Monday, October 10, 2016

1982 Golf Course "Dream Home" Becomes a  Dream Home for a New Generation in 2016

Before and After Pictures of the Transformation

Our latest project started with a well-built 1982 house on a generous golf course lot in the tidy Austin, Texas suburb of Lakeway.  After building their "dream home" in 1982, the previous owners loved and maintained it meticulously for the rest of their lives.  The This Home Has Potential Team immediately embraced the challenge of making this well-loved but dated home another family's dream home.  The prior owners left two jumbo bird houses and two normal sized bird houses in the back yard that were constantly abuzz with activity.  The birds inspired much of the decor for this project.  

The meticulous care taken by the original owners of this house is obvious from this "before" picture of this home.  Notice the recessed front door, arched windows and bare garage wall before and then after.
BEFORE












And AFTER
                                                                         
                                                                       
The major changes to the exterior elevation including bricking over the recessed front entry, removing the two living room windows and replacing them with all glass, triple, 8 foot tall bronze doors and adding the open front porch with exposed cedar beams.  We removed the arches over the windows (a common 1980s motif) and replaced them with stained cedar beams.  We painted the red brick a soft brown to complement the 1 year old roof and used gel stain to transform the white metal garage doors.  We added a cedar beam pergola over the garage door, removed the grass (which was 95% weeds) and replaced it with drought tolerant sod that would grow under the massive oak trees.  We also took out some of the concrete to create a grassy area and landscaping beds around the new porch.

This is a before picture of the living room windows, sunken foyer and inside of the front door.  These are the windows we replaced with the new front door unit. 

BEFORE









And AFTER




We added the recessed cabinet units and custom barn doors and wine bottle bins, stone floors, stone wall and barrel ceiling with bricks and left the original red brick from the front porch.  Here are more pictures inside the wine cellar.



This is the front door frame and red brick front porch-the recessed area you see on the BEFORE picture of the whole house.  We left the house numbers on the inside for a souvenir.  Jeremiah Weed is tea, by the way, for all of you folks wondering where you can buy some other kind of weed by the barrel. 



Finally, here is the entry to the wine cellar with the barn doors closed:














 Let’s check out the living room.  The major issues in the living room were the ugly red brick Heatilator fireplace with the giant vent front and center, the bookshelves flanking the fireplace which were not the same width or depth on either side.  And if you know me at all, you know that no symmetry is a no-no in my book.   

This is the view of the living room from the sunken foyer/new wine cellar BEFORE:

And AFTER:

                                                       

Hopefully, I will find the time to do a later post on how we disguised the ugly Heatilator vent.  After much research , we figured out that one cannot just disconnect the  Heatilator motor, cover up the vents and use the fireplace like any other wood burning fireplace-basically, the options are to keep the vents open or tear down the whole fireplace and start over.  So, we removed the ugly oak fireplace, built a metal frame over the Heatilator vent, covered it with Hardie planks and fire retardant sealer and covered all of that with faux wood tile planks to make it look like a cedar beam like those on the outside of the house.  We tore out the ugly oak side cabinets, built out the walls as needed to make the two sides symmetrical and added floating shelves.  As you can see, we added wood flooring and new 8 foot doors and windows to the golf course.  And look, there’s the horse picture that’s always welcome in our homes.  Love that guy.

Looking the other direction, here is a BEFORE picture of the view from the living room to the kitchen.  As you can see, there was a wall in between:










After removing the wall (and adding a great big structural beam), here is the AFTER view of the new, open space.   More kitchen views to come.










The original house had a decent sized dining room and a HUGE utility room, but no family room.  We decided to create a dining area between the living room and kitchen, steal part of the utility room and make ourselves a family room.  Here is the dining room BEFORE:

And AFTER:



The opening you see into the foyer was closed and is now the opposite side of the stone wall in the wine cellar.  The window onto the front porch had to be closed when we took in the front porch as part of the wine cellar.  In order to open up the floor plan and make sure there was enough natural light in this room, we doubled the size of the opening to the kitchen, removed part of the wall between the utility room and dining room exposing a window in the utility room and added a large three window unit.  

The sofa wall is in the place of the opening to the foyer and window to the porch in the BEFORE picture.  The three large windows are in what was formerly the laundry/utility room.  I love the little “homework” area we were able to create by taking in this space:



And the shiplap and Singer factory chairs?  Oh, be still my heart.  I love them in this area. Since we stole the only window in the laundry room, we added the bubble glass transom window at the top of the picture to get natural light into that room.  





