Beyond the near paddocks the land opens into rolling pasture that feels closer to Woodford County bluegrass than to anything you would expect minutes from the Gene Snyder, and it is precisely this duality that gives the property its rare leverage — a modernist compound with enough acreage and infrastructure to function as a legitimate small equestrian operation without ever reading as a farm. The board fencing traces clean, dark horizontal lines across the terrain, echoing the same linear discipline that governs every roofline and fascia detail back at the house. It is the kind of place where the architecture and the land argue for the same idea, and that idea sharpens further once you step inside the kitchen.