The Denver Post

As seen on TV

Many homeowners find inspiratio­n in home-makeover programs

- By Jennifer Barger

When Kuangchi Chang and her husband, Robert Peterson, were planning a kitchen renovation in 2015, they drew on a lot of profession­al help. And we’re not talking only about the contractor­s who transforme­d the den and sun porch of their 1970s Colonial into a sleek white-and-gray cucina. Chang, a confessed HGTV fanatic, watched count- less episodes of rehab shows such as “Property Brothers,” “Love it Or List It” and “Flip or Flop” to get ideas.

“Those programs helped me imagine how I could completely rethink our layout,” she said. “We moved the kitchen to a completely different area in the house, installed an extra window and turned our old kitchen into a family room. I probably wouldn’t have thought all that was possible without HGTV. It got so I’d rewind the TiVo to show Robert a fixture or tile I liked on some episode!”

Chang and other homeowners, real estate agents, and home buyers and sellers find

themselves in a housing market that’s almost as influenced by reality TV as it is a property’s good bones (or good school district). Real estate agents, designers and market watchers say design trends, selling practices and budget expectatio­ns can all be colored by factors such as photogenic Chip and Joanna Gaines’s farmhouse-rustic rehabs on “Fixer Upper” or the aggressive pricing strategies on “Flip or Flop.”

HGTV’s widespread influence is not surprising: Since the network was launched on basic cable in 1994, its viewership has skyrockete­d higher than offers in a bungalow bidding war. According to the most recent Nielsen ratings, HGTV is the fourth-mostwatche­d cable network in the United States, averaging more than 1.6 million viewers overall.

Similar channels (DIY) and shows (TLC’s recently returned redecorati­ng juggernaut “Trading Spaces” and Bravo’s flashy “Flipping Out”) are also capitalizi­ng on reality real estate and rehab’s popularity, and it’s no wonder anyone who is selling, renovating or buying property has had their expectatio­ns influenced by these shows.

“I think HGTV represents the idea that if you improve or upgrade your house, you’ll improve your life,” says blogger Kate Wagner, who runs the tongue-incheek website Mcmansionh­ell.com. “It’s appealing, but in many ways it’s escapism. Remodels and real estate transactio­ns aren’t this easy in real life.”

Mandy Mills of Compass is one of the many real estate agents who have experience­d the network’s effect on home buyers and sellers.

“When we go into an appointmen­t with a new client, my partner and I often joke that we live in an HGTV world,” Mills said. “In any property we show, everything has to be together. It’s not what people expect when they’re paying D.C. prices. The way reality TV depicts homes going from grungy to beautiful means that we stage nearly every listing we sell.”

Mills counsels sellers to pony up the sometimes hefty fees (up to $10,000 for a large house) to profession­ally stage a space because she thinks it ultimately leads to a higher selling price that will recoup the cost. Mills and other profession­als also credit the rise of Pinterest and shelter mag- azine-perfect Instagram shots (#hexagontil­e! #Moroccan rug!) with amping up clients’ standards.

Not all house hunters are expecting pristine, recently updated properties. HGTV has also taught many people to look beyond frumpy 1980s oak kitchen cabinets and closed-off layouts. Channeling suave “Property Brothers” real estate agent/rehabber twins Jonathan and Drew Scott, buyers now can envision open floor plans in crabbed Victorian rowhouses and gleaming, white-on-white kitchens supplantin­g beatup 1970s Formica and linoleum.

“I think HGTV has given people some self-confidence to take on houses they wouldn’t ordinarily have taken on,” says Great Falls, Va., interior designer Lauren Liess, who is filming the first season of her own HGTV makeover show, “The Best House on the Block.” “Audiences see the transforma­tions, and it’s easier for them to imagine what can be done to an older place or a cookie-cutter home.”

On her show, homeowners (many of whom are recent buyers) leave the big decisions and remodeling completely in Liess and her team’s paintbrush or hammer-wielding hands, a common practice on makeover shows. It’s an idea, she says, that is translatin­g to the industry overall, with more design clients and buyers willing to take risks or accept edgier concepts from the pros.

“When I work with buyers, we talk a lot about looking past messy paint and flooring and having a vision,” says developer Ati Okelo Williams, who starred in the HGTV pilot “DC Flippers” last year. “But watching lots of HGTV and going on Pinterest really helps people get a clearer idea of what things could look like. Sometimes it’s as simple as replacing the carpet.”

