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Preserving History
A thoughtful
renovation honours the integrity of this 115-year-old home
It may not
have made financial sense, but undertaking an historically sympathetic
renovation to a century home was just common sense for a Goderich-area couple.
Steven and
Laurie are the third owners of their 6,000-square-foot, yellow-brick home, which
was built in 1892. Steven's parents lived in the Victorian home for 30 years
after purchasing it from the daughter of the doctor who built it. Along the way,
they repaired and updated the infrastructure, including the wiring and plumbing,
and carried out some cosmetic work, as well.
The home was
structurally sound when Steven and Laurie moved in 15 years ago, which made the
prospect of a renovation easier and less expensive.
"When
they did all of the structural work, they created an opportunity for us to make
a logical investment in an old home that also met our emotional needs,"
Steven says. "We love living here -
it's a great old place."
The original
architectural features, such as the plaster mouldings, hardwood flooring and
detailed ash woodwork, were still intact which was a definite advantage for the
couple.
"Most
of the feeling is still here, the woodwork is still here and any changes along
the way have been really made thoughtfully," Steven
says.
The couple
engaged Oke Woodsmith Building Systems to undertake a series of three
renovations, which began in 2004. Their aim was to restructure the rear of the
home to reflect today's lifestyles, while preserving its architectural
integrity.
Headed by
Brad Oke, the family-owned company created a dining and sitting area where the
kitchen once was, overlooking an east-facing side yard rimmed by cedars. That
area is balanced on the opposite side by a new kitchen, which takes the place of
the former family room.
The kitchen
now features a centre cherry island flanked on two sides by granite counters and
butter-yellow cabinetry with deep crown mouldings. Wide aisles between the
island and the counters allow for an easy traffic flow, which is particularly
important when Steven and Laurie host buffet-style dinners.
"There's
room for people to mingle; it works out really well,"
Laurie says.
Oke also
enlarged an archway between the kitchen and the sitting/dining area to visually
connect them. Built-in bookcases, positioned on each side of a Victorian-style
fireplace, signal a transition between the two rooms.
The dining
area, which resembles a recessed alcove, posed the greatest challenge since
creating it involved removing an exterior wall to add needed floor space. Oke's
aim was to blend the new work seamlessly with the existing structure.
"The
big challenge was to take a Victorian home and not ruin the philosophy of the
original design," he explains.
The focal
point is a bay window, replicated to resemble bay windows in the formal living
room at the front of the home. The long double-hung windows were custom
manufactured by Kolbe & Kolbe Millwork Co. Inc. to resemble century-old windows
and installed by Ridley Windows of Toronto.
The windows
provide nearly floor-to-ceiling views of an in-ground saltwater pool and outdoor
entertaining areas. "Our hope was to have them as authentic-looking as
possible," Steven says.
Draperies in
shades of raspberry, gold and green draw attention to the windows, which form a
backdrop for a trestle dining table with a wrought-iron base and a cherry top.
Terra cotta-coloured wallpaper and golden ash floors unify the renovated areas,
making them warm and inviting.
Connecting
the three rooms to the outdoor living areas was another of Steven and Laurie's
priorities. Because the swimming pool wasn't accessible from the rear of the
home, the indoors and outdoors were completely separate.
"The
pool always felt very disconnected," Laurie notes.
Oke built a
Victorian-style gazebo as an extension of a covered rear patio, which is
accessible through a garden door in the sitting room. Radiant in-floor heating
was installed in the floor of the gazebo to melt the snow, allowing the family
to use it for dining in late fall or early spring.
While a
simple side porch would have been historically sympathetic, it
wouldn't have
achieved the family's objectives.
"What
we have here incorporates all of the architectural elements of an original side
porch, but in a living space that works for today,"
Steven says. "The biggest single thing is that the
outside feels like it's connected to our house now
instead of just being the side yard."
In the spring
of 2005, Oke replaced the deck and fencing using a combination of white painted
wood and wrought iron around the swimming pool, and built a rustic pool house.
He also built an outdoor fireplace made of Shouldice Designer Stone that forms
part of an entertaining area opposite the gazebo.
In the third
and final phase completed last fall, Oke transformed a garage that was designed
for a motor home into a coach house. Built of reclaimed yellow brick to resemble
the home, the garage now features ornate white fretwork and coach house doors
topped by arched soldier courses of brick. It's design is practical since it
allows Steven and Laurie to park two vehicles beneath two other vehicles on
raised lifts.
Heated
sidewalks were also installed at the front and back doors, and the west side of
the house was landscaped with symmetrical, English-style flowerbeds. Boxwoods
and yew, interspersed with pink hydrangeas, lavender, hostas and magnolia trees,
create a sense of formality.
Steven and
Laurie agree the thought they put into the renovation has paid off.
"One of the
things I enjoy about it the most is that it flows so well," Laurie says.
"The kitchen flows to the gazebo and the pool area,
and all of the landscaping around the house ties it together really well."
Steven says
he understands why owners of century homes are tempted to gut entire rooms and
start from scratch. Undertaking an historically sympathetic renovation
- while
it was the right thing to do - added time, work and expense to the project.
The couple
never considered the alternative, however. "It was really worth the investment
and that has been exciting for us," Steven says.
"In terms of the windows and the woodwork and the
trim, Brad's guys have been great in replicating
everything."
Laurie
agrees. "Brad has such wonderful ideas and he's
great to deal with. We always felt very confident in the workmanship."
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Oke Woodsmith Building Systems Inc.,
70964 Bluewater
Highway,
Grand Bend, Ontario Canada N0M 1T0
Phone (519) 238-8893 Fax (519) 238-8894
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