The glass begins before the eye is ready for it, a corridor where every vertical surface surrenders to transparency and the landscape presses inward with an intimacy that reframes what permission means at this scale. Floor-to-ceiling glazing lines both sides of the passage, turning what could be mere circulation into a gallery of living light, the kind of architectural gesture that announces a property confident enough to let its surroundings do the talking. In a corridor built for thoroughbreds and the culture that surrounds them, this stretch of glass operates as both threshold and theater, framing the grounds the way a vitrine frames something irreplaceable. What waits at the end of this corridor is not simply another room but the full declaration of what the property has been building toward.