European Inspired is the most material-intensive of the Forest Heart styles.
European Inspired is the most material-intensive of the Forest Heart styles. A French country home with hand-troweled plaster walls, salvaged limestone surrounds, and a slate roof reads centuries old when it is done right and reads like a theme park when it is not. The difference is in the patience of the detailing. Real plaster, not synthetic stucco. Reclaimed timber, not faux beams. Slate or clay tile, not asphalt. Hand-forged hardware, not stamped reproductions.
Steep-pitched rooflines, asymmetric massing built from clearly articulated volumes, dormers and gables that respond to the interior plan, towers and turrets where the program supports them.
Divided-lite casement and tilt-turn windows from Loewen, Marvin, or European manufacturers. True-divided-lite construction on the most refined elevations. Limestone or hand-cut stone surrounds.
Hand-troweled lime plaster or limewash exterior finish over brick or block. Salvaged limestone trim, sills, and quoins. Slate, clay tile, or hand-split cedar shake rooflines. Solid-wood entry doors with hand-forged hardware.
Plaster walls inside as well as out. Reclaimed timber beams. Wide-plank European oak floors. Inset hardwood cabinetry with painted or wax-finished surfaces. Hand-glazed tile.
Plaster range-hood surrounds. Arched doorways with hand-fitted millwork. Antique chandeliers. Hand-laid stone hearths and surrounds.
Warm whites, cream, soft greens and grays, deep terra cotta accents. Antique brass, hand-forged iron, and unlacquered brass hardware.
European Inspired is most often built as a standard custom home or as a green home with carefully selected envelope detailing. The hand-trowelled plaster envelope is naturally vapor-permeable and pairs well with continuous exterior insulation strategies. Smart-home integration is straightforward — the keypads disappear into the design vocabulary.