thurman did not just design and build an addition for the house at Sunset Rock in Gloucester. He celebrated its past, enshrined its defining feature, and almost certainly saved it. The addition includes roof-mounted solar panels.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012
    The thurman house in gloucester as it appeared in the past

    Originally just 1,300 square feet, the 1904 cottage in Annisquam is a picture-postcard example of English Arts and Crafts style. Designed and built by Charles Harvey, who applied his architecture training to this one summer home before becoming a Swedenborgian minister, it features prominent eave brackets, arched transom windows, high dark oak wainscoting, and red cedar shingle cladding.
    | October 20, 2012
    The thurman house in gloucester

    The house’s most salient feature is the enormous granite rock that has always been a part of its foundation — the house was literally bolted to the rock with steel rods in 1904. Tim made Sunset Rock itself a powerful feature of the new front hall, where it bulges out from under the stairs. “Originally we wanted to enclose the rock, but it grew on us,” says Tim. “The curve is a lovely form.”
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    The old living room and bedrooms are as before, though restored.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012
    The thurman house in gloucester (kitchen)

    a handsome new kitchen ...
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    living ...
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    and dining area ...
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    and a master bedroom with en suite bath.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    The new rooms feature “roasted’’ red oak flooring, walnut counters, and European beech cabinetry. Exposed beams are suspended from black metal strap hangers, and visible metal tie rods are part of the massive wood trusses made by Bensonwood, a Walpole, N.H., company.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012
    The thurman house in gloucester

    “You don’t tear down old houses like this,” says Tim, pictured with wife Cheryl. “But it was small and in rough shape. We saw that if we added to the south side, we would get great solar gain, bring the house down to the ground level, have sunny new space, and do it all without zoning issues.”
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012
    The thurman house in gloucester

    The Thurmans enjoy morning tea on one of their terraces.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012

    The 1,500-square-foot addition wraps around the original house.
    Photograph by Eric Roth | October 20, 2012