Family Album – Issue 49

Escanaba, Mich., John Klim and Beth Wilson
Our 1911 Prairie Style-influenced, architect-designed home began to come to life from near death after we moved here in 1995. The first thing we did was remove the foundation planting that had covered half of the first-floor windows. Working with a landscape architect and a historic-house painting consultant, we restored the house over five years. The interior has all its original fixtures except for the bathrooms and kitchen. During the restoration we discovered 1,000 original Ludowici roof tiles entombed behind a brick wall in the basement. Our philosophy is that, above all, a house must function for the family but retain its original character.

Sacramento, Calif., Nancy Trujillo
A physician, Edwin Wilder, built my bungalow next door to the main city hospital in 1901. It was rescued from potential destruction in 1982 by a previous owner/ builder who moved it across town to its present location. Dr. Wilder built a modest home of 2,000 square feet, but he was generous with its appointments. There are crown moldings around every doorway, wood paneling in the dining room, two clinker-brick fireplaces, and hand-carved banisters matching the hand carving on the exterior beams. There are 43 vintage windows, some as wide as 60 inches. As a preservationist, currently restoring another bungalow here in Sacramento, I have solidified my love and admiration for the style and feel privileged to be the caretaker of such a wonderful home.

Ashland, Ore., Jesse Hanwit
When my friend Tracy and I saw the For Sale sign in front of this house five years ago, we knew the house was a gem. Built in 1927 for Verni Victor Mills, an Ashland businessman, it had the simplicity and charm of a Craftsman bungalow hidden under renovations made over the years. Over the next three years, we brought the house down to its original wood and slowly worked at restoring it to its original beauty. The finishing touch was the carriage-house-style garage door added this past spring. It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a great house both to look at and to live in.

Arcadia, Fla., Jackie and Dale Scogin
We purchased our 1917 bungalow in June, 2004. Two months later, we got hit by Hurricane Charley, the first of three in a row, but we are still standing strong! We painted the exterior and exposed the true beauty of the home, which has two beautiful working fireplaces, original oak floors, original glass in the windows, beamed ceilings in the living room and one original bathroom with a water closet. Our town is a very small, old town with many beautiful old homes. This has been a dream come true for us.

Deadwood, S.D., Randi Coddington
As a second-generation southern Californian, I’ve always been attracted to the Craftsman/bungalow style. My husband and I have been coming to the Sturgis South Dakota motorcycle rally for years, and we fell in love with this 1908 Craftsman in historic Deadwood long ago. We always said that if it ever came up for sale, we’d buy it and move here; it did, and here we are. It has the original woodwork and windows; an eight-light casket door; interior lanterns and dreamy sconces; quartersawn-oak floors; stained-glass interior windows; and a basketweave tile floor in the bathroom with clawfoot bathtub, foot tub and showerpan.

San Diego, Calif., Melissa and Chuck Silva
We have lived in our 1926 Craftsman bungalow for more than seven years and absolutely love it and our North Park neighborhood. Our neighbors all comment on how lucky we are that our red gumwood (we think) moldings and built-in bookshelves and buffet are all in original condition; so many in our neighborhood have been painted. We received city historic designation as the George Gans Spec House #1 for our home’s significance to the neighborhood. We remodeled the kitchen to be modern yet true to the style, including a custom-made nook and quartersawn white oak cabinetry. We look forward to many years of enjoyment in our home.

Ladonia, Texas, Joanna Davis
My search for a bungalow I could afford in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area was discouraging with prices so high. I widened my search to smaller Texas towns, and in the beautiful northeast area of the state I finally found one. Its pier-and-beam foundation needs some correction, especially toward the sun porch, and the house could use a fresh coat of paint. I love the cozy feel of the house. It has all of its original woodwork, a breakfast nook and built-in hutch, and that wonderful sun porch with nine windows with a 180-degree view and door to a small private patio.

