Try GOLD - Free
Taking It Slow
March 2025
|Architectural Digest US
CREATIVE COUPLE MARIE-LOUISE AND MARC HOM THOUGHTFULLY UPDATE A HISTORIC RETREAT IN COOPERSTOWN, NEW YORK
It was close to 5:00 a.m. on a Sunday when Marie-Louise Hom knew that uprooting her family from Brooklyn Heights to Cooperstown, New York, some four hours north of the city, had been the correct decision. She and her husband, celebrated fashion and portrait photographer Marc Hom, were sleeping when their son Winston, then eight, insisted on waking them to admire the sublime upstate sunrise. "Of course you worry whether you're doing the right thing or not, with how you raise your kids," Marie-Louise, an interior designer, confides. "But in moments like that, you realize that there is something about living in such beauty."
To those who recognize the hamlet as little more than the home of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, Cooperstown may seem like an unusual place for a pair of cosmopolitan Danes to settle. But when they first visited friends there 19 years ago-in the dead of winter and a month after beginning to date-a spell was cast. The couple subsequently rented a few weeks each year, then for longer periods, until they made the decision to relocate full-time and enroll their sons in a local school while keeping their brownstone in Brooklyn Heights and a summer cabin in Denmark. (Marc's older son, Adrian, is also a frequent visitor.) It took our Scandinavian relatives a while to understand what we were doing on a hilltop in Cooperstown," Marie-Louise says. Now people come here and they're like, 'Okay, we get it.""
This story is from the March 2025 edition of Architectural Digest US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Architectural Digest US
Architectural Digest US
GRAND ILLUSTRATIONS
Architect Luca Bombassei has created a synthesis between ancient and modern, art and life, on a piano nobile of a palazzo on Venice's Grand Canal
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE
Working with landscape designer Dennis Schrader, artist Ugo Rondinone crafts a meditative Long Island garden where bold sculptures mingle with moss
2 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
EVERYTHING IS ILLUMINATED
FROM HIS NEW STUDIO IN BROOKLYN, ARTIST JAMES CHERRY IS HONING HIS MATERIAL LANGUAGE TO SCALE UP HIS HANDMADE LOW-FI LIGHTS—ONE COMMISSION AT A TIME
2 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
ART APPRECIATION
For collectors Jen Rubio and Stewart Butterfield, a historic Hamptons house with interiors by Jake Arnold is the perfect canvas
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
COLLECTIVE VISION
With help from designer Fernando Santangelo, filmmaker Fabiola Beracasa Beckman fashions a family-friendly showcase for a lifetime's worth of art and objects in her Greenwich Village town house
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
Symbolic Power
Blending traditions in furnishings of uncommon beauty, Mehdi Dakhli unpacks complex cultural narratives
1 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
HUNTING & GATHERING
In the Missoni clan's longtime Alpine retreat, family matriarch Rosita's love of foraged mushrooms, folksy flea market finds, and, of course, bold colors and patterns lives on
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
Breathing Exercise
Updating a historic New York town house, Andre Mellone and Jean-Gabriel Neukomm give the art ample air to shine
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
THEN MEETS NOW
Rescued by a group of artists and restored with the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Nina Simone's childhood home reemerges as a beacon of Black cultural memory
3 mins
December 2025
Architectural Digest US
Desk Jockey
Maurice Calka's sculptural 1969 worktable feels as futuristic now as it did then
1 mins
December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
