Our home remodeling services directory can provide invaluable information when you're getting ready to start moving forward with your remodeling project.
Click here to visit our Homeowner's Resource Guide containing verified architects, interior designers, landscapers, building contractors, and more.
TOWERING
SUCCESS
Shaker design sense and a rooftop tower
turn this bland 1970s house
into a home worthy of heirloom status.
DESIGN BY JEFF NELSON
CONSTRUCTION BY CHATHAM BUILDING & DESIGN
TEXT BY DAVE HOLBROOK
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY BY PATRICK WISEMAN
The real estate ad read "location, location, location",
and, indeed, a one-day, Open House showing in 2003 of this
circa 1973 dormered Cape-style home in Dennis attracted six
seriously interested buyers. In the end, the current homeowners'
bid prevailed.
Situated about two-tenths of a mile from deeded beach rights
on Cape Cod Bay, the existing house had neither significant
structural problems nor much to commend its plain-vanilla
design. A water view, only partly glimpsed from the second
floor, stretches from Provincetown to the Sandwich bluffs.
In fact, a home inspector hired by the homeowners pointed
out the full extent of the view following his rooftop inspection
and got the new owners thinking about adding a widow's walk
to take better advantage of it. A more pressing priority not
addressed by the existing floor plan was the need to accommodate
the couple and their six children. The existing 2,200 square
feet wouldn't meet the demand. So, without ever moving into
their new home, they began the search for a remodeler.
With a better idea of what they didn't want than what they
did, the homeowners considered preliminary design proposals
from two respected design-build firms before consulting Jeff
Nelson of Chatham Building and Design and taking a tour of
one of his company's recently completed homes. What they saw
struck them immediately as what they'd been unable to articulate:
simple, classic, Shaker-derived elements that accommodate
contemporary living with timeless character and practical
details. Nelson has honed his specialized approach to residential
design during his 28 years in residential building and remodeling,
drawing upon his observation of traditional methods and his
formal schooling in architectural design. “"Many
of the details I've adapted come from taking old houses apart
and seeing how those old builders put things together,"”
Nelson says. The distillation of his experience captures the
essential charm of many a historical Cape home, but with the
comfort and advantages of modern space planning.
Square footage previously devoted to an attached garage gave
way to living space in the new design. This required the demolition
of a good portion of the existing structure. A full-basement
foundation under the new wing replaced the old garage slab
and joined the existing poured-concrete basement, providing
plenty of below-grade storage and space potential.
In the remaining structure, Nelson found some floor framing
in need of reinforcement. Elsewhere, existing structural irregularities
drove the decision to add a layer to an area of existing wood
flooring in order to make a flush transition between wood
and tile floors, an example of unforeseen cost added to the
job. Natural stone floor tile requires an exceptionally stiff
floor - twice that specified for ceramic tile - because it's
more brittle and prone to cracking if not properly supported.
THE TOWER
A prominent and striking feature in the redesigned roofline
is the tower room that stands at the right-angle junction
between the main roof ells. Because the home sits in a historic
district, approval of the exterior design was required; the
tower room raised a debate and just scraped through board
approval, moving from a tied vote to a favorable 3-to-1 decision
after a couple of on-the-spot design modifications. You'd
never miss them in the final design, which rests comfortably
in shingled style from both front and rear perspectives.
The tower concept grew out of the widow's walk discussion.
Nelson discouraged the idea of building an open widow's walk
for the simple reason, he says, “"they don't get
used."” The room was originally designed as a regular
10- by 10-foot square, but Richard, an orthopedic surgeon,
wanted to lengthen the room on one axis, specifically to allow
him to enjoy the therapeutic benefits of a hammock. In fact,
extending the tower's dimensions to 10 by 13 feet actually
helped to resolve a design problem, that of integrating the
tower gracefully into the rear roof intersection and adjacent
second-story walls. The end result speaks for itself, adding
dramatic style to the rear elevation at an otherwise awkward
and unadorned junction.
The tower is reached from the master bedroom and an adjacent
guest room situated on the second floor, giving it some exclusivity
from the home's common spaces. Its interior is elegantly finished
in mahogany bead board and clear mahogany trim, showing off
some advanced carpentry skills and tasteful proportions in
the small space. The tower is, after all, a tower, and access
is via a stair of unusual, alternating-tread design. A working
prototype ironed out intangible design decisions such as proper
tread height and, more important, which leg to lead with when
descending. This might not seem to matter, but the tower's
stair is of necessity at right angles to the upper landing
rather than fronting it.
