Featured in the San Jose Mercury News

Cottage Ideas: Pierre Deux and Lucite

Friday, September 18th, 2009

cottage bedroom2

This little cottage is so stylish and daring, it’s almost too hard to imagine a rabble rousing family of four with a dog moving into it.   But that’s what Lisa Murray says her family is still planning to do while they are remodeling the front house.

darned house-Lucite deerThe 360-square-foot cottage is out back and was the first to get attention after they purchased the Los Gatos property a year ago. Lisa is nothing if not whimsical and avante garde. And the cottage reflects that.

The “trophy” over the tiny fireplace is a Lucite deer head illuminated by a string of blue LEDs. The wall above the master bed has a lit arrow that looks like a midway sign at a fair. Even she admits getting a kick out of the “creepy” side of a circus (and has a few framed pictures of circus rides on the wall, too.) But those things are the extras.

darned house cottage living roomAnd it’s amazing how she pulled the fundamentals together for a beautiful, cohesive mix of modern and vintage, traditional and “circus-y.” Blue and white tiles from Portugal frame the fireplace and the kitchen backsplash. A floral love seat (a hide-a-bed) sits across from small red Ikea barrel-back chairs (with Pierre Deux throw pillows.)

She’s made great use of a very small space, with a tiny dining table in the main room and a Queen size bed with a watermelon-color frame from Anthropology in the bedroom.

darned house cottage kitchenNow let’s see how good it looks after the hubby and kids and dog move in. Stay tuned to the family adventures to come. (I can only imagine what the main house will look like! This woman’s got it going on!)

Julia - lookiloos.com 

 

 

Lookiloos is following the adventures of the Murray-Hinkley family remodel.  Scroll down for a list of Lisa’s splurges, bargains and resources on her cottage remodel. Or click below for  the most recent stories:
Lisa Explains Los Gatos Remodel
Los Gatos Family Takes on Major Remodel

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Asian Inspired Backyard in San Jose’s Naglee Park

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Keyhole gate

Rick Holden and Sandra Moll have long been known as patrons of the arts here in the South Bay.  Whether they were chairing meetings for The San Jose Repertory’s Board of Directors or opening their home to host a private event benefitting the Institute of Contemporary Art‘s or San Jose Jazz, the couple did it with flair.   So when it came time to relandscape their large backyard in San Jose’s koi pondNaglee Park, it should be no surprise that it has a distinctly artistic bent, from Thai artifacts to sculptures by local artists, like Marcia Donohue of the Our Own Stuff Gallery in Berkeley.

Entertainers at heart, the couple wanted a backyard space that would be appropriate for hosting a fundraising reception for 100 people, barbecue for 10 or intimate breakfast for two.  They enlisted the help of San Jose-based landscape designer Cevan Forristt, whose penchant for mixing ethnic treasures and reclaimed architectural artifacts  was just what the couple needed to transform their space into an unexpected downtown San Jose oasis.    “Our designer asked us each to write an essay about what we wanted to see in our backyard. I was not sure if Sandy and I would share the same vision or priorities”  Rick said.  “He melded our different points of view, brought his resources and hit the nail on the head.  We are out here year-round and the landscape is lush and constantly evolving.”

tablefor14From antique Chinese soaking tubs to giant Malaysian prayer beads gracing a keyhole concrete wall, the Holden/Moll backyard is a constant delight.   The concrete table seating 14 guests was poured by Forrist himself who embedded broken ceramic plates and pottery as accents.  The pottery pieces were retrieved before a San Francisco shop owner could throw the lot in a dumpster after the Loma Prieta earthquake.  The custom table is surrounded by antique chairs.

Repurposing ancient items for new uses, they converted an antique Chinese horse trough into a beverage cooler. Dinner is often cooked on the gas powered wok hidden in one of the nooks.  A indiangateChinese gate flanked with potted bamboo graces the driveway entrance, while a reclaimed blue antique Indian gate guards the eastern entrance to the patio. Fishing baskets were turned upside down, filled with white lights and converted into outdoor lamps.  The entire property is peppered with creations like bamboo/golden trumpet plant sculptures, lights imported from Mexico and a Buddah in an unexpected corner.   Adjoining the backyard, they have one of the largest collections of SJSU alum Donald Carlson‘s glass art and a contemporary painting by Jenny Do in their downstairs indoor entertainment space.

