A
man's home might be his castle, but for John D.
"Jack" Phillips it is his passion. So
deeply does he love his 325-acre estate near Keswick
on the edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains that he
went into a funk after he signed a contract to sell
it last spring. "I woke up and realized that
was my home," says the 59-year-old CEO of Atlanta-based
World Access Inc. "I plan to retire there.
I went through the withdrawals like you've never
seen."
Phillips
immediately started bargaining to get it back. "Two
days before it closed, I came up with a compromise
that made the buyer happy and got me my farm back.
I begged. I pleaded. I was thinking I'd never be
able to find another one," says Phillips. The
"compromise" cost him hundreds of thousands
of dollars, but he doesn't regret changing his mind.
"It's an investment of the heart," he
says of Airslie, an estate in a setting so beautiful
and bucolic that Phillips refers to it as the place
"where I go to get in touch with myself."
Many
of the state's well-to-do, especially those on this
year's list of "The Virginia 100," feel
the same way. While some may own Park Avenue penthouses
or Caribbean hideaways, many sons and daughters
of this state consider their Old Dominion properties
sacred ground.
Phillips
is no different. A native Virginian who grew up
in Hampton, he still has family in the state including
a son who graduated last month from the University
of Virginia. Further cementing his ties to Virginia,
he bought the Airslie estate for $6.1 million back
in 1995. Phillips immediately fell in love with
its 8,600-square-foot home and all its accoutrements
- barns, stables, woods, pastures and four guest
cottages. The only reason he agreed to sell it in
the first place was that a buyer, who had been eyeing
Airslie for years, caught him at a weak moment.
Phillips was piqued, because some of his family
members don't enjoy coming to the farm as much as
he does. To understand why he loves this property
so, he invited Virginia Business for a look around.
Situated
in the heart of hunt country in expensive Albemarle
County, Phillips says Airslie offers him something
he can't find in populous Atlanta or even at his
beach home in Sea Island, Ga. - a peaceful refuge
in a rural setting that harkens back to a slower
way of life. "It pulls you back to something
you remember - a better time. It's a wonderful tranquilizer,"
he says.
So
wonderful that Phillips flies from Atlanta to Charlottesville
in a private plane about once a month. From there,
he hops in a car and drives to Airslie about 10
miles away. The entire trip takes little more than
an hour, but Phillips says he might as well be entering
another world. Left behind are worries and demands
that come with leading an international telecommunications
company that's in the midst of reorganizing after
filing for bankruptcy. It's also waging a multi-million
lawsuit against a foreign competitor, one of those
complications that Phillips likes to forget when
roaming the Virginia countryside in a Suburban he
keeps at Airslie.
One
of his favorite spots on the farm is a bluff where
Phillips can soak up the beauty of Albemarle County.
From this vantage point, miles of white fences stretch
across green rolling hills. Horses graze peacefully
in a nearby field, lulled it seems by a breeze that
blows steadily from the Blue Ridge Mountains. They
rise majestically, wrapped in that famous blue haze,
just beyond State Route 22 . "If you don't
feel like that's heaven," Phillips says of
the mountains, "you at least know it's got
the same zip code."
This
pastoral paradise draws not only the rich, but the
famous. Other Albemarle homeowners include Hollywood
actress Sissy Spacek, novelist John Grisham and
rock star Dave Matthews, who recently purchased
much of the land that John Kluge, an old colleague
of Phillips, donated to U.Va. Phillips says they're
attracted by the area's natural beauty, its history
- several presidents had homes in Albemarle County
including Thomas Jefferson - and the friendly local
people. "You can live here quietly and not
be bothered."
Jim
Bonner, president of The Land Office, a Charlottesville
real estate company that lists many estate properties,
says the market for second homes is lively. "The
appreciation of high-end real estate in Albemarle
County has been anywhere from 30 to 50 percent over
the last three years." He estimates that Phillips'
estate, which now includes adjoining historic Fendowrie
with a farm house dating back to 1733, is worth
more than $9 million today. Bonner, who represented
Phillips when he purchased the property, is well
acquainted with Airslie. He says the estate is so
striking with its white fencing and stately Doric
columns that it was once used by Playboy magazine
as a backdrop for a feature on female college students
attending U.Va.
While
on the farm, Phillips and his family ride all-terrain
vehicles over six miles of trails that wind through
acres of mature hardwoods. It's not unusual for
them to see a fox or a turkey vulture. Several years
ago, one of Phillips' sons shot his first turkey
on the farm, a 21-pounder that was mounted and now
hangs in the son's bedroom at Airslie. Hunting trophies
are also evident on the home's second landing floor
where another son has draped animal skins from a
zebra, a wildebeest and a kudu, shot during big-game
hunting safaris to Africa. A small but direct sign,
"Do not step on," warns away visitors
who might mistake the skins for rugs. Phillips doesn't
hunt himself, but likes being around wildlife. "At
night the deer come out and eat right up next to
my Suburban," he says.
While
Airslie is spacious and intricately detailed with
10-foot ceilings and detailed moldings, it's not
so big that Phillips' family - a wife and four children
- feel lost. The home's design encourages togetherness
with second-floor bedroom balconies overlooking
a magnificent mahogany-paneled family room. This
is where the family gathers on winter evenings in
front of a big fireplace. Besides the rich paneling,
another distinctive feature of the family room is
an aviary. The large glass cage, also detailed in
mahogany, is home to three colorful finches.
In
the fall when the foliage transforms the countryside
into a blazing tapestry of amber, reds and golds,
the Phillips gather on the outdoor terrace, located
just through the French doors that run nearly the
full length of the family room. Again, an outdoor
brick fireplace, served by the same flue on the
fireplace in the family room, provides the focal
point. Designed around tall Linden trees, the terrace
offers a great view of gently rolling land and beckons
visitors with comfortable wicker furniture. A few
steps away is a pool, landscaped with flowers during
the summer months.
One
of the most stunning rooms at Airslie is what farm
manager Will Holt refers to as "the pink room."
Technically, he speaks of the living room, located
off the home's impressive two-story entrance hall,
which projects an air of dignified formality with
its marbled flooring, raised panel wood wainscoting
and handpainted wallpaper. In contrast, the "pink
room" seems much less formal, because of its
airiness. Triple-hung windows and French doors across
the front facing the mountains bathe the room in
light, warming up the sponged pink color on the
walls. The colors here are soft, with touches of
blue, green and yellow accented in many furnishings,
including the fringe on the window treatments and
the English plates displayed on the stark white
mantle of the fireplace. Two, tall curved arches
lead to French doors that open onto a small side
terrace, giving the room a graceful sense of proportion.
In
fact, if a single word could describe Airslie, it
would be graceful. Its design, from the small bar
tucked off the hall to a modern kitchen equipped
with stainless steel appliances, allows for elegant,
but comfortable living. The third floor even includes
a workout room with weights and a treadmill. Just
outside the room stands a gorgeous grandfather clock
- an appealing juxtaposition of the old and the
new.
For all the home's beauty, Phillips seems most enchanted
when soaking up the rural outdoors. At twilight,
he likes to ride up to the bluff with a bottle of
Moet Chandon White Star champagne. From there, he
can enjoy the sunset and, later, the night stars.
"It just gears you down," he says. There's
something about Airslie - perhaps the freedom to
explore and the space - that reminds Phillips of
the way he felt when growing up in Hampton around
the Chesapeake Bay. "I lived a Tom Sawyer existence,"
he reminisces. Even Tom Sawyer would like this place,
except for maybe all those white fences.
Return
to Virginia Business - June 2002