Cabana
President's Cabin with Lake View
Galeria de fotos de President's Cabin with Lake View





Avaliações
10 de 10
Extraordinária
1 quarto1 banheiroAcomoda 3 pessoas92 m²
Comodidades populares
Quartos e camas
1 quarto (acomoda 3 pessoas)
Quarto 1
1 cama de solteiro e 1 cama Queen
1 banheiro
Banheiro 1
Banheira ou chuveiro · Banheira · Vaso sanitário
Espaços
Cozinha
Espaço para refeições
Sobre esta propriedade
President's Cabin with Lake View
Adicione as datas e descubra os preços
Comodidades
Cozinha
Academia
Estacionamento disponível
Churrasqueira
Vista para o lago
Lareira
Propriedades semelhantes

On Franklin Pond - Lake And Mountain Views With Convenient Lake Access
On Franklin Pond - Lake And Mountain Views With Convenient Lake Access
- Cozinha
- Lava-roupa
- Secadora
- Wi-Fi grátis
10.0 de 10, Extraordinária, (216 avaliações)
Regras da propriedade
Check-in após 16h
Idade mínima para alugar: 18 anos
Check-out até 10h30
Crianças
Aceita hóspedes de 0 a 17 anos
Eventos
Permite a realização de eventos
Weddings & private parties, Group parties
Animais de estimação
Não aceita animais de estimação
Política para fumantes
Não é permitido fumar
Informações importantes
O que você precisa saber
Pessoas extras podem incorrer em taxas adicionais que variam dependendo da política da propriedade.
Documento de identificação oficial com foto e cartão de crédito, cartão de débito ou depósito em dinheiro podem ser exigidos no momento do check-in para despesas extras.
Solicitações especiais estão sujeitas à disponibilidade no momento do check-in e podem incorrer em taxas adicionais. Essas solicitações não estão garantidas.
Festas e eventos são permitidos no local
Nota do anfitrião: Weddings & private parties, Group parties
O anfitrião não informou se a propriedade tem detectores de monóxido de carbono. Leve um detector portátil com você na viagem.
O anfitrião informou que a propriedade tem detector de fumaça.
Os recursos de segurança disponíveis na propriedade incluem itens como extintor de incêndio.
Importante
É recomendada a utilização de um carro para o transporte de/para a propriedade
Informações a área
Rainbow Lake
Com excelente localização em Rainbow Lake, esta cabana fica no centro da cidade e às margens de um rio. Adirondack Artists Guild e The Waterhole são visitas imperdíveis para quem deseja conhecer um pouco da cultura da região. O destino ainda oferece atividades interessantes em lugares como Área de Esqui do Monte Pisgah e Dewey Mountain Recreation Center. Adirondack Carousel e Saranac Lake Adirondack Scenic Railroad Station também valem a visita. Divirta-se com atividades aquáticas nas proximidades, como passeios de caiaque e rafting ou aventure-se com escalada em rocha e mountain biking.

Paul Smiths, NY
Nos arredores
- Brighton Town Hall - 6 min de carro - 4.4 km
- Paul Smiths College - 8 min de carro - 6.9 km
- Joan Weill Adirondack Library - 8 min de carro - 6.9 km
- The Great Lawn - 8 min de carro - 6.9 km
- Paul Smith's College Visitor Interpretive Center - 8 min de carro - 8.0 km
Opções nos arredores
Restaurantes
- Joan Weill Student Center - 10 min de carro
- Bobcat Lounge - 10 min de carro
- Donnelly's Ice Cream - 17 min de carro
- Charlie's Inn - 17 min de carro
- Adk Cavu Cafe - 21 min de carro
Perguntas frequentes
Avaliações
10
Extraordinária
A menos que indicado de outra maneira, as avaliações aparecem em ordem cronológica, estão sujeitas a um processo de moderação e são verificadas.
Mais informaçõesAbre em uma nova janela9,8/10
Limpeza
10/10
Check-in
9,8/10
Comunicação
10/10
Localização
9,6/10
Precisão do anúncio
Avaliações
Verificada
1 de jul. de 2022
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
Hospedou-se por 3 diárias em jun. de 2022
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
Travis S.
9 de mai. de 2022
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
Great character
Travis S.