The hardscape is filled-in with a mix of bamboo, monkey paws, succulents and morning glories to pay homage to their Asian inspiration and create privacy and shade.

Rather than flying half way across the world to see ancient treasures, the Holden’s simply look to their backyard for some zen like relief — Silicon Valley style.

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Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

The stark white house at the end of Plaza Drive in San Jose’s historic Palm Haven neighborhood takes you by surprise. It’s small in scale, a single story on a corner lot. But its domed tower and decorative parapet across the roofline force you to take a second look.

Inside Bell Tower - Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

This is Michael Borbely’s mini masterpiece – a recently completed Mission Revival house of stucco and tile that took years of research to create, plus help from San Jose’s Fireclay Tile to reproduce century-old details.

Borbely, 45, is an architectural activist of sorts who spearheaded an effort several years ago to restore the pillars at the entrance to the 1930s Palm Haven in Willow Glen to their original Mission Revival style. So when he was ready for a new project after selling his Prairie style house in the neighborhood, “I looked for the house in the worst condition that had the most impact on the neighborhood.” He decided on a tiny Spanish style house for sale nearby in need of a major remodel. He wanted the house to fit into the streetscape and, taking some cues from the pillars and an original Mission Revival house in the neighborhood, decided to reinvent a scaled-down version.

It still causes a little bewilderment when people walk by.

“When people ask what it is, they have all sorts of strange ideas,” said Borbely, who owns a small design and construction company called Novuspace. “Because Mission Revival is so rarely done anymore — and when it’s done it’s done out of proper context — I think that furthers people’s confusion when they see it.”

In the early 1900s, when the Spanish Colonial Revival style was hitting its stride in the United States, he said, there was no accepted category called Mission Revival. It was all considered Spanish.

Entry Hall - Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

“It wasn’t until later that historians in the architectural community agreed that there are pretty clear distinctions that separate real Mission Revival from Spanish mode,” he said. “It comes down to an
espadana – a curvilinear parapet.”

Most examples of Mission Revival style were executed in structures as large as the original Spanish missions, such as libraries and train stations. But here was Borbely with a 1,700 square foot original house that barely fit on its little, long, narrow corner lot.

“It’s a very challenging lot,” he said, “I found that if you scale down the components, Mission style fits quite nicely here. People say they feel it’s on a human scale. It’s got a tower, but not a tower that towers
over you.”

The narrow lot size also meant that Borbely had to forego one of the key features of Mission style – an exterior arched loggia. Instead, Borbely turned the concept “inside out,” he said, resulting in the home’s most stunning attribute: its wide, vaulted, triple-arched entry hall. The new house is barely 2,000 square feet, and the central hallway takes up a sizeable portion of it.

Kitchen - Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

“It’s not a big house, but it’s a flexible house,” he said. “I see this as able to double as a dining space,” or a gracious area for wine receptions. A wainscoting of colorful tile, reproduced by Fireclay Tile, came from a 100-year-old photograph Borbely unearthed.

What used to be a tiny breakfast nook at the front of the old house is now the domed tower room that Borbely uses as a study. The old galley kitchen was turned into a guest room.

The new kitchen at the far end of the entry hall, down a few steps, makes another strong statement. The sanctuary-like ceiling explodes into view, with heavy timbers closely spaced and highly-carved corbels. Nava’s Brothers built the red oak cabinetry, including a pew-like banquet for the kitchen table. The kitchen accents tiles were created by local ceramic artist Babak Daleki at www.dalekiceramicstudio.com.

As much as the house is reminiscent of the old, Borbely integrated modern, environmentally-friendly features, including salvaged materials, LED lighting and solar power that not only heats his house but powers his electric car in the driveway.

Kitchen Fireplace - Mission Revival in the Heart of Palm Haven

Borbely even took pains to ornament the long side of the house – an area often downplayed in design. But since the side faces a sidewalk, Borbely added window hoods that suggest a deep adobe wall, a large, carved false door and a vintage style iron fence with a cross motif.

“I wanted to make it pleasing to look at no matter where you were,” he said.

Judging from the neighbors’ reactions, he seems to have succeeded:

“My neighbors have given me a list of properties they want me to work on.”