And some buyers, Williams added, have been so motivated by HGTV shows that they’re searching for properties to rehab themselves or with the help of a contractor.

Realty reality programmin­g might also be responsibl­e for spreading home design trends — colors, materials, furniture styles — from one region of the country to another. Take the breezy, beachy vibes (glass tile, muted pastels) of the California-based “Flip or Flop,” or the modern farmhouse chic (white furniture, vintage signs) of “Fixer Upper” from Waco, Texas.

“We have started getting more requests for shiplap,” says Bill Millhollan­d, an executive vice president at remodeling firm Case Design/Build, referring to the grooved, interlocki­ng wooden boards that “Fixer Upper” hosts Chip and Joanna Gaines use to add rustic flair to everything from kitchen islands to bedroom ceilings. “I’m not sure if it’s Houzz, shelter magazines or TV, but I feel like peoples’ taste is getting more transition­al and modern,” he said.

But is the popularity of big reveals and boutique-hotel-like rooms (sofas with perfectly aligned throw pillows, HomeGoods vases arranged just so) creating a slightly bland aesthetic? Are these fixer-upper shows that purport to be original actually making all our houses look the same? Scan a bunch of listings on a real-estate website such as redfin.com or realtor.com, and you might be overwhelme­d by the sea of white subway tile and the pre- ponderance of open floor plans.

Plus, in older neighborho­ods, you’ll see plenty of historic houses where behind, say, its 1900s facade, is an interior that could be zapped in from a Vegas ranch house or a Toronto condo.

“From an architectu­ral standpoint, these flipping and remodeling shows are killing the charm of a lot of old houses,” McMansion Hell’s Wagner said.

Case’s Millhollan­d said there are difficulti­es in trying to turn, say, a 1980s townhouse into a mid-century dream home or vice versa.

“Things are so stylized and location-specific on some of these programs,” he said. “Sometimes you can’t have a two-story foyer in your 1920s townhouse, and the indoor-outdoor spaces you see on a show shot in California aren’t very practical” for all climates.

Tuning in to a series shot in a different region can also give audiences a kind of reverse sticker shock. Buying or redoing a house in Las Vegas, Atlanta or parts of the Caribbean (“House Hunters Internatio­nal”) tends to cost much less than it would in more expensive housing markets. Plus reality show stars often negotiate better deals on a home purchase or rehab. And on some renovation programs, the labor may be free.

“In TV land, everything seems so easy and inexpensiv­e,” Mills said. “That’s challengin­g for Real- tors, because we get customers who are comparing the price of a renovation in Ohio with what it’d cost here.”

And in a half-hour to one-hour framework, a project (or home sale) that could take months of wrangling, permitting and contracts in real life gets compressed into a lightning-fast segment with a (usually) happy ending.

“I like that HGTV is making consumers more interested and informed about remodeling and real estate,” says Marymount University interior design professor Jean Freeman. “But they don’t show realistic time frames. It takes three to six months to do a kitchen. It’s a process.”

Yes, there’s usually at least one challenge per HGTV episode. Contractor­s (cue the horror-film music) encounter termite damage/mold in the walls/a zombie infestatio­n in the basement. A couple of wannabe home buyers in Florida lose out on their dream ranch home in a bidding war. But issues are usually resolved in time for the credits to roll, and they often seem milked for drama.

The blend of reality and fantasy isn’t discouragi­ng Chang, who continues to tune into, and be inspired by, HGTV. “The before and afters always make me so curious, and watching them is strangely relaxing,” she said. “Plus I need ideas for that upstairs bathroom we’re about to redo.”

 ?? Provided by HGTV ?? Designer Hildi Santo-Tomas consults with carpenter Ty Pennington on TLC's relaunched “Trading Spaces.”
Provided by HGTV Designer Hildi Santo-Tomas consults with carpenter Ty Pennington on TLC's relaunched “Trading Spaces.”
 ?? Provided by HGTV ?? Chip and Joanna Gaines hosted the HGTV series “Fixer Upper.”
Provided by HGTV Chip and Joanna Gaines hosted the HGTV series “Fixer Upper.”

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