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The Dream
Excerpted from Country Home, January-February 2001
Lisa and Morris made the house feel much larger than its
1,700 square feet by opening up the ceilings and introducing
many large windows and doors.
When friends first see Lisa Mahar and Morris Adjimi's cozy
country home in upstate New York, they're invariably surprised.
The Manhattan architects are well known for the edgy projects
they have designed for such clients and Nike, Levi Strauss
and Swatch. Their New York City town house is a study in Modernism.
Yet Lisa and Morris agreed that what their cottage on Lake
Oscawana needed was a simple, traditional remodeling. "Both
of us had a really clear vision about what to do with the
home," Lisa says. "We wanted it to fit into the
area, not to stand out. The challenge was striking a balance
between past and present. That guided every decision in the
process."
Built in the 1940s and vacant for many years, the cottage
was in bad shape when Lisa and Morris bought it three years
ago. The front porch sagged under the weight of the upstairs
bedrooms. The living room floor had buckled from settling
and water damage. A brick-clad addition and a new skin of
vinyl siding in the 1960s spoiled the classic Cape Cod character.
Construction wouldn't be a picnic, either. The rocky ground
would need to be jack hammered in order to build the foundation
for an addition, and a steep slope behind the house would
make getting equipment to the site difficult. But potential
for the house, which sits about 15 feet from the water, far
outweighed any drawbacks.
The architects restored the home's balance with a master
suite addition. The earliest addition on the opposite end
of the house was gutted and rebuilt into a light-filled kitchen.
New floor-to-ceiling doors and stone patios take advantage
of the lake view and promote easy indoor-outdoor living.
Other walls came down and hallways were eliminated. Drywall
and simple beaded board replaced dark paneling. The kitchen
ceiling was vaulted to add volume and spaciousness. Sight
lines from the living room to the new kitchen and master bedroom
help expand the space.
"The best way to limit a budget is to limit the overall
square footage." Morris explains. "Our house has
four bedrooms, three bathrooms, an eat-in-kitchen, a living
room, and a utility room in only 1,700 square feet."
Like most first-time home remodelers, Lisa and Morris had
to make tough choices before and during building. Should they
spend from $20,000 to $35,000 to perfectly level the floors
and plumb the walls? (No, they could live with the slight
slopes and angles.) Should they insist on true divided lights?
(No, they got the look and energy efficiency they wanted with
simulated divided lights.) In matter important to daily living,
however flooring, countertops and fixtures-the architects
opted for style and luxury.
As the project wound down, Lisa and Morris realized another
thing-their emotional attachment to the cottage had grown
during the eight-month project. "We don't think of it
as our weekend house anymore," Lisa says. "It's
more like our real home."
The Plan
"The plan only took a couple of days," says Lisa
Mahar. "It's easier to work with an existing building
as opposed to creating something from scratch. The house tells
you what to do."
In this case, what the house was telling then to do was restore
the common-sense symmetry of the typical Cape Cod.
The new master suite addition took care of that by counterbalancing
the earlier addition. Now, new clapboard siding, painted a
cheery yellow, unifies the original house and additions.
To make the house more suitable for modern living and entertaining,
Lisa and her husband, Morris Adjmi, mobbed the kitchen to
the older addition, where there's room enough for a dining
table that seats eight.
A new entry and furnace-laundry room occupy the old kitchen
space.
The living area gained more square footage and daylight when
the architects removed the closed-in sun porch and replaced
it with a smaller open porch.
The couple retained the staircase and fireplace in the living
room, a move that saved money.
Upstairs, they bumped out the dormer a few feet to squeeze
in a shower in the bathroom for the three guest bedrooms.
The Payoff
December 1998: In December we began to question our initial
decision not to build a master bedroom suite. It wasn't until
a month after we began construction that we decided to change
our plans to accommodate an enlarged master bedroom suite.
Additionally, because the house was so close to the water
and our neighbor to the south, we had to file for a variance
from the zoning board, which was approved. The excavation
for the addition was difficult. The ground where we built
had to go down 8 feet to match the height of the existing
living room floor. The ground was solid rock, and it took
almost two weeks just to break it up, we used the rocks to
build retaining walls behind the kitchen and master bedroom,
this part of the project seemed to ho on forever. By the end
of the month, we were eager to see things like patios and
cherry wood floors (From Goodwin Heart Pine Co.) instead of
cement and mud.
The first-floor bath, near the master bedroom but not in
it, functions as Lisa's bathroom and as an overflow guest
bath when necessary. The architects don't like to plan bathrooms
with shower-tub combinations. "The shower is not an ideal
shape, and the tub has to have a curtain, "Lisa says.
"This room feels very luxurious because the bathtub is
a nice architectural form in the room." The European-style
handheld shower fixture is a stylish compromise.
Tips From the Pros
- Consider upgrading to premium material in areas that you
will come in daily contact with, such as floors and countertops.
In the kitchen, Lisa and Morris specified inexpensive cabinets
since they would be painted white. That allowed them to
splurge on marble countertops. Cherry wood flooring may
seem like a luxury, but it cost only a dollar more per square
foot than oak and makes a much bigger style statement.
- Use caution in letting builders specify lighting and
plumbing fixtures. They might steer you toward items because
they're easy to get, easy to work with, or have nice markups.
Lisa and Morris negotiated base installation prices with
their builder, so it cost the same to put in a $300 faucet
as a $100 faucet.
- Use paint to bring color to your interiors. It's inexpensive
and readily changed if you grow weary of the color. Vibrant
yellows, blues, and greens-the colors of the lake and garden-take
turns playing starring and supporting roles in the remodeled
cottage's rooms.
- Strive for excellence, not perfection. When remodeling
an old house, perfection, such as leveling the floor in
the living room, would have come at too high a price.
Sources
Interior details:
Cherry Flooring, American Cherry, 3 ¼-inch boards,
$6.15/square foot-Goodwin Heart Pine Co., 800.336.3118; www.heartpine.com
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