Painting in Grove Park.
Grove Park was built by Edwin Wiley Grove, who made his fortune on Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. By 1907 he had a thousand acres on the western slope of Sunset Mountain, and in 1909 he opened North Carolina's first suburban development. He hired Richard Sharp Smith — the same architect from Montford — to set the dominant style, and what Smith landed on is the look you see all over the neighborhood today: English Derived Craftsman, which is Arts and Crafts with English country touches.
The Grove Park Inn opened in 1913 and still anchors the top of the hill. The streets curve, the yards are terraced, the stonework is substantial, and there are three public parks tucked through the development. The whole neighborhood is on the National Register. Painting here means careful stonework masking, period-correct trim restoration, and a real color consultation for the original Sharp Smith palettes.
What we see on Grove Park homes.
Common home styles
1910s–1930s English Derived Craftsman by Richard Sharp Smith, Tudor revival, Colonial Revival, and English country homes on curved, terraced streets.
Popular projects
Multi-week exterior repaint with stonework masking and trim restoration, specialty color matching for original Sharp Smith palettes, historic plaster and trim interior repaint, and porch and porte-cochere refinish.
Climate & prep considerations
Sunset Mountain elevation adds UV exposure on south-facing facades, so we recommend five-year cycles on those exposures. North-facing sides hold seven to ten years. Mountain humidity means premium mildew-resistant primers on every job.