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related Stories:

La Estancia – A Los Gatos Mission Revival

Reviving a Spanish Revival

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California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Pool and Carport - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Realtors are well-known for “expanding” the boundaries of popular neighborhoods like San Jose’s Willow Glen and Rose Garden. But the residents of the distinctive Hanchett Park neighborhood, a largely unknown enclave of period California Craftsmen, Italian Revivals and Prairie-style homes, are tired, quite frankly, of being referred to as “the lower Rose Garden.”

Sequoia Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Hanchett Park’s graceful streetscape design, including European-like traffic roundabouts and original entrance pillars, was designed in 1907 by John McLaren who designed Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. The neighborhood is often referred to in a larger sense as the Shasta Hanchett neighborhood because Shasta Avenue is the main street that runs through it. But the historic name is Hanchett Residence Park and it is nestled between The Alameda and Park Avenue. Several of the Arts and Crafts homes in the neighborhood were once featured in American Bungalow Magazine.

Now, a grass roots group, calling itself the Hanchett Park Heritage Project, hopes to rebuild the historic gateway pillars with pergolas at key entrance points around the neighborhood, including Martin Avenue at The Alameda. They’re hosting their first home tour, featuring five historic houses, on May 30 to raise money for the project.

Tillman Pillars - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

“Hanchett Park is one of only two residential parks in San Jose. The other is Palm Haven and no one has ever heard of us,” said Hillary Savage, a neighborhood resident who is helping plan the home tour. Residential parks were some of the first “subdivisions” at the turn of the last century that were planned with utility poles running at the back of the lots, decorative lighting and landscaping to “retain a park-like atmosphere.”

One of the most enthusiastic supporters of the project and the neighborhood is Larry Camuso, who has restored his 1926 Italian Revival home into a stunning showplace and earned it a city historical designation. The house, which was originally built as a one-story home in 1908 then radically remodeled in 1926 with a second-story and Palladian windows, echoes the Hollywood glamour and style of its day.

Sequoia Foyer - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

And Camuso, with his partner Kirk Wentland, is getting it ready for the tour. Camuso, 49, is long a fan of the classic “Sunset Boulevard,” where the Hollywood mansion is a much a character as stars Gloria Swanson and William Holden.

“I discovered that movie in my 20s and thought that was what I was all about,” Camuso said. “That whole period of time, the style, design, art and decoration, it created a vision for me.” In fact, the look of the upstairs master suite, including the custom-made water spout in the bathroom, came right out of an Art Deco movie set book. Interior designer Paul Rokovich brought the vision to reality throughout the house.

“I’m stuck in the 1920s living in this house,” said Camuso, who is semi-retired from his antique and collector car parts business. (The house was built with a detached three-car garage, including a repair “pit” in one of the bays. “Sold!”)

Sequoia Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Like many homeowners in the neighborhood, Camuso embarked on a historically-correct renovation. Though the house was in good condition when he bought it in 1991, he began five years later to restore its original footprint and fixtures. And he marshaled the memories of one of its original inhabitants, Lucretia Martin Schlueter, who was raised there until 1954.

“By way of old pictures that Lucretia supplied, I was able to put it back the way it was,” he said. Camuso threw an 80th birthday party for the house in 2006, and invited Lucretia, who is in her 90s and lives in Carmel, as the guest of honor.

“The house had great bones, but was never fully realized as far as its aesthetic values.” He removed a bathroom and closet off the main entry hall and returned the space to its original purpose — a rear hallway that separates the living room from the study. He also replaced the replacement windows — in other words, any flat glass that had been installed to fix broken windows over the years was replaced with vintage wavy glass that Camuso tracked down at Anderson C&M Used Building Material on Montgomery Street near downtown San Jose. He had nearly every one reglazed.

Shasta Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

“It’s like a shimmering show of wavy glass,” he said.

Along with Camuso’s home, several turn-of-the-century Craftsman bungalows will be on the tour, including one with original stone columns in front. Also on the tour is one of the first homes built in the subdivision, considered the model home of its day. The large, shingled house was designed by the well-known Wilson-McKenzie architecture firm, which designed many homes in Naglee Park near downtown.

Outside the downtown core of Victorians, “this was considered modern, in terms of 1908,” Savage said.

Yosemite Home - California Craftsman, Italian Revival, Bungalows on Hanchett Home Tour

Preparation for the home tour has been a neighborhood preoccupation over the past two years, as several homeowners have hosted cocktail and garden parties to raise money among themselves for the event.

