Page 31 - Great Camp Santanoni
P. 31

The Main Camp Complex

            Newcomb Lake






 Main Lodge

 Pump
 House
 Artist’s
 Kitchen/   Studio
 Boathouse  Service Wing
 Gazebo
 Generator
 Building            Bathhouse           The informal entrance to the log villa
 Icehouse   Wood Shed Site
 Ruins
         L
 Ash House

 Workshop Ruins        ike a woodland creature, the villa at Camp Santanoni
                       hides in low-growing, forest scrub. Screened from the lake
          by shoreline trees, its dark brown-stained logs blend into the landscape.
          It is solid, powerful, but not ostentatious. Stepping onto a porch obscured
 Site
 28       by a rocky outcropping and following it around several          29
 Service   Ruins  corners, it is possible to glimpse slivers of lake through the
 Complex  Existing
          trees. But the full impact of its location is only apparent
          from the shore, which offers a sweeping vista of a wall of
          mountains, like a theater backdrop to pristine Newcomb
 People generally like the unique simplicity,   Lake. To the north, solitary Santanoni Peak stands sentinel

          at the southern gateway to the High Peaks region of the
 the strange difference from the ordinary   Adirondacks. It is quiet, save the cry of loons.

 country place, the ease of living and   The Log Villa (1893)     Courtesy NYSDEC


 freedom from care. You have all the   Sixteen thousand square feet of roof, 5,000 square feet of porch, 1,500
          spruce trees for the log walls—the numbers are staggering, and yet the
 requirements of comfortable living without   villa’s presence in the forest is relatively unobtrusive. Robert Robertson’s

          (above) contribution as architect is certain, but what of the local laborers
 the jostling of the crowd or the tyranny of

 conventional life. . . . The world is at arm’s


 length and nature is your intimate.



 —Robert C. Pruyn, 1915
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