Provo, Utah, Kurt and Viktoria Peterson
Our house is located in the Provo Historic District several blocks south of Brigham Young University. The woodwork in both the living and dining rooms is gumwood and the floors are quartersawn oak. Opposite the brick fireplace is a unique combination of three windows at the top of the wall, and the extra-wide front door is gumwood veneer inside and quartersawn oak outside with three beveled glass panels. Our house was featured in the Provo Landmarks Tour of Homes in June 2004.

by Ken and Laura Liang

In 2002, we decided it was time to build a house for ourselves and our three young daughters — a place the kids could grow up in and have special fond memories of, a place where we could be comfortable together yet have our own more private domains when we needed them for study, work and sleep.We had no preconceptions of what style of house we wanted; we were focused on the functionality of our family life and on developing spaces that afforded the kind of casual day-to-day living we enjoy.

We had adapted to other houses we had lived in, but we were always aware that we were adapting our lives to someone else’s notions of how architectural styles and spaces support family life — or even someone else’s idea of what family life is all about. The older houses we lived in had character but lacked the functionality and modern amenities we wanted. Newer houses built to the maximum allowed space lacked character and looked out of place in more established neighborhoods. It was time to figure it out for ourselves.

We also wanted to see for ourselves if the experience of building a house is as bad as all the “war stories” we had heard suggested it is. It wasn’t. We’re proud to say we survived our first home-building experience. We actually enjoyed it, primarily because we worked with great people throughout our process and stuck to our original plans.

Function, Function

We wanted to build a house that was, first and foremost, a functional space designed to suit our family’s needs in the 21st century. Beyond that, we wanted to build a home that fit in well with the neighborhood and environment surrounding it; we did not want to impose an outsized new home into a neighborhood with 40- to 70-year-old homes.

And while we wanted a spacious house that would be large in terms of square footage, we wanted it to present a handsome but not intrusive profile to the street and convey a warm and lived-in feeling. Finally, we were determined to build within a defined budget in terms of both dollars and time.

Because we wanted a large house with lots of outdoor space, the first object was to find the site. Our search led us to a quiet neighborhood in La Canada Flintridge, in the foothills northwest of the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, where we found an older ranch house on a 34,000-square-foot flat lot overlooking a shallow canyon, with a view of the San Gabriel Mountains to the east and north. One feature of the site that especially attracted us is that it has a modest frontage but fans out to the rear on both sides to provide plenty of space for outdoor amenities and activities.

For the design of the house itself, we turned to Dave De Angelis, a designer who had extensive experience in constructionand then spent six years as a draftsman for a well-known local architect before beginning his own architectural practice. We chose to work with Dave for three main reasons. First, he was passionate about his craft. Second, he was willing to work — on a collaborative basis — with first-time homeowner-builders like us who had clear ideas and strong preferences but who also wanted to thoroughly explore alternatives and learn about design and building. Third, because of his construction experience, he knew what would actually work when it came to putting the two-by-fours together; we were confident there would be few — if any — surprises when we went from designing to building.

It also helped that Dave does all of his design work on the computer, which meant that he could, and did, produce design revisions literally overnight during the six months we spent in the design phase. Dave also understood we had a budget and held to it, sometimes better than we did.

Early on, we decided on a two-story arrangement, with the “public” spaces on the ground floor and private and utility spaces upstairs. Our floor plan began with what we regard as the core of our living space: a large kitchen that flows into an even larger family room, where knew we would spend most of our time together as a family.

We also wanted that combined space to flow naturally to the outside, so we had the family room open out to a large covered patio. We made the living and dining rooms relatively small by most standards; we knew that we would probably spend no more than about two weeks out of a year in those rooms. We wanted them to fit comfortably into our house, but we didn’t want to put a lot of emphasis on them.

We put Ken’s study next to the living room, with stained-glass pocket doors separating the two rooms. An investment manager and attorney, he spends a fair amount of time working on weekends, and his working space is far enough down the hall from the kitchen and family room to be relatively quiet, yet close enough to be easily accessible. A guest bedroom and bath are across the hall from the study.

We put the family bedrooms — each with its own bath — and the enclosed laundry area all upstairs. Because we did it all by computer, working through the hundreds of design iterations was fast and nearly effortless — even though it did take six months. By the time we were two-thirds through the design process, we had detailed plans and elevations for every interior space and surface in the house. Only then did we turn to the exterior design and the question of architectural style.