The city of San Jose’s Redevelopment Agency is helping with funding to build the first set of pillars at The Alameda and Martin that were removed in the 1960s, probably because of disrepair. But residents want to rebuild the pillars at other key entry points as well, including at Park and Tillman avenues, with an estimated cost of $40,000 each.

“We have to have a lot of home tours,” Savage said.

Tickets for the Saturday, May 30th tour, may be purchased for $25 the day of the tour at 1265 Sierra Avenue, or $21 in advance through hanchettpark.org.

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(Story by Julia Prodis Sulek. Photos by Desiree Northend.)

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Big Sur’s Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

For 60 years at Big Sur’s famed Nepenthe restaurant, cameras have been clicking away on the obvious – the cliffside view of the dramatic Pacific coastline, the iconic, mid-century restaurant of glass and wood, the grand terrace where Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton filmed the 1965 classic, “The Sandpiper.”

But just above the terrace is a humble, but intriguing dwelling hiding in plain sight from guests awed by the captivating view.

Log Cabin 1930 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Behind a brick facade is a structure of logs and adobe cement that Hollywood legend Orson Welles and his wife Rita Hayworth bought on a romantic whim in 1944.

This weekend, as Nepenthe celebrates the 60th anniversary of the restaurant’s opening, we turn our lens toward this tiny and surprisingly vibrant place that is still home to members of the same fascinating family that founded Nepenthe and run it today.

The Bohemian aura of Nepenthe, the beatniks, the belly dancing, the poetry, the parties began in this cabin. In those days, the cabin was the first stop for guests.

“The log cabin was the hub of everything that went on,” says Romney “Nani” Steele, who grew up in the cabin with her grandparents and cousins in the 1960s. “The restaurant was built in such a way, it was somewhat added to the cabin,’’ she says. “My grandmother created a whole life behind the restaurant.”

Bill Lolly and Kids - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Her grandparents, Bill and Lolly Fassett, moved into the three-room cabin in 1947 with their five children and within two years had built Nepenthe, naming it for the Greek word meaning “no sorrow.”

The cabin and 12 acres had cost them $12,000 after Welles and Hayworth divorced and sold them the property. The Hollywood couple had planned the 1925 cabin as a getaway when they purchased it from a hiking group. The stars even measured for curtains, but never returned.

Renting the cabin at the time was author Henry Miller, who had already written the scandalous “Tropic of Cancer.” He moved out when the Fassetts bought the cabin, but became lifelong friends with Bill Fassett, a gregarious storyteller who ran a magazine in Carmel. Lolly Fassett was a cultured, artistic woman in her own right, having lived her teen years in Europe as the traveling companion of her grandmother, artist Jane Gallatin Powers, who was part of the original Carmel art scene.

Holly and Erin - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

The Fassetts were great entertainers and envisioned Nepenthe even though Highway One had been open only a decade and traffic through the area was light. Lolly, influenced by the great piazzas of Capri, insisted that architect Rowan Maiden – a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright – design a great terrace for dancing and a restaurant that opened to the air. It was Lolly who made the adobe bricks and laid them for the giant round fireplace on the terrace. When Nepenthe opened April 24, 1949, about 500 people attended the grand opening. Photographs were shot for architectural magazines.

The guests had traveled 30 miles of winding road from Carmel and beyond. Life in Big Sur, then, as now, was dictated by the ebb and flow of nature. In the winters, the roads washed out and in summers, wildfires whipped through.

“It created tension and upheaval and a dynamic quality of people,” says Kirk Gafill, a Fassett grandson, who grew up in the cabin and runs Nepenthe with his mother, Holly Fassett.

From artists to hippies, his grandmother welcomed them into her living room.

Filming On Terrace - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“When we were growing up, nightly 10, 15, 20 people were in the living room visiting with her,” says Steele, whose book “My Nepenthe” will be published this fall (www.mynepenthebook.com). “People came in and napped there.” Some of those wayfarers fell in love with the Fassett daughters, married them, had children, then continued on their journeys. Four of those children spent part of their childhood living in the cabin.

“Our absolutely favorite thing to do was to lie on my grandmother’s long row of beds and look out the window with our hands perched under our chins,” says Steele, 43. “People would get up and dance. Someone would be in the corner reading poetry or playing music. I can remember the sun coming through the window and watching for hours what was going on.”

