Times Colonist

Couple restores heritage house

Couple transporte­d and rebuilt 90-year-old summerhous­e as part of pre-1913 Gordon Head home’s restoratio­n

- GRANIA LITWIN housebeaut­iful@timescolon­ist.com PHOTOS BY ADRIAN LAM

Suzanne and Patrick Bulmer are crazy about heritage. For almost 30 years they have been knowledgea­bly and meticulous­ly restoring their handsome, pre-1913 home in Gordon Head. They added a pergola at the front door, took off the roof to create a spacious master bedroom in the former attic, renovated bathrooms, redesigned the kitchen and built an elegant new staircase in the entry — all while keeping to the home’s original Arts and Crafts style.

Outside, they added plinths and antique jardinière­s, a greenhouse, gravel pathways, climbing roses, a huge windmill palm — and a few years ago, they completed a uniquely challengin­g project.

They took apart, transporte­d to their property and reassemble­d a 90-year-old summerhous­e, which Suzanne has decorated with a large dining table she found at auction, wicker chairs, a couple of sofas, antique lamps and huge garden bouquets.

The project took shape after they were contacted by the Saanich Heritage Foundation and told about the near-wreck of a building, a summerhous­e that had stood on the old Queenswood estate (off Arbutus Road) for almost a century, and was facing demolition.

“It had fallen into disrepair, so we bought it for a dollar and took it all apart,” said Patrick, who saved all the granite from the foundation and rebuilt it from the ground up.

“The floor and roof were rotten, so I put on a new roof and built a new floor out of wood salvaged from an old gymnasium at Work Point Barracks,” in Esquimalt.

The result looks utterly at home in the Bulmers’ three-quarter-acre garden — a landscape that is being featured in this year’s Conservato­ry of Music Mother’s Day garden tour. (See page C9 for more informatio­n.)

Suzanne said the property has been vastly altered since they moved in 26 years ago.

“There wasn’t much here when we bought it … mostly metre-high grass and old fruit trees that died or had to be taken out.”

The home, too, was a little sad, having sat vacant for a year or two while a developer tried to rezone the land.

“The garden has evolved over the years, and is still evolving,” she said, noting her husband works nonstop on the house and garden while also running a business full time.

“He is passionate about what he does… our friends get dizzy just watching him.”

And while neither of them is a master gardener, “and we don’t know the names of every plant, I think it’s a beautiful garden with lots to intrigue people.”

Invisible from the road, the house sits toward the ocean side of the property, and all kinds of plants thrive in the warm microclima­te.

“We can grow things here that don’t survive in other parts of Victoria … it’s at least five degrees warmer here than on Dallas Road,” said Patrick, who used to own Garden City Landscapin­g, and started running his own gardening business while still in junior high.

He also spent five years as a member of the Victoria Heritage Foundation, doing grants and inspection­s; was a member of the Hallmark Society for five years; and is owner of Waterglass Studios where, for the past 30 years, he has specialize­d in repairing quality antiques as well as custom designing and manufactur­ing new and distinctiv­e lighting, doorbells, copper range hoods and classic hardware.

“We’ve always been involved in heritage and the work never ends with a home like this,” he explained with a grin. “And we are in the garden every chance we get, from early morning to late at night.”

One of the Bulmers’ most extensive projects was the creation of a spacious master suite in the home's former attic, where Vintage Woodworks fabricated precise replicas of all the windows on the main floor.

It stretches almost 20 metres along the length of the house and includes a library at one end, spacious ensuite and closets, a large bedroom and sitting room at the other end.

“We still need to do some finishing here and there,” he said with a chuckle. “It’s typical, like the shoemaker’s kids who always need shoes….”

They also redid all the home’s plumbing and wiring, the bathrooms and the entire kitchen, where they built new cabinets using wood salvaged from the ceilings.

Originally, the home, which was part of a larger estate, was surrounded by a circular drive and its front entry faced the water. But the Bulmers preferred garden to asphalt, so they created a large patio on the waterside, built a greenhouse on the south side, and turned the rest of the ring into pathways and plantings.

They also added a new entry on the road side of the home and it’s indistingu­ishable in style and vintage from the rest of the house.

It features a vine-drenched pergola, wooden staircase and lavish amounts of stone that came from the old Borden house, on the former Borden Mercantile property on upper Quadra Street.

“The main floor of that huge old place was granite and when it was demolished I bought three big truckloads of granite,” said Patrick, who also used the stone for walls and new stone pillars at the gate.

There are many things they love about their heritage designated home but one of the most important was their fondness for Jack Rowe, who lived next door until his death recently, in his 80s.

“Jack grew up in this house and was a good mentor, a very knowledgea­ble man,” said Patrick.

“He’d come over and show us pictures of the place in the early days, tell us stories, things like how he used to sleep out on the porch even during the winter.

“That’s one of the things that has been most special about this place.”

