considered. And so it does — beyond the pantry, recessed into a climate-sealed alcove where Harbour Town's salt air cannot reach, the same dark slate gray cabinetry reappears as wine storage, its raised-panel shaker doors now fitted with brass-latched glass fronts that reveal bottle after bottle resting in custom-milled cradles, each divider as precise as the shelf work that preceded it. The brushed gold hardware catches the alcove's amber accent lighting, lending the room the warmth of a private tasting cellar even as the crown molding overhead maintains its unbroken black line — a thread of architectural consistency that ties every room back to the kitchen's original promise. It is the kind of detail that residents along Lighthouse Road and Calibogue Cay have come to expect, where a home's interior must answer the grandeur of the harbour views outside, and where wine collections numbering in the hundreds demand cabinetry engineered for both beauty and true preservation. As the road winds from these coastal installations toward the foothills near Hendersonville, the craft remains unchanged even as the context shifts — cooler mountain air replacing maritime humidity, stone and timber replacing stucco, and yet the same hand that built these cellar cabinets now reaches toward