Although one can hardly picture a more ideal home for an accomplished horsewoman and breeder than this 350-acre farm near Lexington, Kentucky, it's not quite what the owner originally set out to purchase back in 1985. "I wasn't looking for a major farm—just an old, pretty house with a bit of land around it—maybe 30 acres, not 350," she says. Yet the property's rolling hills and winding creek, which brought her back to her childhood in eastern Pennsylvania, sold her before she even set foot in the mid-1800s farmhouse that had been kept within the same family for generations.
Despite the house's hereditary charms, it would be a labor of love to make the place livable, starting with electrical and plumbing updates, turning a bedroom into a second upstairs bath, and relocating a tiny kitchen. It wasn't until she married in 2003 that the need for an addition became clear. "There were a lot of things that worked pretty well for a single person but not as well for two," she says. For instance, a shortage of storage space meant that things were always piled here and there.
Still, it took more than a decade—and multiple architects' drafts—for the couple to commit to their renovation plans. The upside to the long wait: They got exactly what they wanted once the project wrapped up in early 2016. Working with Lexington interior designer Matthew Carter and Louisville architect Tim Winters, the couple added a first-floor master suite—with that much-needed closet space—and a family room that's ideal for spending time with the guests they host during horse sales and events. Both feature ample windows and French doors, offering glimpses of the mares and foals outside.
These and other improvements, from a laundry room to a new front porch, were all done with a mind toward honoring the home's long history—incorporating exterior brick walls and shutters into added-on rooms, bringing in reclaimed wood flooring and beams, and playing up aged texture over sleek newness. "The house has been here a long time, and I think it's important to respect that," the owner says. At the same time, Carter helped weave in her passion for animals, travel, and fine art throughout the colorful interior. "It's a horse farm in Kentucky, but we wanted it to look a little more eclectic and collected than that," he says. The result is rooms that balance tradition, comfort, and personality—and a home that's now as uniquely enchanting as the meadows that surround it.