THE KITCHEN
The kitchen is a beautiful tribute to the calming, homey
goodness of this building style. The cabinetry is built right
in place, unlike the fixed-dimension plywood and particleboard
boxes one otherwise buys to roughly fill the lineup. There
are at least two reasons for building cabinets in place: First,
that's the only way they used to be made and you can't buy
a kitchen like this down at the big-box building supply; and
second, if you could and did, you'd have preempted the flexibility
and serendipity of using existing space exactly the way you
decide. The look of the site-built kitchen comes straight
out of every old Cape home you've ever loved, where traditional
cabinetry grew and changed to suit the user and the room.
In this kitchen, wall cabinets
mix open shelving and concealed storage. Rather than crowding the sink
window, the cabinets are held back to allow more light
to enter, the resulting spaces bridged with simple and decorative
corner shelves. Laid out in practical workstations, the
clear, wide-pine cabinets follow traditional lines and feature
delicate edge-bead treatments that not only supply a subtle
decoration but also protect otherwise sharp corners from
dents and damage.
Painted inside and out in a continuation of the general door,
window and base trim color, the cabinets truly become an irreplaceable,
key component in the home's ambience.
The countertops are finished in Brazilian soapstone that
required multiple trips to the supplier for selection. Soapstone
is a highly workable material that can actually be cut and
worked using conventional woodworking tools, a characteristic
that's been exploited for hundreds of years to make, among
other things, the original farmhouse sinks.
The new addition actually stepped the building back from
the lot line relative to where the garage entrance had been.
In its place is a laundry and mudroom side entry, the traditional “working door" in
a typical Cape home. (Bona-fide locals know not to knock
at the front entry.) Beyond the laundry is a roomy walk-in
pantry, both with stone tile floors that will never wear
out or look dated. The pantry naturally opens to the kitchen,
the typical first stop in most homecomings. It's a very logical,
practical progression of spaces.
Communication between the homeowners and Nelson took place
largely by telephone and e-mail, as well as via a dedicated
virtual job folder on Nelson’s company web site, chathambuildinganddesign.com.
Accessible
by password, the site enabled the homeowners to review material
selections, structural conditions demanding decisions and
weekly progress on the job. “This
system has been working extremely well for us, and we’re still tweaking
it and making improvements,” says Nelson, who regularly photo-documents
his projects for reference.
On the home’s second floor, Nelson laid poplar
planks tightly together, repairing imperfections in the lumber with epoxy filler
before sanding the floors to a smooth, even plane, ready for painting. The
floors received a traditional New England “spattered” finish,
a decorative combination of complementary colored paint dots literally
spattered onto a painted field color at random. This kind of finish takes
a day or two longer than a urethane finish to harden sufficiently for foot
traffic, but delivers good service life, relatively casual maintenance
and tons of local flavor.
Nelson places true thresholds (beveled-edge board
atop the flooring) across his interior door openings. “Everyone’s forgotten about thresholds,” he
says, “but you’ve got to have them there to give the door clearance
over scatter rugs.” With the door closed, there’s no gap
between its bottom edge and the floor, enhancing privacy and giving the
opening a truly finished look. Once you notice thresholds, other doorways
look somehow incomplete without them.
The
homeowners quickly became comfortable enough with Nelson’s
vision and methods to give him relatively free rein with the details.
Nelson determined nearly all the home’s interior and exterior
details, from the height of a wainscot paneling section to full floor,
wall and ceiling surface treatments, built-in cabinets and shelving,
niches, moldings, window and door trim, and much more. “We’ve
been surprised and delighted with the entire process, and with the
progress,” the homeowner says.
Nelson worked on a cost-plus basis within
a projected $500,000 budget and pitted his energies against a
firm completion date of May 15. However, builder and client
determined that they’d be making opportunistic design
changes on the fly and that the budget would have to tolerate
vertical adjustments. The homeowners say they plan to leave
the home to their children and grandchildren to enjoy, making
the somewhat open-ended aspect of the job’s
final cost more palatable.
At ground level, wide pine plank flooring,
beamed ceilings and pine trim connect the rooms to one another
with attentive craftsmanship in evidence everywhere. It’s
the reliance on the wood, simply defined and expertly fitted,
that anchors the ambience in stylish, casual comfort. There’s
a sense of heritage, and of being cradled in a great wooden
basket, lending an overall sense not merely of house, but
of home.
Visit our Where to Buy Section
for information on purchasing products from this
project.