Southampton's Sayre Barn Reopening To The Public After Year-Long Renovation - 27 East

Residence

Residence / 1382082

Southampton’s Sayre Barn Reopening To The Public After Year-Long Renovation

icon 14 Photos
Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

A traditional stack of firewood between two trees in Sag Harbor.

A traditional stack of firewood between two trees in Sag Harbor.

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

Photographer Ulf Skogsbergh and Historical Museum Director Tom Edmonds in the refurbished barn. BY ERIN MCKINLEY

June 4 -- A far

June 4 -- A far

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Cultivator."

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Cultivator."

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Horseshoe."

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Horseshoe."

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Wheel."

Ulf Skogsbergh's "Wheel."

author on Jun 2, 2014

A far cry from its former self—a busy barn filled with livestock that used to sit on the corner of Hampton Road and Main Street in Southampton Village—there was no question that the dilapidated Sayre Barn needed a little help.Concerned that the building, which is now owned by the Southampton Historical Museum, would continue to deteriorate until it was no longer standing, museum officials last year decided to take action. The 24-by-37-foot barn has been restored, and it will officially reopen this week.

The Sayre Barn will be used for several historical museum events throughout the year, and it is opening with a photography show by local photographer Ulf Skogsbergh, who has spent the past nine months documenting its restoration.

“What is great about Ulf’s project is that he documented all of the mess,” museum director Tom Edmonds said last week. “So we are going from a mess to a beautiful multipurpose space.”

The barn was built in 1825 by the Huntting family and sold to Isaac Sayre a year later. At that time, it was at the corner of Main Street and Hampton Road and used for livestock. According to the museum, it used to be known as the “billboard” barn because posters identifying wanted criminals and runaway slaves from the South, and also advertising help wanted and upcoming events, like the circus, were posted on the facade.

The barn was later owned by the Dimon family and became an antiques store in the 1930s, when most of the changes, like new windows, a loft and a staircase, were made.

After World War II, the family gave the barn to the Southampton Colonial Society, which later became the Historical Society, which is based at the museum. In 1952, the organization moved the barn onto its property on Meeting House Lane by rolling it, on logs, down Main Street. Soon thereafter, it became the museum’s dry goods store and a tourist attraction.

In the 1990s, a drunk driver crashed into it and in making repairs, new wood was used to replace the old. The structure was closed to the public in 2008 because it had deteriorated so badly.

For the renovation project, the historical museum used the services of Strada Baxter Design Build of Amagansett, a construction firm specializing in historic restoration, to deconstruct the building down to its skeleton, and then rebuild it using whatever original woodwork they could. Where necessary, the group utilized newer materials, melding the pieces together.

“They meticulously saved whatever they could,” Mr. Edmonds said. “It was a very expensive project and very laborious—they re-created it just he way it originally was, they did the right thing.”

Mr. Skogsbergh’s photographs, approximately 30 pictures ranging from standard size to 20 feet long, will be on display at the museum from June 14 through October 18. Admission to the museum costs $4.

The museum plans to utilize the space more often, for example for small gatherings, dances, educational classes, or meetings. More information about the barn and photography exhibit can be found at Southamptonhistoricalmuseum.org, or by calling the museum at 283-2494.

“We needed to document this restoration,” Mr. Edmonds said. “To be a proper preservationist you have to document wear and tear, so this will show what these objects looked like in 2013 so that when we look at things again in 2020, we can see deterioration and changes and determine how to fix it. Ulf took the project and went to the moon with it—he took a museum procedure and turned it into fine art.”

You May Also Like:

Spring Is the Time To Pot Up Houseplants

In spring our gardening attention logically and naturally focuses on things going on outside. We ... 25 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

The April Ramble

April got off to a typical start. For most of the first two weeks of ... 18 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

AIA Peconic Presents 2024 Design Awards

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, recognized outstanding design, ... 15 Apr 2024 by Brendan J. O’Reilly

A Complicated Task – The Renovation and Addition to Temple Adas Israel

For any architect, the renovation and addition to a temple like Adas Israel would be ... by Anne Surchin, R.A.

Plant Radishes Now

As you may have discovered from last week’s column there is more to a radish ... 11 Apr 2024 by Andrew Messinger

In Praise of Trees

“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time ... 9 Apr 2024 by Marissa Bridge

PSEG Reminds Customers To Call 811 Before Digging

As National Safe Digging Month begins, PSEG Long Island reminds customers, contractors and excavators that the law requires them to call 811 before digging to ensure underground pipelines, conduits, wires and cables are properly marked out. Striking an underground electrical line can cause serious injury and outages, resulting in repair costs and fines, PSEG stated in an announcement this week. Every digging project, even a small project like planting a tree or building a deck, requires a call to 811. The call is free and the mark-out service is free. The call must be made whether the job is being ... by Staff Writer

Capturing the Artistry of Landscape Architecture

Pink and white petals are unfolding from their fuzzy bud scales, hyacinths scent the air ... by Kelly Ann Smith

AIA Peconic To Hold Design Awards Celebration April 13 in East Hampton

AIA Peconic, the East End’s chapter of the American Institute of Architects, will hold its 2024 Daniel J. Rowen Memorial Design Awards celebration on Saturday, April 13, at 6 p.m. at the Ross School Senior Lecture Hall in East Hampton. The work submitted to the Design Awards will be on gallery display. The jurors included Deborah Burke, Joeb Moore and Omar Gandhi, and the special jury adjudicating the Sustainable Architecture Award: Anthony Harrington, Whitney Smith and Rives Taylor. The awards presentation will include remarks by AIA Peconic President Edgar Papazian and a program moderated by past AIA Peconic President Lori ... 4 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

A Brief History of Radishes

The madness will begin. Adventurous souls have had just one day too many of cabinus ... by Andrew Messinger