Regina Leader-Post

‘WITCH HOUSE’ GETS NEW LIFE

Homeowners update and expand mid-century home to accommodat­e today’s needs

- SCOTT SOWERS

Alex and Karin Hodjatzade­h did not need another house. They owned a perfectly fine Colonialst­yle home in Rockville, Md., that they bought from Alex’s father. They’d lived in it for 20 years and remodelled it, but something was missing.

They pored over listings looking for a new abode that would meet their desires to live in something more modern.

Karin, 46, who serves as the CEO of the household, says: “We were always interested in mid-century, so we looked and looked. This one had so much charm, it had the bones, the trees, and the neighbourh­ood.”

The Hodjatzade­hs grew up in Austria, where Alex’s father was an architect. The family, which now includes two daughters, walked through the house on a Saturday in February 2013 after seeing it in a listing and made a full price offer the next day, which was Super Bowl Sunday.

Second thoughts immediatel­y began haunting the deal. Karin’s parents referred to the 2,800-square-foot (260.13-squaremetr­e), two-level home, which is also in Rockville, as “a witch house.” There was no garage, no central air, an untamed garden out front and a major design flaw as soon as you walked in.

“When you opened the front door, you were almost falling down the basement steps,” says architect Damian Trostinetz­ky, a principal at RT Studio. Trostinetz­ky and his partner, Gadi Romem, tend to specialize in mid-century makeovers.

The family knew they would be remodellin­g when they bought it, but the good news was the previous owner had updated the kitchen in 1998. The previous owner had also planned further improvemen­ts and had commission­ed drawings that conveyed with the sale. Alex noodled on the drawings, hired another architect for a consult but then fired him after meeting Trostinetz­ky and walking through the designer’s own remodelled mid-century home.

“What we saw in Damian’s house was his vision in how he was able to preserve a rambler and convert it into a beautiful modern, practical livable space, which is exactly what we were looking for,” Alex says.

The mid-century modern period lasted from the early 1930s through the mid-1950s. The movement gave us Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe and Frank Lloyd Wright. It also left us with small bedrooms and baths, tiny closets and fixed glass panels instead of functional windows.

The Hodjatzade­hs, who had moved from a large Colonial with a full basement, now found themselves renting storage space and having their cars bombarded by walnut trees hanging over the driveway. “I told Damian, ‘I want a garage, a dining room and more storage,’ ” Alex, 46, says.

The architect said he initially was hesitant about the project. “Usually if a client says, ‘I need more storage and a garage,’ I’m not taking the job,” Trostinetz­ky says. “But we saw the possibilit­ies and I thought I could do more than a garage and storage. They bought into it, so it was good.”

Trostinetz­ky came up with a scheme that expanded the house by adding the requested dining room and a large coat closet off the front entrance that also pulled the front door away from the basement steps.

The house sits on a hilly, oddshaped lot, which forced the garage to the back of the house with a new driveway connecting to a different street than the one the house faces. Alex did his homework by making sure he could get an easement for the new driveway before closing the deal.

Even though a new master suite was not on the wish list, the architect proposed one that would sit on top of the garage but angled to add interest. A corridor would connect the new master suite and garage to the original house. Butterfly-style roofs would shelter the new sections of the house, an homage to mid-century design.

The homeowners signed off on the plans and then revealed that Alex intended to serve as the project’s general contractor, a path that can be fraught with peril. “I’ve done it before — I did it on the other house — so I had the experience,” says Alex, who studied architectu­re in college and grew up with a father who could design and build. “There was no way I was giving this to a GC (general contractor). I didn’t trust anybody else. The design was too intricate. Anytime I showed the drawing to anybody, they got scared.

“I talked to between 100 and 150 contractor­s. Of those, I interviewe­d 80 to 90 sub-contractor­s on site, so I had a No. 1 pick, a No. 2 and a No. 3 in case one of them dropped out.”

Clearly, the plan worked, as the project was complete in less than six months.

To make room for the new entryway, trees were cleared. A new wall was built with functional windows illuminati­ng the dining room. Alex found a flooring contractor who was able to match and seam in new flooring with the existing white oak.

Although the kitchen was completely functional, the team refaced the red brick fireplace with dry stacked stone and moved one bank of the cherry cabinets to improve flow in the centre of the room.

The added corridor leads to the now spacious master suite complete with a walk-in closet.

The new master bath was rendered from neutral colours and a pleasing puzzle of geometric shapes. All the fixtures and finishes came from Porcelanos­a. The tub is a free-standing soaker style with a separate shower.

A leftover frosted glass panel from the project was used to create a half wall around the toilet. To configure the vanity the way they wanted it, the design team combined a double vanity with a single unit and tied them together with a custom countertop. All of the surfaces in the bath are made from Krion, a non-porous, solid surface that feels like natural stone. A dark accent wall of dry stacked, brushed black limestone anchors the space and provides privacy.

The exterior of the house looks different depending on where you are viewing it from and uses a mix of materials to conceal the renovation. The house was originally sheathed with T1-11, a grooved plywood that was especially popular in mid-century designs. The home’s new skin includes an esthetical­ly pleasing mix of cement board, stucco, stacked stone, natural finished wood siding and brick.

For the garage, Alex took note of some frosted glass panelled doors at a BMW dealership and mimicked the design. The frames of the panels echo the trim colours on the house.

Alex piloted a Bobcat and a backhoe while overseeing the family’s dream project and cites the excavation phase of the project to be the biggest challenge. He had to change the slope of the driveway on the fly, move a water line and had multiple discussion­s with the tub manufactur­er.

Alex declined to disclose the budget for the project, but says: “If I sold it, I would make out like a bandit. I could easily double my money, but it would take a unique buyer; it’s not for everybody.”

 ?? PHOTOS: DEBORAH JAFFE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Alex and Karin Hodjatzade­h wanted to remodel their home and settled on an architect after touring the designer’s remodelled home.
PHOTOS: DEBORAH JAFFE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Alex and Karin Hodjatzade­h wanted to remodel their home and settled on an architect after touring the designer’s remodelled home.
 ??  ?? The family knew they would be remodellin­g when they bought the house, but the good news was the previous owner had updated the kitchen in 1998.
The family knew they would be remodellin­g when they bought the house, but the good news was the previous owner had updated the kitchen in 1998.
 ??  ?? The mid-century modern period lasted from the early 1930s through the mid-1950s.
The mid-century modern period lasted from the early 1930s through the mid-1950s.

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