Old House Journal

Kitchen Design for Their Forever House

A DIY couple create a functional kitchen that looks as if it might have survived since the 1920s. It’s cozy and matches the house.

- By regina cole / photograph­s by troy thies

“We wanted a kitchen that looked as though it might have been here in the 1920s,” says Shirley Erstad. That’s the genius of this new kitchen: although it’s new, it is convincing, handsome, and functional, outfitted with its original oak millwork, leaded-glass windows, and builtins. The transition from living or dining room into the kitchen is seamless. The entire house looks like a lovingly maintained period piece.

For their “period” kitchen, Rich and Shirley used antique appliances, lighting fixtures, and plumbing fittings, but they cleverly integrated them with top-of-the-line contempora­ry elements. The refrigerat­or, for example, is

The Erstad kitchen may look a hundred years old, but it has all modern necessitie­s. “The only visible new thing is the smoke detector,” Rich says. The big appliances are indeed vintage. Contempora­ry items, like modern freezer drawers, are camouflage­d or hidden behind cabinet faces. USB chargers were included inside cabinet drawers—handy, but invisible. Electrical outlets are minimized with the use of an inset Wiremold strip beneath upper cabinets. To the right of the sink, the dishwasher is faced to look like two deep drawers.

The Erstads skipped an island in favor of a kitchen table. Blue-green paint on the pantry cabinets creates the look of a kitchen dresser. Countertop­s are both marble and black granite— an unfitted look that seems evolved over time.

The kitchen remains in scale with the house, and in its original location. Materials used were common between 1912 and the 1930s. Cabinets have inset, not overlay, doors and drawers. Lights are converted gaslight or early electric fixtures, and flooring is a resilient checkerboa­rd.

an original 1927 GE Monitor Top. Beside the 1924 sink, however, are freezer drawers, hidden behind wood cabinet doors.

“The freezer in the old refrigerat­or is miniscule, and it needs to be defrosted periodical­ly,” Rich says. “But that refrigerat­or measures 17 cubic feet and is very quiet and efficient. It has the original coolant and a newer motor that probably dates to 1938.” The Reliable gas stove, too, dates to the 1920s.

Erstad built the cabinet over the refrigerat­or, basing the design on a desk owned by the Finnish composer Sibelius. Sonos wi-fi speakers are hidden inside vintage radios in the cabinet.

The kitchen floor posed its own challenges. They wanted 6"-square linoleum tiles in period-correct colors, but they no longer exist. So they found 12" commercial vinyl tile in Chicago, in the right lightand dark-brown combinatio­n, and had them laser cut to precise 6" squares.

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 ??  ?? The subway tile resembles the old-style flat, squared tile (modern versions have pillowed edges). Outlet plates are mirrored. left The 1912 house in St. Paul is a variant of the American Foursquare, with a large, frontfacin­g gable. Two “bird-houses” in front are Little Free Libraries for sharing books. Their design is modeled on a house Rich Erstad’s ancestors built in Norway in the 1700s, with “green” roofs.
The subway tile resembles the old-style flat, squared tile (modern versions have pillowed edges). Outlet plates are mirrored. left The 1912 house in St. Paul is a variant of the American Foursquare, with a large, frontfacin­g gable. Two “bird-houses” in front are Little Free Libraries for sharing books. Their design is modeled on a house Rich Erstad’s ancestors built in Norway in the 1700s, with “green” roofs.
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 ??  ?? A brown checkerboa­rd floor, antique appliances and lighting fixtures, painted cabinets, and a kitchen table (in lieu of an island) create a convincing period kitchen. right Before renovation, the kitchen was a jumble of prior remodeling­s, with poor placement of appliances and a radiator in the middle of the room.
A brown checkerboa­rd floor, antique appliances and lighting fixtures, painted cabinets, and a kitchen table (in lieu of an island) create a convincing period kitchen. right Before renovation, the kitchen was a jumble of prior remodeling­s, with poor placement of appliances and a radiator in the middle of the room.
 ??  ?? bottom left The upstairs bath retains its clawfoot tub, art-glass window and casings, and beadboard wainscot. The wall-hung sink is 1920s salvage. The floor was painted with a stencil to look like hex tile.
bottom left The upstairs bath retains its clawfoot tub, art-glass window and casings, and beadboard wainscot. The wall-hung sink is 1920s salvage. The floor was painted with a stencil to look like hex tile.
 ??  ?? left The new windows had to be sized to fit around the sink’s high backsplash.
left The new windows had to be sized to fit around the sink’s high backsplash.
 ??  ?? above The 1927 General Electric Monitor Top refrigerat­or is not only handsome, but also uses far less electricit­y than a modern appliance.
above The 1927 General Electric Monitor Top refrigerat­or is not only handsome, but also uses far less electricit­y than a modern appliance.
 ??  ?? above To make back of the house function better, the door was moved and an entry porch built. The new lower bank of four windows frames the kitchen sink.
above To make back of the house function better, the door was moved and an entry porch built. The new lower bank of four windows frames the kitchen sink.

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