Hospedou-se por 3 diárias em mai. de 2022
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
Lori C.
8 de fev. de 2022
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
Historic and Cozy
Lori C.
Hospedou-se por 3 diárias em fev. de 2022
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
David K.
23 de jan. de 2022
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
A perfect retreat
David K.
Hospedou-se por 5 diárias em jan. de 2022
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
Jennifer H.
15 de jun. de 2021
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
Fabulous Stay
Jennifer H.
Hospedou-se por 6 diárias em jun. de 2021
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
Ken K.
18 de nov. de 2020
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
Remote/Historical/Fantastic
Ken K.
Hospedou-se por 2 diárias em nov.. de 2020
Verificada
10/10 - Excelente
Allan A.
3 de jun. de 2020
Pontos positivos: Limpeza, check-in, comunicação, localização e precisão do anúncio
I liked our stay
Allan A.
Hospedou-se por 2 diárias em mai. de 2020
Sobre o anfitrião
Anfitrião: Tim Moody 518-327-3030
The Builders
At the turn of the twentieth century, much of the St. Regis Lakes area was owned by Paul Smith lumber baron, inn keeper, and raconteur. Many of Smith’s prominent hotel guests subsequently purchased lakefront property from Smith to build their own summer homes, or camps, as they came to be known. One such buyer was Archibald S. White, a prominent New York banker, and his socialite wife, Olive. The Whites purchased 35 acres covered with white and red pine trees overlooking what then was called Lake Osgood.
In 1907 White commissioned New York architect William Massarene to design his Adirondack camp, just a short boat ride from Paul Smith’s Hotel. Ben Muncil, the region’s unschooled master camp builder, was the contractor. White also hired interior designer and architect Addison Mizner to work on furnishings and decor and design several additions and alterations. White Pine Camp was one of Mizner’s first commissions. He went on to become one of America’s leading architects and the visionary behind the development of Boca Raton, Florida.
At the turn of the twentieth century, much of the St. Regis Lakes area was owned by Paul Smith lumber baron, inn keeper, and raconteur. Many of Smith’s prominent hotel guests subsequently purchased lakefront property from Smith to build their own summer homes, or camps, as they came to be known. One such buyer was Archibald S. White, a prominent New York banker, and his socialite wife, Olive. The Whites purchased 35 acres covered with white and red pine trees overlooking what then was called Lake Osgood.
In 1907 White commissioned New York architect William Massarene to design his Adirondack camp, just a short boat ride from Paul Smith’s Hotel. Ben Muncil, the region’s unschooled master camp builder, was the contractor. White also hired interior designer and architect Addison Mizner to work on furnishings and decor and design several additions and alterations. White Pine Camp was one of Mizner’s first commissions. He went on to become one of America’s leading architects and the visionary behind the development of Boca Raton, Florida.
Por que o anfitrião escolheu essa propriedade
The Camp
The camp that Massarene, Muncil and Mizner designed and built would be architecturally unique among the Great Camps of the Adirondacks. Its 20 original buildings included an owner’s cabin, dining hall, four or five sleeping cabins, two boat houses, a tennis house, bowling alley a Japanese tea house that would become one of the Adirondacks’ most iconic images. But unlike the heavy log style first developed by William West Durant or the ornate artistry associated with later Adirondack styles, White Pine Camp’s builders effected a more subtle rustic expression. Their “pre-modern” composition featured soaring roof lines, asymmetrical -shaped buildings, and the extensive use of dramatic, natural lighting. If windows are indeed the eyes of a home, White Pine Camp’s unusually shaped windows--in corners and clearstories--open every room to a kaleidoscopic array of natural light textures.
Another one of the builders’ innovations was the rough-milled siding developed by Muncil and Paul Smith’s millwright, Charles Nichols. It was a compromise between more traditional clapboard siding and the rustic slab siding typical of other Adirondack camps. Muncil and Nichols’ “brainstorm siding”, as they humorously referred to their innovation, soon became a common element of Adirondack architecture. Also known as “Adirondack siding”, it soon spread throughout the region and beyond.
