A decades-long renovation returns a Midwestern palazzo to its original glory [View all]
DESIGN
A decades-long renovation returns a Midwestern palazzo to its original glory
See inside the palace near Forest Park.
BY STEFENE RUSSELL AUGUST 16, 2018 4:00 AM
PHOTO BY ALISE O'BRIEN
Editor's note: This story has been updated to remove the address of the home.
When attorneys Mark and Patty McCloskey bought their home in February of 1988, it was the color of cigarette ashes. Still dirty from the days when St. Louis lay under a blanket of coal smoke, the homes Carthage marble facing had quarter-inch-thick carbon on it in some places, Mark says. The two Carrara marble urns out front, copies of a pair at the Vatican, had turned black, obscuring Neptune and his attending dolphins. The imported Caen limestone in the entry hall had been painted battleship gray, and the intricate wood carvings in the dining room (which, as Mark points out, are so detailed, you can see the birds individual claws), were smothered in layers of white and robins-egg blue. What had once been St. Louis most dazzling mansion now felt more like a haunted house. It didnt help that the first time Mark and Patty turned the key in the door, the temperature had fallen to 4 below zero and the house didnt have a functioning furnace. The prior owner had heated the house with 48 kerosene space heaters that had since been removed.
The McCloskeys joke that they were too young and naïve to know what theyd signed up for. But 30 years later, the house is as magnificent as it was when Edward and Anna Busch Faust held court here, meeting guests at the top of the grand staircase for afternoon tea or smoking cigars around the billiard table in the sub-basement.
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PHOTO BY ALISE O'BRIEN
PHOTO BY ALISE O'BRIEN
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