Here’s the laundry room BEFORE:



As you can see, there was a LOT of unused space.  After taking part of the space for the new family room and replacing the cabinets on the left with a “mud area”, this is what the room looked like AFTER:







The transom window is the same one over the desk in the “homework” area of the family room.













Who puts the discussion of the laundry room before the kitchen!  Let's get to the kitchen.  Here are a few BEFORE pictures.  The first picture is the back of the wall that was taken out between the living room and kitchen.





And here is the kitchen AFTER:

And here is the kitchen AFTER:










Before looking at the bedrooms and baths, let’s take a look at a new space we found off of the garage.  The previous owner had a very nice wood shop off the garage that we decided to turn into interior space.  By closing up the double doors into the garage and installing a door in the back hallway, VOILA!  New room in the house.  As a bonus, the workshop had a large closet that we were able to steal half of to expand the closet in the adjoining master bathroom. 

Here is the work shop, during construction because it seems I neglected to take a BEFORE picture:






And here it is AFTER, staged as an office, but it could also be a bedroom or anything else the new owners want. Recognize the super cute sewing machine base desk from earlier posts?  One of my proudest creations!






Ok, time to look at the bedrooms and baths.  First, here’s the master bedroom BEFORE:


 Hello?  It's 1980 calling and they want their matching curtains and wallpaper back.   Whoever designed this house loved storage-enough to cover the whole “bed wall” in the master bedroom with closets.  These are in addition to a decent sized master closet off the master bath.  

We decided to keep the left and right-most  closets in order to create a cozy bed alcove:

Three things I have to say about this space:  
1.  The barn door to the master bath has mercury glass inserts that are soooo cool 2.  The wood accent wall behind the bed is made of a brand new product called, appropriately, “walling”.  It’s a much easier alternative to pulling a million nails out of pallets to create a “pallet wall”.  I recommend it.  3. The new 8 ft. tall doors on the closets are a good example of how taller doors can really add to the drama of  a space if your ceiling height will allow it.  OK, four things:  I swear the bed skirt isn’t purple.  Something weird is going on with this picture.  

The beige chair in the corner is one of two examples of upholstered furniture I painted to stage this house.  AGAIN, hopefully, I will find time to do a tutorial on painting upholstered furniture.  It was really fun to try it out for this house and I'll definitely be doing in again. 

Moving to the master bath, this house had something had never seen before.  There were two doors off of the master bedroom, each one leading to a different full bathroom-vanity, toilet and tub on one side, vanity, toilet and shower on the other.  It look a lot of brainpower and manpower to take down the dividing wall and reconfigure all of the plumbing to turn those two full baths into one nice master bath.  Here are some BEFORES of the separate baths:



                                 
                                   








And here is a picture of the new, modern bath AFTER:



These pictures truly do not do justice to how pretty this master bath turned out.  You can’t see them side by side, but the ceramic tile in the shower and the wood ‘walling” on the master bedroom accent wall matched almost perfectly.  The wall behind me as I’m taking this picture is a mirror image of the vanity wall in front of me-symmetry, sweet symmetry. 



Here are the 2 secondary bedrooms BEFORE:         Back bedroom with views of the golf course:And AFTER:


Front bedroom BEFORE:










And AFTER:
The pale blue chair is the second example of furniture I painted for this house.  It was my second try and turned out much better than the first chair.  The result feels like something between suede and “Sunbrella” type outdoor canvas.    See that headboard?  I was driving down the street with my sweet husband when I spotted a pile of old fencing on the curb waiting for the trash truck and yelled:  “Headboard, I need that gate for a headboard”.  He indulged me, as usual, and got out and threw the gate in the back of the truck.  I love, love, love how it turned out!
Here is the bathroom that serves these two bedrooms BEFORE:









OK, take a peek at the back of the house with the nice full light doors, the ugly pillars removed, some new lights and a double ceiling fan.
Back of house BEFORE:

And AFTER
I love how you can look all the way from the from the golf course to the front yard and vice versa. And I love how painting the red brick a neutral color brought out all of the neutral colors in the roof instead of the rusty browns.  I think it looks like a completely different roof.

Thank you for looking!  We love what we do and love sharing our results with anyone kind enough to look!   If you want to see more areas and views of this house, including brand new full bath we made out of a hall full of closets, look at this link from Realtor.com:   http://www.realtor.com/realestateandhomes-detail/913-Vanguard-St_Lakeway_TX_78734_M77556-05845


3 comments:

  1. The transformation is beautiful. Wow, what wonderful work you guys do. Joanna and Chip Gaines would be proud. Keep up the great work. You amaze me Virgil and Jerri.

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