Los Angeles Times

TV’s ‘Rehab Addict’ star says: Save the tile!

- By Leslie Van Buskirk home@latimes.com

Unlike most of us, there is pretty much nothing that will stop Nicole Curtis from taking on a home renovation. So what if the foundation’s cracked, the walls termiterid­den, or it bears the scars of a major fire? The petite dynamo and host of HGTV and DIY’s long-running hit “Rehab Addict” has seen and done it all in her 20-plus years revamping and restoring vintage homes between Detroit and Minneapoli­s.

“The only thing that’s a deal breaker is the price,” she says. “Everything else I can deal with.”

In her new book, “Better Than New: Lessons I’ve Learned From Saving Old Houses,” Curtis, 40, frankly reveals her life struggles — two-time single mother, former Hooters waitress, broke more times than she can count — against the backdrop of restoratio­ns. The result is unlike the lightweigh­t primers we’ve come to expect from other TV design stars. We caught up with Curtis to ask her a few questions about design, and life:

What’s a common mistake that people make when taking on a house rehab?

Putting their wants before the needs of the house. You know, putting granite counters all over the kitchen and bath instead of replacing the roof shingles. I’m an investor first — I love saving old homes but I need to make a living — so return is a big thing for me ... plumbing, electrical, and roofing take priority over making something pretty.

What’s something that’s worth trying to save?

Tile!... Old houses are so unique and interestin­g and the old tile is often in great shape. It really disappoint­s me when they tear it out — part of the heart of the house is gone.

Is there a design element that you’d be happy to never see again?

Slate bathrooms and kitchens! Oh, and glass tile! — if I see one more glass tile border in an early 1900s house I’m going to scream. It’s like taking a Rolls-Royce apart and putting in Prius parts.

I expected you to say negative things in your book about your time working at Hooters, but you didn’t.

You know, that was my growing-up period, my sorority — I didn’t have a college experience of going away and being in a sorority. People think Hooters would be filled with catty women and be ultra-competitiv­e, but it wasn’t like that. It was filled with intelligen­t, beautiful women who worked really hard, and there was a lot of bonding going on. I could pick up the phone right now and any one of them would be there for me.

In the book you write, “The best way to get through hell is to keep on moving.”

Years ago, I was having a bad time and I was sitting there in my pajamas crying, and a friend was there and said “C’mon, get up, we’re going for a walk.” And that was really helpful. If I wasn’t so physically active, I probably wouldn’t get out of bed some days. You have to get fired back up — just get up and move.

You work in a field populated with men; how do you deal with sexism?

You know, I don’t actually like to say that it’s populated by men. The way I see it, I’m not in a man’s field; every woman in my family can tear apart something and put it back together. Do I run into it? All the time. But I’ve learned as I’ve gotten older to just … brush it off.

Your life has taken some dramatic turns thus far. If you could give your younger self some advice, what would it be?

Just breathe and trust yourself. And keep your focus on being a mom. The most amount of self-doubt I ever experience­d was when I was a young mom. A lot of people assumed I wasn’t a good mom, but I was, even though I didn’t really believe it back then. I should have trusted myself more.

 ?? Lauren Noess ?? NICOLE CURTIS of “Rehab Addict” searches for brick in the walls of one of her restoratio­n projects.
Lauren Noess NICOLE CURTIS of “Rehab Addict” searches for brick in the walls of one of her restoratio­n projects.

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