122 Round Hill Road
The estate parcel, with pond, pool, tennis court, cottage, long drive, and compound potential. The conceptual direction should feel like an estate composed of related pieces rather than a single overscaled object.
Fifteen acres in Mid-Country Greenwich, assembled by one family over six decades and now framed as four distinct estate opportunities. Spring Farms is the current expression of the Davis Chase Homes thesis: modern Greenwich living, grounded in place.
The land carries its history on its surface: old stone walls, root cellars, mature trees, a gently moving creek, and a nearly one-acre pond on the estate parcel. The site plan above shows the full Spring Farms setting; each future home should still be shaped around its buyer, its site, and the way the home will be lived in.
Workshop/APD brings national design credibility to Spring Farms, establishing conceptual direction for each homesite while leaving room for each buyer’s program, preferences, and final design development.
The renderings and site studies shown here are conceptual starting points, not fixed prescriptions. They establish a design language and a clear sense of possibility for each parcel. Once engaged, Davis Chase Homes and Workshop/APD will work with the buyer to evolve the architecture, program, scale, materials, interiors, and outdoor connections into a custom home shaped around the site and the way the buyer wants to live.
The estate parcel, with pond, pool, tennis court, cottage, long drive, and compound potential. The conceptual direction should feel like an estate composed of related pieces rather than a single overscaled object.
Private and tucked within mature landscape, with elevation, privacy, and a generous building setting. The home should feel quietly set into the former estate gardens.
A graceful setting with rolling grade, established tree canopy, and a family-oriented residential scale. The concept is organized around everyday living, outdoor connection, and a calm arrival sequence.
A retreat-scale homesite with additional wooded acreage, privacy, and a creek along the rear. The concept should feel more secluded, with a stronger relationship to landscape and quiet outdoor life.