image description
The new Eastover logo has an Asian flair as it beckons visitors onto its renovated Lenox property.
image description
Asian ink art adorns the walls of the first floor of the mansion.
image description
The library offers a calm space to reflect and read.
image description
The tea room cafe has south-facing windows to let in the sun.
image description
An eventual fountain adds a water feature to the property.
image description
The path leading to the pool building.
image description
The pool building is under complete renovation.
image description
The new logo also graces the bottom of the pool.
image description
The spacious lawn offers fabulous views.
image description
The outbuilding accommodations offer a hotellike feel.
image description
The mansion suites have been completely renovated as well.
image description
The Tallyho restaurant on the property is also being renovated to host parties and special events.
image description
Mini wind turbines and solar panels help keep Eastover environmentally sustainable.

New Eastover Offering Public Sneak Peek This Weekend

By Rebecca DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
The main mansion of Eastover Resort in Lenox is in the final stretch of a multimillion dollar renovation to turn it into a holistic retreat. The public is invited to tour the grounds this weekend.

LENOX, Mass. — A new chapter of the Eastover Resort in Lenox is starting this weekend.

For the last four-plus years, Ying Wang has been overseeing the renovation of the 600-acre property, which she and her husband, in the form of HG October Mountain Estate LLC, bought in 2010 for $5.4 million. This weekend, the grounds will open to the public for a sneak peek at the multimillion dollar renovation.

The resort will permanently open next summer, Wang said, as a new destination for holistic, group and personal retreats.

"It's coming together," she said during a recent tour of the grounds, still undergoing substantial renovations but ready to preview their future to the public.

The open house weekend starts with a Friday, Sept. 19, dinner at 5:30 p.m. The bulk of the celebration will be held Saturday, Sept. 20, when the grounds will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. for tours and workshops, as well as a noon celebration of International Peace Day at Tallyho, the restaurant located on Eastover's grounds, and a Saturday night concert with Steven Michael Pague and the Winged Heart Band. Sunday, the grounds will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. For a complete schedule of events, visit eastover.com. Attendance is by optional donation ($20 suggested) to benefit Pursuit of Happiness, a nonprofit collaborative of educators, scientists and Web professionals at the forefront of the "Educating the Heart" global movement.

When it opens permanently, Eastover will offer workshop and program rooms with multiple meeting and studio facilities for teachers, groups, company retreats and trainings. The estate, designed around the style of a "summer cottage," aims to create a contemplative and holistic environment; from its courtyards and terraces overlooking English and Japanese gardens to its mix of manicured lawns and meadows, woodland trails and breathtaking views of Mount Greylock to the north and October Mountain to the southeast. There will also be a host of amenities that will include spa services, a sauna, hot tub, spacious heated indoor pool and indoor clay tennis courts.

Mount Greylock can be seen to the north from the front of the mansion at Eastover in Lenox.

Wang, originally from a resort area in China, came to the Lenox area with her children, one of whom plays with the Boston Symphony Orchestra at Tanglewood. In looking for a unique summer residence, she fell in love with the Eastover property, which was for sale at the time and which she and her husband toured on a whim.

"We saw this beautiful place and we said, 'Oh my goodness,' " she said. "I fell in love with the wetlands. I'm not a house person."

She ended up needing to be a "house person," overseeing the renovation of the mansion, which included roofs, kitchens, water mains, sewer pipes and more.

"I didn't know we'd have to do so much infrastructure work," she said with a laugh. "I didn't know what I was getting into to."

Once that became apparent, she and her husband started brainstorming ways to make the property a year-round destination that would support their investment.



"After all these years of renovations, we can't just do a summer thing. It has to be year-round," she said. "How can we figure out a sustainable business model?"

So she decided to go along with what she was interested in: a quiet place for meditation, tranquility and peace.

"I want a place for people not coming here for a short-term pleasure," she said. "Something more profound that can affect their lives."

Born from that were the pieces of Asian ink art adorning the walls of the mansion, a tranquil library, sunny tea room cafe, areas for mediation and massage, and more. The first floor of the mansion will be open for people to stop by for some relaxation, while the seven completely renovated suites on the second floor will be used for VIPs and donors. The third floor will be studio space for yoga and massage.

The property includes several outbuildings that also have been completely renovated that will offer reasonably priced hotel-quality accommodations for the majority of the people who choose to visit Eastover. But with only 90 rooms available, Wang said, Eastover is not a traditional hotel in any sense.

