KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
- Share via
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Every other week, No Place Like Home will take
readers on a tour of a local residence.
Linda Taylor and Dave Ullman are like two ships passing in the night.
This dynamic Newport Beach couple, married for 19 years, have
high-powered careers that demand constant travel for Dave and long office
hours for Linda.
Dave, owner of Ullman Sails, is an internationally renowned sailor.
With three world championships and scores of sailing accolades, it is
easy to understand how sailing-inspired memorabilia and furniture made
its way into his domestic surroundings.
Linda, president of Taylor & Associates Architects, makes her living
merging ideas, function and practicality with inspired design. Her firm
is working on the new Women’s Pavilion at Hoag Hospital. Her love of fine
art and intimate living spaces are showcased in her professional and
domestic surroundings.
Together, this husband-and-wife team has created a unique home
environment that blends a love of the sea and appreciation of good
design. Add to that a penchant for interesting building materials and
high-caliber workmanship, and you get a product that is particular to the
Taylor-Ullman home.
When Linda and Dave bought their home in 1989, they immediately
started the transformation. The ranch-style house, built in 1952,
originally had 1900 square feet with a 400-square-foot detached garage.
Previous owners had been quite partial to Polynesian-influenced decor.
Linda and Dave quickly removed several tons of lava rock and began making
the house their home.
Linda’s plan was to create a comfortable beach house using materials
that were practical and visually interesting. She chose not to
incorporate a “style,” like Nantucket or Craftsman, but to use simple,
clean details, and high-quality materials and workmanship.
Several phases of remodeling over a number of years included the
addition of a master bedroom and bath ideally located in the back of the
house. This cozy retreat, complete with fireplace and bay window,
overlooks the pool and gardens. Dave and Linda consider this space their
sanctuary.
Linda’s new kitchen was carefully designed to be the center of
activity for the family. Soapstone counters are set on crisp white
cabinets. Open shelving displays Linda’s pottery, baskets and cookbook
collection. An antique pine table accommodates family and guests. A large
cinder-block fireplace adds texture and warmth. A charming Dutch door
leads to a garden filled with herbs and potted citrus trees.
One of the great perks of a sailor’s life is traveling all over the
world. Dave has enjoyed staying with other sailing families, and when he
and Linda remodeled their home, one of their great inspirations was the
creation of a space to offer fellow sailors so they could return the
favor of gracioushospitality.
The upstairs of the Ullman-Taylor home is devoted exclusively to guest
accommodations. The guest bedroom and adjacent bath and living space are
steeped in nautical influence. The stairs, which lead to an observation
deck, were built to replicate a boat ladder: polished chrome handrails
and teak steps. At the top of the ladder is a boat hatch that leads to
the rooftop weather station.
As the house took shape, the couple began to focus on the backyard.
Linda calls her landscaping “a work in progress,” which defines spaces
for an outdoor living room, dining room and fireplace.
The four distinct outdoor “rooms” are cleverly connected by wood
decking, which replicated an Eastern seaboard boardwalk. From the living
room, a Dutch door opens out to an alfresco dining area, anchored by a
fireplace.
The next area, delineated by a split-rail fence is the “beach” area
and includes a rectangular pool (influenced by a trip to Tonga) and sand
gravel and sea shell borders. The path frames a vegetable garden, grape
arbor and berry vines.
Her family of boys, with their wet sailing gear, inspired the need for
practical outdoor space that includes an outdoor shower with high hedges
for privacy.
The materials for the outside of the home include burnished and
sandblasted concrete block, shingles to “hide the seams between old and
new,” and copper flashing because it holds up to the corrosive marine
air.
Leftover boat parts have been incorporated into the outdoor scheme,
continuing the subtle nautical flavor. With a house full of sailors, the
influence is inevitable.
The Taylor-Ullman household embraces a family lifestyle that offers
generous hospitality to a wide circle of friends, a love of good design
and a deep respect for their natural surroundings.
*
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column, which was
written with assistance from MICHELE MILLER, runs Sundays.
The upstairs guest bedroom includes a bunk with a pullout trundle: an
efficient use of precious space. The built-in cubbyholes provide a place
for everything, with everything in its place.
The backyard hosts collections from the family’s extensive travels.
The master bedroom has a cozy reading retreat, complete with
fireplace.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.