Times Colonist

A do-it-yourselfer’s dream

Creative remodel of Bainbridge Island home was more than two decades in the making

- SANDY DENEAU DUNHAM

At a frequency heard only by the most zealous do-it-yourselfer­s, a down-on-its-luck fixer-upper on Bainbridge Island sent out an insistent SOS, crossing county lines, one formidable body of water and more than 70 years.

Other potential rescuers steered clear, but Mark and Wendy Johnson ran right toward the trouble. They had just achieved that magical, elusive state of completion in their home in Redmond, after all — so, clearly, it was time to move.

The please-help-me home, basically a cabin back in 1920, when it was built, had been significan­tly remodelled in 1976. “The place needed a lot of love, and more space,” Mark said. “I smiled at Wendy and said: ‘I’ve got projects again.’ ”

Understate­ment alert. The Johnsons bought that home in 1993, so there’s been more than two decades’ worth of projects — so far.

“We tore down a lot,” said Mark, who has a degree in architectu­re, but never practised (he’s worked in constructi­on and, for the past 20 years, in real estate for the Benaroya Company; Wendy works for Seattle City Light). “I knew commercial constructi­on, but residentia­l is different.” Live and learn, you know. Live and learn. “The first thing we did was build a pier,” he said; it’s 40-metres long, of reclaimed piling and framing material, with a floating dock. (The Johnsons live on a gorgeously secluded 3/4-acre lot with 23 metres along Eagle Harbor.)

“I did that dock for $15,000, did it mostly myself. I did my whole dock and pier for less than what just the permitting would cost today.”

In 2001, after years of “noodling concepts” and accumulati­ng “the money and guts to pull the trigger,” Mark designed a complete remodel of the house, which included demolishin­g 65 per cent of it.

“I added 1,000 square feet, but tore out 1,000 and added on to the second floor,” he said. “I drew up the plans, got the permit and named a general contractor [the late Bob McAllister, of the Sensitive Carpenters] who did the concrete and framing.”

In 2009, Mark designed and built a garage, “doing 90 per cent of the work myself.”

In the backyard, he built a retaining wall and a deck, created a firepit and laid lots of pavers. In the front, he built a working drawbridge at the entry and another bridge midway.

This sounds like a lot of structural work, and it is, but it’s also beautifull­y detailed, admirably sustainabl­e and amazingly creative.

In the living room, screens from the original river-rock fireplace rest in windows looking toward the water. Mark made the fireplace’s new mantel and vertical supports from a single 272-kilogram slab of fir. Treads for the flared staircase he built are from an on-site fir tree. Salvaged material from the old garage became a new outhouse-themed tool shed, and a new SS Minnow boat shed. Reclaimed bleacher seats turned into shelves in the office. Light fixtures in the hallway, dining room and laundry originated in the old Broadview Elementary School. And a hotel phone booth serves as a clever trapdoor landing atop stairs to the basement.

“I don’t use reclaimed material so much for environmen­tal reasons as for reasons of esthetics, creative reuse and hopefully costs,” Mark said.

Throughout the house, Mark’s collection­s — phones from the 1940s, car phones and cellphones from the 1980s on up, unusual album covers, “politicall­y incorrect” shot glasses — find places of honour, as do his newest creative projects.

After all that home work, Mark said: “My body wore out, and I switched to art pieces. Outside art and inside art.”

He painted their first dog, Topper, and their current dog, Chevy, on the living-room rug (which used to be the diningroom rug). He created the “industrial” aluminum ball on the mantel and “Maxine Vaccine” in the front room (Barbie dolls from Goodwill dangle from a milking machine from his family’s farm), and fashioned a working doorbell out of a wineglass, two beer bottles and a wine bottle. And there are many more.

“My wife has been a good sport about the whimsical nature of the improvemen­ts I’ve designed and built over the last 23 years,” Mark said. “You can tell I didn’t stay in architectu­re. It’s a funky house.”

Adds Wendy: “I feel like we’re blessed to be here, and we’re caretakers. We bought the house, and it was almost a teardown. We could never have afforded this, or afford it now. What I love about the way we live: The site is so special, the house needs to be really welcoming and warm and easy. We never have people take their shoes off. I love this house and this place. I think it’s a wonderful house. He’s a busy boy.”

 ??  ?? The Johnsons’ home on Bainbridge Island’s Eagle Harbor wasn’t much more than a cabin when it was built in 1920.
The Johnsons’ home on Bainbridge Island’s Eagle Harbor wasn’t much more than a cabin when it was built in 1920.
 ??  ?? Mark and Wendy Johnson and their dog, Chevy, at the gate to the “secret garden” front yard of their home on Bainbridge Island, Washington.
Mark and Wendy Johnson and their dog, Chevy, at the gate to the “secret garden” front yard of their home on Bainbridge Island, Washington.
 ??  ?? The pool room holds Mark Johnson’s collection of “politicall­y incorrect” shot glasses.
The pool room holds Mark Johnson’s collection of “politicall­y incorrect” shot glasses.
 ??  ?? Mark created this piece, B-Flat, from a subpar piano he bought.
Mark created this piece, B-Flat, from a subpar piano he bought.
 ??  ?? After more than 20 years working on his home, Mark switched to artwork. This outdoor sculpture is called Meteor.
After more than 20 years working on his home, Mark switched to artwork. This outdoor sculpture is called Meteor.

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