Style: Coming to Craftsman

Ken’s comfort with the warm atmosphere conveyed by interior wood — something, perhaps, that goes with being an attorney and spending much of his life surrounded by books and bookshelves in law libraries — led us to decide that the interior surfaces of the house would be dominated by stained wood. And it was that decision, combined with our search for an exterior style that would fit naturally into our neighborhood, that drew us to the Craftsman style.

Although the interior design had been completed from a purely functional standpoint before we even looked at possible exteriors, it became clear that the functional forms we had designed reflected Craftsman principles and that a Craftsman style fit our needs and tastes ideally. We discovered American Bungalow one day when we visited Historic Lighting in Monrovia to see if we could get ideas and craftsman referrals.

We bought all the back issues we could find and used them for guidance on the Craftsman theme and on specific features of the interior and exterior, like the height of the wainscoting, the depth of the fireplace mantel, tiling for bathrooms and fireplaces, color schemes and the detailing of the stairway banisters. And, of course, we bought and studied all of the popular Craftsman and bungalow books.

For the exterior, we decided to use a combination of darkly painted synthetic shingles and stone. Synthetic shingles aren’t “pure” Craftsman style, of course, but we weren’t looking for purity. We were looking for functionality — in this case, durability, ease of maintenance and, above all, safety: synthetic shingles are fireproof. To enhance the visual texture of the shingled surfaces, we experimented with staggering the elevation of the shingles in each row. The result is a rustic appearance that seems to work.

When we reached the end of the design process, we had a fifty-page plan that specified every detail of the house, inside and out. As a result, the construction process was amazingly orderly and straightforward, and everyone who worked on the project was able focus on the quality of what they were doing. We like to think that, in a way, the great amount of time and attention we spent on planning and design contributed to the quality of our finished product in a way that’s similar to the quality that resulted from the years of experience and practice that traditional Arts and Crafts designers and builders brought to their work. That, at any rate, is our hope.

Since we completed the house, we’ve had many compliments on how well we “renovated” this “old Craftsman house.” We couldn’t be more pleased. We understand, of course, that our house is a 21st-century interpretation of the Craftsman style, but we’ve embraced it because it is a “basic” design executed — we think — to perfection.

Table of Contents

Number 49
Winter 2005 (Purchase Here)

BUNGALOW FEATURES

New Construction
A Family Craftsman for the 21st Century
by Ken and Laura Liang
A young couple with three daughters work
with a great team and stick to their plans.

Renovations
Prairie Positive
by Thomas Shess
Newlyweds turn a deferred-maintenance
fixer into the home of their dreams.

Historic Structures
Kelly Bungalow Colony
On the nation’s first airbase, bungalows
are mute reminders of bygone military life.

Beneath Brown Gables
by Tim Counts
A family reconstructs the history of their
1910 lakeside Adirondacks camp.

Bungalow History
Robert Winter’s “The California Bungalow” at 25
by John Luke
A quarter-century ago, a pioneering act
of scholarly fieldwork helped keep the
bungalow from disappearing.

Departments and Craftsman Resources

A Letter from the Publisher

Open House: Letters to the Editor

Family Album
A foursquare is back from near dead in
Michigan, and a search for an affordable
bungalow ends happily in Ladonia, Texas.
Other readers report in from coast to coast.

Antiques
Perspective on Antiques
with David Rudd
In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, single-drop
lanterns hanging from a ceiling plate
have a strong aesthetic quality. Also:
a bizarrely humorous piece from Jamestown,
N.Y., and the lowdown on restoring a Royal Easy Chair.

New & Noteworthy
From plein-air paintings to a serene take on
the contemporary kitchen, a sampling of fine
designs for indoors, outdoors and in between.

Arts & Crafts Profile
North Prairie Tileworks: Designing
an Arts and Crafts Life
by Terry Tsujioka
A collaborative tile studio embodies a career reinvented.

American Bungalow News
This spring, plan a visit to San Francisco’s
New de Young Museum — and a side trip
down memory lane on Route 66.

Books
Beyond the Bungalow
by Paul Duchscherer

The New American Dream
by James Gauer
Reviews by John Luke

Directory of Advertisers

From Our Friends
The Best Job in the World
by Michelle Gringeri-Brown
Recalling homeowners’ love stories
and the finer points of editorial style.

The Bungalow Bookstore
Browse our bookstore for some great new
titles and classic editions.