Talk Back
Post a CommentMost Recent Post
(Nov 11 2007 10:13AM)
Read all comments (2)
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- A smaller home can still be beautiful
- Tapping an Overlooked Homebuying Market: Single Women
- 10 keys to a more streamlined homebuilding company
- Retool your sales process to meet tougher mortgage guidelines
- Presenting the 50+ Housing Awards of 2008
- The Land Dilemma: Is it Time to Buy or Sell?
- Here are the 100 Best New Products
- Minimalist Modern House Showcases Art and Architecture
- Modular and Green
- Wood vs. Engineered Lumber
Whole-House Remodel with a Tuscan Feel
An ambitious remodel expands a home in every direction while maintaining its Tuscan feel
Ann Matesi, Senior Contributing Editor
September 1, 2007
Professional Remodeler
|
![]() |
| The homeowners had outgrown their old kitchen. The new kitchen was relocated to the space previously occupied by the family room. After photos by Anne Gummerson Photography |
|
Before |
![]() |
The remodeled home was expanded both vertically and horizontally, impacting literally every room, says Bowers. The company's updated design included additions for a great room off the rear of the home as well as an upper floor office and guest suite; relocation of the kitchen; extension of the rear footprint of the home's bedroom wing in order to increase their size and number; a new full bath; removal and reconstruction of the central core of the home in order to create space for a volume entry and new upper floor as well as to add ceiling height and windows to the basement which was then finished as recreational space; a mud room with secondary laundry facilities; and a three-car garage.
The new floor plan for the split-level home includes four distinct zones designed to meet all of the homeowner's requirements. The main level provides space for the family's daily living and entertaining needs with key areas relocated to improve their function. The original dark and narrow foyer was replaced by a dramatic, two-story entry with a view out to the rear terrace rather than into the kitchen.
"The foyer is a very important part of a home," says Bowers, "because it really sets the stage for how the whole house feels."
The kitchen/breakfast area was relocated to the rear of the home in the space that was previously the family room. The updated space includes a large center island and a more contemporary visual connection to the new great room. In place of the former kitchen the homeowners now have a large, open flex space which includes a lobby for greeting and entertaining guests as well as the home's formal dining area. Multiple sets of antique, arch-topped French doors provide access to the rear colonnade and terrace from this zone.
![]() |
The addition of the upper floor contributed most to the dramatic visual transformation of the home inside and out by providing the opportunity for interior volumes and distinctive exterior architectural features. This level includes a computer center with a cathedral ceiling, a large office and a guest suite.
Big changes were also made in the fourth zone, the basement, which was located underneath the central portion of the home. A two-car garage, also below grade, adjoined the basement and provided the foundation for the master suite.
"Originally, the basement had a low ceiling and no windows. It really felt like a cave down there," says Bowers. "The homeowners really wanted to make better use of this part of their home so it could function as recreational and entertaining space."
![]() |
| In place of the kitchen, the homeowners now have a lobby which they use for greeting guests and entertaining. |
The remodeler paid careful attention to maintaining the integrity of the home's original finishes including preserving tile flooring, hand-painted frescoes and beamed ceilings and reintroduced similar details throughout the re-design. Arched doorways and windows were used to recreate, and even improve upon, the original architectural charm and character of the home.
|
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This




