What a Difference (Decent) Windows Make…

What a Difference (Decent) Windows Make…

I’ve been waiting to see how this project on Club Boulevard was turning out for a while, and just got a chance to walk the house with the contractor and homeowner earlier this week.  The house is a lovely 1910’s Craftsman that had been added onto in some odd ways over the past 40 years, and our mission was to make the rear enclosed porches and additions more useful, add a screened porch, and unify the exterior.

Someone in the 1980s added a rear master bedroom on the second floor and a breakfast room off the kitchen without considering the existing roofline, original window pattern or proportion, or the exterior materials.  It made the new pieces feel very pasted onto the original house, and brought lots of attention to the unbalanced rear facade.

South Facade

The rear of the house before renovation. The previous work to the house reused a few of the original windows (on the left) and used 1/1 windows in the rest that were wider and shorter than most of the original windows.

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The new rear facade has a single roofline connecting the breakfast nook, screened porch, and mudroom, which balances the asymmetrical rear gable. New, taller windows that match the originals replaced the 1/1 units, and cedar shake pulls together the exterior.

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The original house, visible under the hipped roof to the left, has plain wood weatherboard on the first story and cedar shake on the second.

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The mudroom’s addition on the left and the screened porch on the right are connected by a single hipped roof with exposed eaves, matching the original house.

Riverbank Construction, a pleasure to work with as always, has a few pieces to wrap up before it’s all said and done. I’m looking forward to seeing the final details in place and taking photos of the rest of the project in the next couple of weeks.  It’s one that will be featured in the portfolio to be sure!

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hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702

Sneak Peak

Sneak Peak

In the final stretch of finish

The owners of the Purple Castle (1106 Alabama Ave.) are kindly offering their house up for a tour on this coming Thursday evening, Dec. 1, 5-7pm.  I’ll be on hand to answer questions about tax credits, and there’s a suggested $5 entry fee – a donation to Preservation Durham.  Come and visit!

Book a Consult

hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702

Progress is being made!

Progress is being made!

It’s been a busy fall around here, and as we careen into the holidays, it’s glaringly obvious that I need to get some photos up here!  A proper update will be on my thanksgiving break to-do, but a few teasers are in order.  Remember the purple castle?  It’s not so purple anymore, but instead nearly finished.  The homeowners are hoping to move in early December, and Preservation Durham is planning a sneak peak tour the week after Thanksgiving.  The first floor especially has been very well restored, and it’s a treat to see it repaired properly.

 

Also heading towards finish is the whole house renovation on Ottawa.  It has been under construction all summer, but only received a fresh coat of paint recently.  Given that it had been one story originally and had a wide band between the first and second floors, we chose a two-tone color combination that makes me very happy.  The yellow accent is cheery and welcoming, but unexpected at the same time.

 

New projects on the drawing board include a screened porch design for a sweet little bungalow in Old North Durham, and the reconfiguring of a second floor right around the corner from me in Watts-Hillandale.  After that, I’ll be re-working a stair landing; it sounds small, but the small spaces are sometimes the hardest!  More on all of that soon.  Until then, happy thanksgiving: enjoy the turkey, the family, and the rest.d at the same time.

 

Book a Consult

hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702

Recent Projects

Recent Projects

t’s high time I updated the project list with the new things on the list – especially as I’ve wrapped up a few in the past weeks. During the countdown to tax time I always end up doing a number of Part B applications, and some of the after photos are downright inspiring. The large house over in Cleveland-Holloway turned out beautifully, with happy owners and a fresh coat of paint. I’ve nominated them for a preservation award come spring (shhh, don’t tell) and know they’re thrilled with the house.

The tax credits are wrapped up for the big brick bungalow on Club too, with the most stellar kitchen I’ve seen in years. Originally they were planning on painting the floor bright turquoise, assuming that the wood would be damaged under all the linoleum, but when they peeled back the layers, the heart pine was so lovely they didn’t have the heart to paint it. How to get that bright color into the kitchen now? By painting the upper cabinets’ interior, of course! The saturated color is fantastic, and the spacious kitchen just begs for a party. There are a ton of ideas worth stealing tucked into this space, including the laundry built into the custom cabinets. The high countertop and fold-away doors hide the machines and convert the butler’s pantry into a mudroom space, while looking completely in keeping with the era of the home. Besides that, the marble subway backsplash, dark countertop, and white cupboards are so luscious, I want to wake up to that kitchen some day.

Two projects design in the fall are both under construction, and I just saw a skylight appear on the side of this bungalow today (first on the to-do list way back in October). I am not doing any construction administration on that one, so I get to wait with bated breath until the owner invites me over to see the finished product.

Another tax credit project has popped up in Lakewood-Tuscaloosa – my first in that neighborhood in some time. That area seems to be doing a really good job of keeping their old houses full of character and not gentrifying quickly. Instead, there’s a gradual upswing to the neighborhood, over the course of the past number of years. The new owners on this place don’t know much about historic homes, but loved the location and have a lot of respect for the original features. It was such a treat to walk through it with them and talk about some of the more notable parts, including the stunning colonnade in the front rooms – they had no idea it would have once been open on both sides, and are now planning on restoring it. The light will be lovely!

There’s more coming, and one particularly interesting project that deserves its own entry. We’re waiting to hear what the tax credit folks think about our plans, and then a whole update will be coming shortly.

