respected operations in the region. Step inside the skylight bath and that operational seriousness dissolves into something purely personal—a vaulted ceiling pierced by natural light that pours down onto stone surfaces, transforming a functional space into a private retreat that feels almost conservatory in its brightness. Where the land outside speaks to discipline and infrastructure, this room answers with indulgence, the kind of finish that signals a property designed not just for the work of horses but for the restoration of the person who owns them. It is the architectural exhale after the operational inhale, and it prepares you for what the weekend estate dimension of this property reveals when you round the next corner and realize the grounds themselves have been composed with that same duality in mind—