Toronto Star

Complete reno is the cat’s meow

A bathroom update spurred Toronto couple to a three-floor, $375,000 overhaul of their home

- JACKIE BURNS

Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh and her wife, Barbara Piatkowski, thank their lucky stars for the life-changing renovation of their 1890s home.

In the months leading up to the total gut job of the Parkdale-area, three-storey house in 2012, Feathersto­nhaugh had begun studying astrology. She used her new-found knowledge to increase their chances for a smooth, speedy refurbishm­ent of the 2,000square-foot home they’ve lived in for 20 years.

“When you start projects, you need to start it between the new moon and the full moon because then things tend to go more smoothly,” says Feathersto­nhaugh, 48, who runs a home-based massage therapy business.

She insisted their contractor start on a specific date and when that plan was about to get pushed by one day, she improvised.

“They came over and we swung a sledgehamm­er though a wall just to start it!” laughs Piatkowski, 51, who works for the Rider Training Institute.

Their original plan back in 2011 was to do a simple bathroom update after seeing an episode of the TV series Hoarders and realizing their bathroom resembled the one they were watching with mould and peeling paint.

On a friend’s recommenda­tion, they booked an appointmen­t with Fraser Homes Inc.

“Within a day, they gave us a six-page estimate for our bathroom, right down to the last light switch. It was crazy detailed,” Piatkowski says.

The pair was so pleased with their revitalize­d bathroom, they started asking for quotes on other home improvemen­ts. “It just spiralled!” Piatkowski says.

In 2012, the couple and their five Siamese cats moved into a 250-sq.-ft. space in their basement as demolition work began upstairs.

They used a hot plate to cook and a chalkboard to cross off the days of the six-month “jail” sentence, during which there was an unexpected benefit.

“That six months that we lived in the basement was the only six months we went without an argument!” says Feathersto­nhaugh, who met her wife in 1996 while the pair was teaching a motorcycle course together.

“There was nowhere to go!” explains Piatkowski of their reluctance to squabble. “Plus, people (working) upstairs would hear us!”

When they finally moved back upstairs, they were overwhelme­d by the result of the $250,000 transforma­tion.

“For six months, we didn’t think we deserved to be in this house!” Piatkowski says.

Gone was their dated kitchen, completely rebuilt on the opposite side of the house to allow for a more seamless flow of the main floor and new sliding glass doors providing easy access to the barbecue on the deck. It features an island with black granite countertop and seating, grey marbleand-white porcelain backsplash­es, custom walnut cabinets and modern appliances, and came with a $39,000 price tag.

A custom space was designed for their collectibl­e, wall-mounted Bell pay phone, a housewarmi­ng gift.

They splurged on a new-age fireplace in the living area, framed by a grey marble wall and custom walnut cabinetry to match the kitchen cabinets, to the tune of $20,000.

The old home’s choppy space, with orange-and-teal paint, was transforme­d into a bright, open-concept expanse.

Crisp white walls, modern pot lights and statement light fixtures are warmed by American black walnut flooring.

The solid red oak staircase to the second and third levels, with black anodized aluminum glass and red oak hand rails, was custom-designed by Fraser Homes Inc.

Co-owner Mark Fraser does design and sales developmen­t at the company he runs with his brother, Rod, who handles the project management and constructi­on aspects of the business.

Fraser says the inspiratio­n for the three-level, statement staircase came from his trip to Barcelona’s famed La Sagrada Familia church and its spiral stairs in the towers.

“I like the idea of being able to start at the top floor and never have to take your hand off until you make it to the bottom, and just kind of feel connected,” he says.

Artworks by Toronto illustrato­r David Crighton, rolled up in a closet for years, were framed and hung on walls adjacent to the staircase.

Now, one of the couple’s favourite vantage points is the main-floor eye of the staircase, looking up 30 feet to the third-storey loft and taking in the beauty of the stairs, the art and the lights.

On the second floor, Piatkowski’s home office doubles as a gallery for her impressive Pez dispenser collection; at least 900 pieces are neatly displayed in glass cases around the room.

“My inner 12-year-old is very satisfied with this room,” she laughs.

Down the hall is the couple’s music room, with Feathersto­nhaugh’s base guitar and the drum set of Piatkowski, who plays gigs around the city with local band Leona’s Sister.

Up in the third-storey loft is the couple’s gym and trophy room for Feathersto­nhaugh’s marathon-running passion: her 42 medals hang alongside framed number bibs from some of her favourite races. “It’s my room of glory!” she says. Last year, they completed their home’s final renovation: the dreaded basement.

“It was pretty nasty,” Piatkowski says. “It looked like many previous owners had had their inexperien­ced hands on it.”

They hired Fraser Homes Inc. again to complete the three-month, $125,000 project which included all new pipes and flooring.

Feathersto­nhaugh’s massage clinic was completely transforme­d and now includes a tranquil work space, an office and separate entrance and bathroom. The couple — who met on May 19, 1996, and closed the purchase of their Edwardian-architectu­ral-style house exactly a year later — agree the $375,000 needed to breathe new life into their home was well worth it.

“We could have been mortgagefr­ee and had the old house, but we’ve traded the next 20 years of our life for being able to live in this — what this does for you, feeling good about yourself, is worth that investment,” Piatkowski says.

 ?? RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR ?? NOW Barb Piatkowski, left, and Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh, along with their feline family, enjoy their renovated living room that is now redesigned as an open-concept space and invites natural light to flow through.
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR NOW Barb Piatkowski, left, and Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh, along with their feline family, enjoy their renovated living room that is now redesigned as an open-concept space and invites natural light to flow through.
 ?? FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI ?? THEN A choppy living room layout helped create clutter amidst the outdated colour scheme.
FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI THEN A choppy living room layout helped create clutter amidst the outdated colour scheme.
 ?? FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI ?? THEN The couple’s old oak stairway, with painted railing and spindles before the reno.
FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI THEN The couple’s old oak stairway, with painted railing and spindles before the reno.
 ?? RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR ?? NOW The three-storey view of the stairway is one of the couple’s favourite parts of their renovation.
RICK MADONIK/TORONTO STAR NOW The three-storey view of the stairway is one of the couple’s favourite parts of their renovation.
 ??  ?? “My inner 12-year-old is very satisfied with this room,” Barb Piatkowski says of her home office’s Pez collection gallery.
“My inner 12-year-old is very satisfied with this room,” Barb Piatkowski says of her home office’s Pez collection gallery.
 ??  ?? Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh, left, and Barb Piatkowski have a home gym and trophy room in the third-storey loft.
Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh, left, and Barb Piatkowski have a home gym and trophy room in the third-storey loft.
 ?? RICK MADONIK PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR ?? Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh in her basement massage room that was updated in the lower-level reno the couple did last year.
RICK MADONIK PHOTOS/TORONTO STAR Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh in her basement massage room that was updated in the lower-level reno the couple did last year.
 ??  ?? Renovation­s included a music room for drummer Barb Piatkowski and bass guitarist Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh.
Renovation­s included a music room for drummer Barb Piatkowski and bass guitarist Maxine Feathersto­nhaugh.
 ?? FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI ?? THEN The 250-square-foot space, home to the couple during their six month-reno, was redone once they were able to move back upstairs.
FEATHERSTO­NHAUGH/PIATKOWSKI THEN The 250-square-foot space, home to the couple during their six month-reno, was redone once they were able to move back upstairs.

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