from Wilderstein The mansion commissioned for the site was a plain two-story
Italianate villa designed by architect John Warren Ritch of
New York. Construction began in December 1852 and completed in the autumn of 1853. In 1888, Thomas Suckley's son Robert Bowne Suckley and his wife, Elizabeth Philips Montgomery, undertook a remodelling and enlargement of the house. This work was carried out by the architect Arnout Cannon of
Poughkeepsie. The style of the mansion was changed to the eclectic
Queen Anne style. A third floor, a multi-gabled attic, a circular five-storey tower, a
porte-cochère, and a
verandah were added in the process. The new interior of the building was designed by
Joseph Burr Tiffany, a cousin of
Louis Comfort Tiffany. The rooms of ground floor were done in the
Aesthetic Movement style using materials such as use mahogany, leather, stained glass, and linen. In parallel to the redesign of the mansion proper, the grounds of the estate were transformed by landscape architect
Calvert Vaux according to the American Romantic Landscape style. ==Preservation==