Orlando Sentinel

OPPORTUNIT­Y KNOCKS

- By Sandy Deneau Dunham

The first time architectu­ral opportunit­y knocked, Travis Penn and John Wicher lived in the Queen Anne in Seattle’s Center. It was an actual knock. At the door was their neighbor, Geoff Prentiss, just delivering a neighborly how-doyou-do. He is an actual architect.

That was a while back, but some initial connection­s span time and distance.

The couple later moved and alighted on a heavenly but devilishly steep site in the Washington Park neighborho­od, with an older, one-level home on one arm of the T at the end of a dead-end road. Working with general contractor Schultz Miller, the former neighbor and his firm, the couple added a second floor and “did a pretty extensive remodel,” Prentiss says.

When architectu­ral opportunit­y knocked again, it was right next door. On the other arm of that dead-end T, a green farmhouse dating to 1916, concealed by spreading greenery and stealthily sliding down that heavenly hill, went on the market.

“It had been so overgrown,” says Penn. “We said, ‘Why don’t we buy it and control it ourselves?’ ”

Initially, the couple rented it out, thinking they’d build a new spec house and sell it. But then, Penn says, “John and I realized it’d be the only house we’d ever design from the ground up.”

The dream-team duo reconvened, joined by interior designer Holly McKinley. And now, rising up, up, up from a concrete foundation, Penn and Wicher’s all-new, transition­al, thoughtful home rests securely on its slope, its 5,320 square feet filled with abundant light, majestic viewpoints and artful remembranc­es of special people and places.

The palette is consistent, neutral and warm — riftsawn white oak paneling and plank flooring — with “an overall feeling of a home of warmth, embracing color with highlights,” says Prentiss. One of those happy highlights is the workout space over the garage, with an orange staircase that’s “an homage to ‘Pee-wee’s Playhouse.’ ” The lines are crisp, the trim is minimal. The custom details are distinct.

“These guys are very organized,” Prentiss says. “They knew what they wanted.”

For example: In the dining area, there’s one drawer for napkins, and another for place mats. Because often, this transition­al, thoughtful home also is filled with people.

“The prime driver was that we entertain a lot,” says

Wicher. “We wanted flow.”

The sleek, shiny kitchen at the heart of the home — both spatially and spirituall­y — smoothly connects the living and dining areas in a great room of great impact. “My advantage in helping them is that we’re friends,” says Prentiss. “I’ve been with them when they’re entertaini­ng. I knew to eliminate bottleneck­s.”

“Family is important to us,” says Wicher — visitors get to pick their preferred upper-level guest room: mountain view or lake view. “So are travel and art. It’s not highly valuable, but it’s meaningful. That had to be incorporat­ed.” Adds Penn: “Places were designed for specific pieces — things that have memories and meaning.”

The Buddha in the living area belonged to Penn’s grandmothe­r; a table was his mother’s. The clock in the hallway had been Wicher’s great-grandparen­ts’. There’s a painting from Bali, and two vases the couple picked up in Venice. Penn’s grandmothe­r’s settee sits at the top of the stairway.

Oh. That stairway. It’s a wood-and-glass work of art itself — slim and solid and geometric — and behind it: a fantastic, massive two-story map of the world, on wallpaper.

“We knew we had this big wall and wanted something, but we couldn’t imagine what,” says Penn. “What about a mural? What about a map? We found a place in Bristol, England. You send the dimensions and the areas you want. Once it was installed, work kind of stopped.”

This time, in a custom home of lasting connection­s and repeat collaborat­ion, opportunit­y knocked right inside the front door.

 ?? STEVE RINGMAN/SEATTLE TIMES PHOTOS ?? In the great room, under a 17-foot-high ceiling, light shines through opaque shelves holding glass from Venice.
STEVE RINGMAN/SEATTLE TIMES PHOTOS In the great room, under a 17-foot-high ceiling, light shines through opaque shelves holding glass from Venice.
 ??  ?? A custom two-story wallpaper map of the world fills the wall behind the main stairway.
A custom two-story wallpaper map of the world fills the wall behind the main stairway.

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