You’ve come a long way from ordering the house wine. Why shouldn’t you have the same selection in your home, as at the finest restaurants? Gerety Building & Restoration designs and installs home wine cellars for storage as well as entertaining throughout homes in New Canaan CT, and Fairfield County, CT. We can transform underutilized areas in your lower level into a wine cellar lined with cedar, mahogany, or exotic wood, with capacity for a few hundred or a few thousand bottles.
Gerety Building & Restoration takes every detail of wine cellar design into consideration. Our foremost priority is temperature and humidity control; many of our custom wine cellars are multi-zoned, using state-of-the-art technology. With a single click you can monitor your cellar’s status online, get temperature and humidity notifications, and receive alerts. We also address how your home wine cellar will be used – to store a personal collection or as an extension of your home’s entertaining space.
Gerety’s custom carpentry and in-house mill shop can create custom wine racks, display cases, and cabinets. Our wine cellar design services include sourcing natural stones and unique tiles for counters and flooring. Include a wet bar and sound system, and you have a complete entertaining environment.
A custom wine cellar is a special and unique addition to your home. With Gerety Building & Restoration you can be assured that great care will be taken in every step of your home wine cellar’s design and construction. We can all raise a glass to that.
History of New Canaan CT
"In 1731, Connecticut's colonial legislature established Canaan Parish as a religious entity in northwestern Norwalk and northeastern Stamford. The right to form a Congregational church was granted to the few families scattered through the area. As inhabitants of Norwalk or Stamford, Canaan Parish settlers still had to vote, pay taxes, serve on juries, and file deeds in their home towns. Because Canaan Parish was not planned as a town, New Canaan, when incorporated in 1801, found itself without a central common, a main street or a town hall."