The room to the right of the foyer has the elements one would expect of a resplendent formal dining room: wainscoting, crown molding, a long table, a china cabinet and a crystal chandelier hanging from a ceiling medallion. To the left of the foyer is the study, an intimate room with dark walls, tall windows, built-in bookcases, a leather ceiling and a crystal chandelier. White columns and crown molding set the tone for the rest of the stately home. The chandelier is from Fischer-Gambino in New Orleans. Past the heavy iron front doors is the foyer, in which the first of the home’s many chandeliers hangs in golden splendor. I had no idea I would ever have anything like this, but I’m really happy with how it turned out.” “It’s really neat to see it come to life. “Almost everything has been changed,” Jason says of the interior and exterior of the home. From many limestone accents to towering chimneys, he designed the house with influences from European castles that he studied while in living in London during a study-abroad program at Samford University. This renovation was a total design transformation. He started what is arguably his greatest house renovation to date when he purchased an 11,300-square-foot home in Greystone in 2014. It’s relaxing for me.”įor the last five years or so, Jason has taken his plans from paper to production, renovating and flipping houses. “Ever since I could pick a pencil up, I’ve drawn houses. Dreaming up house plans and drawing them on paper is what Jason Thomas does for fun.
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