"We don't sell rooms," she said. "We sell an experience."

Wang hopes many visitors to this weekend's open house will be proprietors of holistic businesses looking for a site to hold retreats and workshops in the future. She also would like to hold a yoga festival on the grounds and continue a concert series that started when she hosted the music festival "Berkshire Stock" two years ago.

Bringing those kinds of instructors to Eastover to share their knowledge is something Wang feels very passionate about in starting this new chapter in the life of an old mansion.

"Almost every teacher I speak to, I learn so much from them," she said. "And I learned so much about myself. I feel so grateful."


Tags: berkshire cottage,   resort,   yoga,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Ventfort Hall's 2024 Season: Reviving the Spirit of Festival House

LENOX, Mass. — Ventfort Hall is preparing for its 2024 season with a theme inspired by the 1950s Festival House era. 
 
The 2024 season at Ventfort Hall takes inspiration from the work of Bruno and Claire Aron and their daughters Madeline and Judy during the 1950s. A Jewish family, the Arons transformed Ventfort Hall into an inclusive resort, welcoming individuals from all walks of life and making it a hub for cultural expression. 
 
The Aron family embarked on this venture after experiencing a marked exclusion from Berkshire society as Jews.
 
"I'm thrilled Ventfort Hall is honoring my family's vision and the era of Festival House," Madeline Aron, daughter of Bruno and Claire said. "It was clear there was a vacuum in the area for places that were welcoming to anyone and everyone. Festival House became a magnet for diverse community and cultural expression. It was such an enriching time and its impact planted a seed for expanded accessibility to the beauty of the Berkshires and its cultural gems like Tanglewood.”
 
Season Highlights Include:
  • An exhibit titled "Breaking Glass & Breaking Barriers: An Obscured History of Baseball in the Berkshires," curated by Larry Moore, running from June 1 to September 20. This exhibit focuses on the stories of women and people of color in Berkshire baseball history. 
  • The Ventfort Hall Artist in Residence 2024 program, in partnership with the Berkshire Art Center, will provide a residency for a local Berkshire Artist, giving access and resources to an artist from a marginalized community within the Berkshires.
Public Events Schedule for 2024:
  • May 12: Mother's Day Tea
  • May 18-19: Community Weekend (Free Days!)
  • June 11: Tea & Talk with Louise Levy on "Mary Todd Lincoln- Hostess & Housewife" (2023 Encore and part I of II) 
  • June 18: Tea & Talk with Victoria Ross on "The Lenox Bachelors: The Misses Kate Carey, Heloise Meyer, and Mary Depeyster Cary"
  • June 25: Tea & Talk with Kathy Sheehan on "The Fox Sisters"
  • June 27: Concert: Piano Extravaganza by Prima Music Foundation
  • July 2: Tea & Talk on the History of Festival House
  • July 3, 4 & 5: Events to be announced
  • July 9: Tea & Talk with Elizabeth Winthrop on "Daughter of Spies, Wartime Secrets, Family Lies"
  • July 13: Paranormal Investigation with David Raby
  • July 16: Tea & Talk with Larry Moore on "Baseball in the Berkshires"
  • July 23: Tea & Talk: Claire Shomphe & Chelsea Gaia on "Beautiful But Deadly"
  • July 30: Tea & Talk: Victoria Christopher Murray presents "The Personal Librarian"
  • August 1: Concert: Prima Music Foundation's Jazz of the Gilded Age
  • August 6: Tea & Talk: Eleanor Martinez Proctor on "Untold Lives: Recovering the Histories of Eustis Estate Workers"
  • August 13: Tea & Talk: Chelsea Gaia on "Floriography, The Language of Flowers"
  • August 15: Concert: Prima Music Foundation's Chamber Music Soiree
  • August 20: Tea & Talk: Kate Baisley on "Hair and Makeup Through the Eras of Ventfort Hall.”
  • August 24: Special Event: Michelle LaRue in "Someone Must Wash The Dishes: An Anti-Suffrage Satire"
  • August 27: Tea & Talk: Louise Levy on “The Haunting of Mary Lincoln” (Mary Todd Lincoln Part II) 
  • August 29: Concert: Opera Meets Hollywood by Prima Music Foundation (Fundraiser & Season Closer)
 
Tickets, Memberships & More:
 
To purchase tickets and memberships, or to learn about Volunteer opportunities and upcoming events, visit GildedAge.org.
View Full Story

More Lenox Stories