Book a Consult

hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702

More on the Purple Castle

More on the Purple Castle

Enough people have asked for an update on the purple castle that I took a detour on my morning walk this morning and snapped a few pictures of the progress. The plans received approval from the Historic Preservation Commission in December and from SHPO in January, with only minor changes necessary. Since then, the homeowner (who is also a contractor) has been doing demolition and clean-up on the site while he gets other paying projects off the ground. He told me that he is also preparing for the exterior work, ripping down a load of cedar siding into shakes for spot repairs.

As I walked around the property, now without all those crazy vines, I was struck by what was visible now, and the evidence of the past owners who had loved the house once. It is so easy to forget that a house as old as this one has gone through all sorts of evolutions – instead, we see the past 15 years of deferred maintenance and forget that it was once a loved home. The house only shows the recent history, but hidden back in the landscaping, there’s all sorts of interesting things peeking up into the spring.

The back yard, which extends well into the block, has lots of daffodil bulbs now coming up for air, crocuses that are probably so sun-starved they didn’t put up flowers this year, and what looked like a bank of hyacinths. The far back has a stand of pines that clearly once were a cool, shady spot, hidden from the road and even the house. And the profile of the house from a distance made me think of what it must have looked like from Club Boulevard after it was built – definitely a striking sight!

Also, I had noticed on my first visit to the house a disk set into the front terrace, at the north-west corner. Unfortunately it isn’t dated, but it appears to be a latitude/longitude marker made of concrete, with the cardinal directions called out. I have no idea which of the past residents might have installed it, but someone who was clearly passionate about this specific place.

As work progresses, I have permission from the owner to swing by periodically and check up on things, so will be updating as I can. I am assuming that once they commence things will move pretty quickly, but who knows how long it will be before they really get started. I am really looking forward to seeing how the facade shapes up once the second floor gets a balcony door again – so exciting!

Book a Consult

hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702

Hunting the Wild Linthicum

Hunting the Wild Linthicum

For the purple castle project, I have been trying to establish who first lived in the house.  The slightly loony man who brokered the sale of the house (let’s call him Mr. Gravy) swore that the house had originally belonged to an architect and his wife.  Mr. Gravy said they owned the entire corner and the house faced the main street, with a wide, circular drive.  After a few years ‘out in the country,’  the missus insisted that they move back into town, and the property was sold.  The new owners wanted to know the truth, so off I go to write a proper house history.

The stair hall of the purple castle

Some grain of truth seemed plausible from all this: the house appeared to be earlier than many in the neighborhood (now Watts-Hillandale, then Club Estates and Hester Heights), which was platted around 1910 but did not get a streetcar nor dense settlement until a decade or so later.  Tax records (always a dubious authority around here) have the house constructed in 1911 – definitely earlier than  everything else nearby.  And I give Mr. Gravy about as much credence as the tax records.  So what’s the real story?

The West End Land Company sold two lots to Hill C. and Josie S. Linthicum on August 14, 1915.  Hill C. Linthicum was a practicing architect for many years, who had settled in Durham by 1904.  The first lot (#75) was where the purple castle now sits, plus the 1950s ranch immediately to its north; the second (#77) was around the corner on Club Boulevard, with an adjoining back yard.  16 months later in December, 1916, they transfer the purple castle’s lot (now subdivided from the original wider parcel) to their son, Henry Colvin Linthicum, and his wife Catherine.

Henry (or Henri) C. Linthicum had moved to Durham about 1912 to work as a draftsman in his father’s firm.  The two of them were listed in a 1916 business directory as ‘specialists in modern schools,’ and he officially joined the firm in 1918.  Both the Linthicums and their wives are listed at 703 Jackson Street (a house lost to the Durham freeway) in the 1915 city directory, when the lots were purchased.

In the 1919 city directory, however, Hill is listed at Club Boulevard near 12th Street, and Henry is at “16th, corner D, Oakland Heights.”  What?  there is no such intersection… unless you extrapolate a little bit.  Before the area was incorporated, the streets in this area were lettered and numbered – a carry over from the mill area south and east of Club Boulevard.  9th and 15th are still around, but the rest were renamed eventually.  That said, this lovely map, off of Old West Durham’s fantastic website, shows the basic grid.

Old West Durham map, c.1920 – with thanks for the OWDNA website

Knowing that the streetcar line went up 7th (now Broad) to E (now Club), 16th and D puts the younger Linthicum at the corner of Alabama and Englewood – tada!

2023 West Club Boulevard

As for where Hill C. and his wife were living through his last days (he passed away in October of 1919), 12th looks to be about the location of Carolina Avenue today… in which case, I might propose this house, if the penchant for brackets and shakes ran in the family.

I’ve still got a few loose threads to tie up, including what popped up in Henry and Catherine’s daughter’s obituary.  It looks like Diana Skipworth Linthicum Coley, born in 1912, tells her stories of growing up in Raleigh – and the Linthicums weren’t there until after 1920 at least.  I wonder if the elder Linthicum’s passing in 1919 helped push the younger family out of town?  Regardless, Henry Linthicum sold the purple castle in 1921 to Ira J. and Lizzie Stoner, who owned the house for 22 years and gave it its name for the national register nomination.  Lizzie sold it to J.W. Wilkinson in 1944 – a name connected with the building trades in Durham.  I’d wager he’s the one who cut up the house and turned it to apartments, classy light pole support system and all.

So there’s definitely some truth to Mr. Gravy’s claims about the history of the purple castle – long circular driveway notwithstanding – and I am looking forward to finding out the last details and giving the new owners the full story.

Book a Consult

hi.there@fouroverone.com   (919) 339-1411
Office Address: 1235 Berkeley Ave, Durham, NC, 27701
Mailing Address: P.O. Box 355, Durham NC, 27702