In addition to its innovative architectural style, White Pine Camp’s designers surrounded their buildings with the most extensive landscape architecture of any Adirondack rustic estate to date. Its masonry walls, paths, bridges, flower plantings and lush rhododendron gardens create a medley of natural elements that embrace the camp’s grounds.
The camp that Massarene, Muncil and Mizner designed and built would be architecturally unique among the Great Camps of the Adirondacks. Its 20 original buildings included an owner’s cabin, dining hall, four or five sleeping cabins, two boat houses, a tennis house, bowling alley a Japanese tea house that would become one of the Adirondacks’ most iconic images. But unlike the heavy log style first developed by William West Durant or the ornate artistry associated with later Adirondack styles, White Pine Camp’s builders effected a more subtle rustic expression. Their “pre-modern” composition featured soaring roof lines, asymmetrical -shaped buildings, and the extensive use of dramatic, natural lighting. If windows are indeed the eyes of a home, White Pine Camp’s unusually shaped windows--in corners and clearstories--open every room to a kaleidoscopic array of natural light textures.
Another one of the builders’ innovations was the rough-milled siding developed by Muncil and Paul Smith’s millwright, Charles Nichols. It was a compromise between more traditional clapboard siding and the rustic slab siding typical of other Adirondack camps. Muncil and Nichols’ “brainstorm siding”, as they humorously referred to their innovation, soon became a common element of Adirondack architecture. Also known as “Adirondack siding”, it soon spread throughout the region and beyond.
In addition to its innovative architectural style, White Pine Camp’s designers surrounded their buildings with the most extensive landscape architecture of any Adirondack rustic estate to date. Its masonry walls, paths, bridges, flower plantings and lush rhododendron gardens create a medley of natural elements that embrace the camp’s grounds.
O que faz essa propriedade ser única?
As a guest, you have your choice of 13 distinctive cabins and cottages with soaring roof lines, hand-built Adirondack-style furniture, stone fireplaces or wood stoves, and breathtaking views. Two cottages are pet-friendly, and most have private porches or patios.
Also, as a guest, you have total and unlimited access to all our facilities and activities.
Want to go fishing or boating? Just walk down to one of our two boathouses and grab a canoe, rowboat or kayak.
Want to hike? Head out on a trail right outside your door.
Want to swim? Enjoy an invigorating dip in the crystal-clear waters of Osgood Pond.
Like to bowl? You can do so in the vintage bowling alley used by the President himself... as long as you set your own pins.
And don't forget to bring a good book. White Pine Camp literally has dozens of indoor and outdoor hideaways to while away a lazy afternoon - be it by a roaring fire in the 'Great Room,' on a rustic bench in our Alpine garden, or in our iconic Japanese tea house on a tiny island accessed by a 300-foot wooden bridge.
Should you tear yourself away from camp, you'll find an entire smorgasbord of natural adventures. We are surrounded by the St. Regis Canoe Wilderness, with some of the most extensive paddling routes in the country. And, 'down the street' - our version of two miles - is Paul Smith's College, where you are welcome to enjoy the fitness center, café and Visitor Interpretive Center, the ultimate source on snowshoe, cross-country skiing, bird watching and back-country hiking.
Also, as a guest, you have total and unlimited access to all our facilities and activities.
Want to go fishing or boating? Just walk down to one of our two boathouses and grab a canoe, rowboat or kayak.
Want to hike? Head out on a trail right outside your door.
Want to swim? Enjoy an invigorating dip in the crystal-clear waters of Osgood Pond.
Like to bowl? You can do so in the vintage bowling alley used by the President himself... as long as you set your own pins.
And don't forget to bring a good book. White Pine Camp literally has dozens of indoor and outdoor hideaways to while away a lazy afternoon - be it by a roaring fire in the 'Great Room,' on a rustic bench in our Alpine garden, or in our iconic Japanese tea house on a tiny island accessed by a 300-foot wooden bridge.
Should you tear yourself away from camp, you'll find an entire smorgasbord of natural adventures. We are surrounded by the St. Regis Canoe Wilderness, with some of the most extensive paddling routes in the country. And, 'down the street' - our version of two miles - is Paul Smith's College, where you are welcome to enjoy the fitness center, café and Visitor Interpretive Center, the ultimate source on snowshoe, cross-country skiing, bird watching and back-country hiking.
Idiomas:
Inglês
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