Just glistening

December 03, 2009
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  • Holiday central is the dining room, with its massive E.J. Victor dining table with mahogany inlaid top and apron of French appliques. The Savvas host their extended family after morning services on Christmas, later serving a full sit-down, family-style dinner for 37 people.
  • Holiday central is the dining room, with its massive E.J. Victor dining table with mahogany inlaid top and apron of French appliques. The Savvas host their extended family after morning services on Christmas, later serving a full sit-down, family-style dinner for 37 people.
  • Georgio and Dimitra Savva and Bianco in their living room. The golden tinsel trees were originally store props.
  • Off the living room is an intimate tearoom, Dimitra's favorite room, overlooking the yard.
  • The family room evokes Christmas in wine country , with Tuscan hand-carved furniture, tapestries, and distressed leather complementing the rich merlot and green-grape colors adorning the tree.
  • Bursts of color set off black-and-white Rosenthal china. A velvet-wrapped ornament plays the part of a sorbet.

Set back from the road, the Savva home, with its brick exterior, looks cozy and solid, a felicitous blend of farmhouse and New England Cape Cod, with a bit of Europe mixed in.

But step inside, and space opens into more space, with unexpected bends and turns that reveal the Moorestown home's unending charm. For Georgio and Dimitra Savva, who purchased the home in 2002 just after they'd almost settled on a characterless townhouse, the home presented a blank canvas. Because both love design, it let them express their creativity and their love for their Greek heritage.

During holiday season, the 4,400-square-foot home, built in 1942, takes on a luminous quality that made it a highlight of the 2006 edition of Moorestown's annual Cook's Tour of very special houses, with proceeds benefiting South Jersey's Virtua Health Systems.

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But it wasn't always so appealing. Just ask Dimitra.

"The first thing my wife said when she saw the house seven years ago was, 'I'm not living here!' " Georgio recalls. Occupied by renters, the place was furnished in "early chaos," without charm or style. Georgio's father, who spent his youth in Greece, likened it to "a barn where you could keep horses."

Georgio, a designer for Unique Interiors in Cherry Hill, was undaunted. He instantly saw the home's potential and its good bones, and even imagined it as a holiday home for his large family.

Dimitra, whose background is in textiles and who currently works in fashion, did come around. And today, Georgio's parents occupy a large suite in the back of the home.

Visitors enter by the main door into a hallway; next to it is a small room that takes on significance at Christmas. The Icon Room, as it is known, holds the couple's religious treasures, including photos and statuary representing saints. The couple began their collection on their honeymoon in Greece 10 years ago, and it now fills multiple shelves. Included in the unusual collection, in a heart-shaped holder, are the stefana, the silver and pearl crowns the couple wore during their traditional Greek wedding ceremony in 1999. Candles illuminate the pieces at night.

Beyond the intimate room, the home rambles on, with its center core comprising a formal living room, dining room, kitchen, and family room. While each space is unique, there is a unity to the look and feel of a home that combines European formality with country charm. The balance never tips in one direction or the other, because that blend is exactly what the Savvas wanted.

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