The fireplace wall features custom-fabricated blackened steel with a sliding panel that can conceal the television when not in use.
Before they began the renovation, Chan and Eayrs lived in the house for six months to get a good feel for the space.
"Historically, this topmost room would have housed the silk weavers' rooms, but the room is now Zen, one where you might relax into a freestanding tub or sink into a bed of plumped up pillows," says Eayrs.
The antique Norwegian log burners in the living room are framed within semicircular hearths made of radial clay bricks.
Inspired by their travels to Morocco, where they got married, the couple chose Moroccan clay tiles for the ground floor and spread an assortment of Moroccan rugs across the original wooden floors.
The couple’s preference for raw, natural materials, tactile surfaces, and verdant color can be seen throughout the house.
The walls were covered in raw lime plaster, and modern, flush paneling in rough, cross-sawn limed oak wraps around the interior walls to form cabinets, doors, and dado rails.