House of the Week
Country living not far from civilization
01:00 AM EST on Saturday, February 2, 2008

Living on Hawkins Pond in Johnston offered Bob and Maryellen Quinn a real-life tale of country living minutes from Greenville’s Apple Valley Mall and about 15 minutes from downtown Providence.
“Our home sits on a peninsula with a three-sided view of the water,” Bob Quinn said. “It’s so peaceful here. This is like living in New Hampshire.”
The log cabin-looking, three-bedroom house at 25 Pine Lane also became a labor of love for Quinn, an engineer. He spent weekends and week nights adding some 1,800 square feet onto the 900-square-foot dwelling, built nearly 60 years ago. The sale price is $579,000.
Located at the end of Pine Lane in Johnston, it has a circular driveway, storage shed and two-car attached garage. There is additional storage inside a car port next to the garage.
From the road, the dwelling stands out as unique. Its log-cabin exterior and farm-style porch resemble something out of a western.
And even before entering the house, which sits on more than a half acre, the front-door’s side lights deliver a view of the pond. Nearly every room, including the cellar, supplies a view of the pond.
The house boasts two porches, two balconies and an oversized deck. Step into the house, and you’ll find the small foyer with a tile floor contains the home’s signature exposed pine beams and paneling. It also has a coat closet, and a door leading to a small mudroom and the garage.
The entry hall is closed off by French doors that lead to the living room with lots of windows, and additional sets of double doors lead to a wraparound porch. The living room has two ceiling fans, radiant floor heat and a wood-burning stove.
“It’s wonderful having heating in the floor,” said Quinn. “Our feet are always toasty warm.”
The Quinns said that they like a lot of light, and put in windows and windowed doors whenever possible. The floors and the wood walls and ceilings are an off-white color in keeping with the log-cabin theme.
The second floor, which houses the master suite, has similarly bleached oak floors and paneled walls. It includes a sitting room with a balcony, a full bathroom with whirlpool bath and double sinks. There is a roomy walk-in closet with a hook-up for a washer and dryer and built-in closets.
The oversized bedroom prompted Quinn to say, “Look how small our king-size bed looks in this room.” The master suite has air conditioning and a gas fireplace. “We rarely need to use the heat up here,” he added. “The wood-burning stove throws off enough heat to keep it comfortable.”
Quinn, a self-described weekend contractor, said that he worked on the house for four years. “I’d fall asleep at night,” Maryellen Quinn added. “Then, he’d wake me up to show me what he had just finished.”
The Quinns, who collect antique cars, found another home that can accommodate their collection. (Currently, he’s paying to store his cars, he said.)
During his renovations, Quinn said, he rarely deviated from the log-cabin theme. Most noticeable is the restoration in the kitchen where he put in pine cabinets, a wood floor and a decorative dark-brown tin ceiling.
The ground level boasts an open-floor plan with the dining room and the house’s original living room separated by the kitchen. The living room has a high ceiling of dark-wood paneling and a large fireplace with a floor-to-ceiling granite surround.
A hall off the kitchen leads to a full bath and a bedroom. He enclosed the original back porch and entry, and turned it into another bedroom. It has lots of windows, and, naturally, the home’s signature view of Hawkins Pond.
In the winter, they said that they enjoy ice skating; in the summer they swim and take out their paddle boat. About 32 families have access to the pond. He added, “No gas motors are allowed on the pond.”
“I love this location,” he said. “I also like that I live in a pine house on Pine Lane.”
The three bedroom log cabin-looking house, which has two full baths and is on more than a half acre, has oil heat and about 2,839 square feet of living space. The home, at 25 Pine Lane, Johnston, is on sale for $579,000; taxes are $7,444; and there’s a $100 annual fee paid to the Hawkins Pond Improvement Association. Celeste Fournier, of RE/MAX Realty Group, (401) 640-8897, has the listing. Fournier will host an open house tomorrow from noon to 2 p.m. A different House of the Week appears each Saturday in the projoHomes section of The Providence Journal. The feature tells the story of the house and the people who have lived in it. If you would like us to consider a house for sale as a subject of this news feature, send a photo, information about the house and why it is of interest, to Faye Zuckerman, real estate writer, 75 Fountain St., Providence, RI 02902; fax (401) 277-8250; or e-mail pjhomes@projo.com. For more information, call (401) 277-7333.
| Green eggs, no ham | |
| North Providence fire truck gets lunchtime workout | |
| "But the main thing is that you have two feet; a right and a left." |
More projoHomes stories
House of the Week: A cozy Cape in Kingston near the URI campus
House of the Week: A cozy Cape in Kingston near the URI campus
Most Viewed Yesterday
Pedroia misses game to be with pregnant wife
Imprisoned for murder, ex-Providence police officer will still collect disability pension
Providence woman slain, boyfriend arrested in N.Y.
Most active surveys
Should the R.I. Tea Party have been dumped from Bristol's Fourth of July parade?
What would you do about the two tent cities in Providence?
React to proposed toll changes on the Pell, Mount Hope bridges
Is Narragansett's policy of using 'orange stickers' to mark party houses unconstitutional?
Most e-mailed in the last 24 hours









You must be logged in to contribute. Log in | Register Now!
You are logged in as screenname | Log Out
You are logged in, but do not have a "screen" name. Create a Screen Name