This Lighthouse-Turned-Artist Residency Blends Style and Sustainability

Share News:

The Orient Point lighthouse sits on a rock pile. (Jason Schmidt)

When was the last time you heard about a “gorgeous” hazmat situation? Yet that’s exactly the word master builder and installation artist Randy Polumbo used to describe the dilapidated lighthouse in Orient Point, New York, he purchased off a government website.

“It had peeling lead paint, cauliflowers coming out of the plaster, rust, mold, mildew, and a few dead birds and some bird crap, but it definitely was beautiful in that kind of decayed, weird way,” he says.

The stunning transformation mixes style and sustainability. (Jason Schmidt)
A silver grotto sits adjacent to the sleeping area. (Jason Schmidt)

Let’s back up a bit. Polumbo has never been into the easy or the obvious, according to CURBED (where we first spotted this story). And he wasn’t exactly in the market for a lighthouse. It was on the hunt for a decommissioned fuel tank that he happened upon the large cylindrical item. Its price tag: $5,000.

Polumbo even paid a sizable sum to get on the bid list. But one glance at the actual 1899 landmark confirmed what he suspected.

This was a prize that needed to be saved.

Again, some explanation. There is only one way to reach the lighthouse—via fishing boat from Orient, a 6.1-square-mile hamlet located in Suffolk County. The approach is perilous. There’s no proper mooring—just a metal ladder.

“I liked that it was doomed, and I felt that I could breathe new life into it, partly with other artists and creatives,” says Polumbo.

“It had this incredible energy.”

The kitchen sports a 12-volt refrigerator that runs right off the battery. “Even if everything else goes down, ice cream doesn’t melt,” says Polumbo. (Jason Schmidt)

It’s not the first time the Joshua Tree/New York City-based artist has initiated a major, albeit unconventional, transformation. His office is in a vintage Dodge Travco camper that is hoisted in the air inside his 4,000-square-foot Gowanus studio.

His artwork has been shown nationally and internationally across metropoles and natural landscapes such as deserts, ruins, and caves. Polumbo is also a LEED accredited master builder. For the Orient Point Lighthouse project, his handiwork goes far beyond salvaging the structure.

What Polumbo created is an uber-stylish, eco-minded art installation complete with solar system and composting toilet.

A handmade desk sits beside the original metal torqued ladder. (Jason Schmidt)

“Cleaning it up wasn’t really the hard part,” he says. “It took a lot of time figuring out the solar; I did different solar systems. I had two wind turbines that perished because the elements are so harsh — they literally blew apart. The one now is supposed to be a little more impervious.”

Since opening the lighthouse to visiting artists, Polumbo has had four takers including NYC fine artist Erin Curry. She stayed for two weeks.

These illustrations are from Erin Currier’s journal. This one depicts the approach and the ladder which welcomes you. (Art: Erin Currier)
Another entry features the dishwashing system that Polumbo rigged up. (Art: Erin Currier)
A pair of Beluga whales visited one enchanting night. (Art: Erin Currier)

Her only outing was a fishing trip. “I caught two striped bass at once on one line.” She also saw a pair of Beluga whales.

“It was an honor to be the first artist-in-resident at the world’s first green, solar-powered Lighthouse Artist Residency!!!,” Currier wrote on her Instagram.

“My friend Artist, Master Builder, & Visionary, @randypolumbo, gripped by a higher poetic madness, transformed it into a work of art & a sustainable & inspiring work space for artists.”

Randy Polumbo is a visual artist whose practice intervenes in perceptual, ecological, and propagational systems. Informed by his wide-ranging study of horticulture, engineering, and regenerative design, his projects use recycled, repurposed, as well as living materials to enact alchemical, spatial, and social transformation.

Elaine Raffel

Elaine Raffel