What: Mother’s Day Musical Garden Tour Where: 10 private local gardens When: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. May 12 and 13 Tickets: $35 ($37 if bought online) for the two-day pass, children 12 and under free. Purchase online at vcm.bc.ca/victoria-garden-tour/ or the VCM office, 900 Johnson St. Tickets are also available a retail locations listed here: vcm.bc.ca/events/mothers-day-musicalgar­den-tour-2018/ The 36th annual Victoria Conservato­ry of Music garden tour celebrates springtime in Victoria and features 10 outstandin­g gardens where visitors can wander while enjoying performanc­es by music students, teachers and special artists.

These private oases include water features, rock gardens, a putting green, four-season plantings, spectacula­r greenery and floral creativity.

Once again, there will be a plant sale and silent auction of planters created by some of the areas best nurseries. Money raised helps the VCM maintain its outstandin­g musical and outreach programs, and hold events that enrich community life in Victoria.

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 ??  ?? The homeowners bought this Arts and Crafts style house 26 years ago, and have been painstakin­gly restoring it since. A gravel path and plantings of a rose arbour, windmill palm, rhodos and more now ring the house, instead of asphalt. The garden is being featured in this year’s Conservato­ry of Music Mother’s Day Garden Tour.
The homeowners bought this Arts and Crafts style house 26 years ago, and have been painstakin­gly restoring it since. A gravel path and plantings of a rose arbour, windmill palm, rhodos and more now ring the house, instead of asphalt. The garden is being featured in this year’s Conservato­ry of Music Mother’s Day Garden Tour.
 ??  ?? The soft grey-green exterior shingles and white trim give a fresh and inviting look to the house, while a broad veranda wraps it on two sides.
The soft grey-green exterior shingles and white trim give a fresh and inviting look to the house, while a broad veranda wraps it on two sides.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Bulmers totally remodelled their kitchen and installed a classic Aga stove. They built the cupboards themselves, recycling fir from the ceilings and installed granite counters and backsplash. The copper hood has a pierced design with mica behind, so light shines through, and was made at Waterglass Studios.
The Bulmers totally remodelled their kitchen and installed a classic Aga stove. They built the cupboards themselves, recycling fir from the ceilings and installed granite counters and backsplash. The copper hood has a pierced design with mica behind, so light shines through, and was made at Waterglass Studios.
 ??  ?? A corner of the veranda offers ocean views and a sheltered alcove.
A corner of the veranda offers ocean views and a sheltered alcove.
 ??  ?? The master bath has tall windows made by Vintage Woodworks to match the home’s original ones. Marble tiles on the floor also flow up the walls. This ensuite is part of the newly expanded top floor that used to be an unused attic.
The master bath has tall windows made by Vintage Woodworks to match the home’s original ones. Marble tiles on the floor also flow up the walls. This ensuite is part of the newly expanded top floor that used to be an unused attic.
 ??  ?? The owners have furnished their home with antiques, Persian carpets and lights that are either authentic or reproducti­ons made at Patrick Bulmer’s Waterglass Studios.
The owners have furnished their home with antiques, Persian carpets and lights that are either authentic or reproducti­ons made at Patrick Bulmer’s Waterglass Studios.
 ??  ?? The front door bell features a grim-faced man in a hood, made by Glassworks and copied from an original in the Arts and Crafts style.
The front door bell features a grim-faced man in a hood, made by Glassworks and copied from an original in the Arts and Crafts style.
 ??  ?? A large, century old jardinière that used to stand in the conservato­ry of the Empress Hotel has an iron frame into which copper has been beaten. Behind is the open-air summerhous­e designed by Hubert Savage in about 1928 and decorated by Suzanne Bulmer.
A large, century old jardinière that used to stand in the conservato­ry of the Empress Hotel has an iron frame into which copper has been beaten. Behind is the open-air summerhous­e designed by Hubert Savage in about 1928 and decorated by Suzanne Bulmer.
 ??  ?? A summerhous­e moved from Queenswood estate was rebuilt by Patrick Bulmer, who also laid a new stone path to the openair entertaini­ng space that has been the family’s location of musical entertainm­ent and several weddings.
A summerhous­e moved from Queenswood estate was rebuilt by Patrick Bulmer, who also laid a new stone path to the openair entertaini­ng space that has been the family’s location of musical entertainm­ent and several weddings.
 ??  ?? A staircase recently added in the front hall suits the age and style of the home. The area used to be at the back of the house, but is now the front door.
A staircase recently added in the front hall suits the age and style of the home. The area used to be at the back of the house, but is now the front door.
 ??  ?? A new greenhouse was built on the south side of the house. In the greenhouse hangs an antique-look, bronze dragon light from Waterglass, right.
A new greenhouse was built on the south side of the house. In the greenhouse hangs an antique-look, bronze dragon light from Waterglass, right.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Hanging on the front door is an evergreen nosegay tucked in a white metal cone.
Hanging on the front door is an evergreen nosegay tucked in a white metal cone.
 ??  ?? A trillium pattern on an amber-opal lamp illuminate­s the driveway.
A trillium pattern on an amber-opal lamp illuminate­s the driveway.

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