Every once in a while, her grandmother would say, “Go dance!” “She would wrap scarves around my waist and we’d whirl around,” Steele says. “We’d do that for guests and we would come back up the stairs. She always had plenty of costumes, petticoats, Flamenco costumes, just amazing stuff.”

Piggyback 1968 - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

Erin Gafill, 45, Steele’s cousin who is an artist, says that “the line between fantasy and reality was totally blurred. There was so much magic and glamour around here.” She has a foggy memory of lying on her back as a toddler on the terrace, looking up at the sky between the branches of the old oak tree.

“This man appeared and scooped me up. I couldn’t stop crying,” Gafill recalls. “Years later my mom told me this was Richard Burton, and that Liz Taylor took me from his arms and handed me to my mom, who was sitting on the bleachers in shock at the whole thing.”

It was 1964 and the movie stars were filming “The Sandpiper” on the terrace. Its theme song, “The Shadow of Your Smile” became a classic. When the movie about an artist’s illicit affair with a schoolmaster premiered in 1965, Nepenthe was transformed. The Fassetts opened Nepenthe from seasonally to year-round.

After Lolly died in 1986, Gafill returned to the cabin, raised two children, and still lives there her husband.

Picture Frames - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

“It seemed like an impossible place to live,” she says, recalling her decision to make the move. The cabin “was so psychologically important to us. I had to make sure the change was OK with everybody.”

She’s done her best to preserve the spirit of the cabin. It still has three main rooms, including the kitchen and big stone fireplace. An extra bedroom was added along the way. Behind the door of the log cabin’s kitchen is the industrial prep kitchen for the restaurant. When the adobe cement began to chip away on the side of the cabin facing the terrace, a brick facade was overlaid to protect it from the wind and fog. Inside, she covered the cabin’s redwood walls with her great-great grandmother’s paintings. Family and restaurant crew took them to safety when the wildfires came dangerously close to Nepenthe last summer, closing the restaurant for three weeks.

Outdoor Dining - Big Sur's Nepenthe Turns 60, But a Log Cabin is Still Home

As the extended family gathers this weekend for the anniversary, the cabin will beckon them in. And as they planned all along, there will be dancing on the terrace.

Julia - lookiloos.com

(Top black and white photograph of Nepenthe taken in1950 by Morley Baer, ©2009 by the Morley Baer Photography Trust, Santa Fe; Lee Harbick Collection, California History Room, Monterey Public Library. Color photo in cabin with Erin Gafill on right and her mother, Holly, by Tom Birmingham.)

Related stories:
Artist Getaway on Big Sur Coast
California Daily Art: Landscape Paintings
Carmel Valley Cabin
Artist in Residence

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Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

Not much surprised Iris Harrell’s family when she left Virginia in her 20s to work as a history teacher on a Navajo Indian reservation, then toured the country for five years as a guitar player and singer in a pop and country band.

But when she put on a tool belt in her 30s and started doing carpentry, “they thought, ‘Have you lost your mind?’”

Living Room Center - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

It all made perfect sense to Harrell, who is 62 now and CEO of her own Harrell Remodeling company based in Mountain View.

“If you can control a public school sixth period class on Friday afternoon and you can control drummers and other free-spirited, independent people and travel all over the country,” she said, “it’s pretty powerful training.”

For the past three decades, she’s been orchestrating designers, carpenters and subcontractors to create beautiful homes for people all over the Peninsula. She finally was able to focus on her own home in Portola Valley, which she shares with her partner of 30 years, Ann Benson. They completed a major remodel last year that is both universal — meaning it works for all ages and abilities — and it’s sustainable, meaning it’s “green” and has a roof with 54 solar panels. They built it as much for Benson’s 91-year-old mother as themselves. They installed an elevator as well as a bathroom vanity that lowers to wheelchair height.

The couple was first drawn to the area when they visited a friend in the Portola Valley Ranch subdivision, an early 1980s-era development of 200 homes nestled among hills, oaks and meadows. A nature corridors runs through the development, so wildlife is free to meander. That means all gardening is relegated to a fenced-in “community garden” near the pool and tennis courts. In 1992, the house that was built as the developer’s office — with 10 “bedrooms”, one-and-a-half bathrooms and no kitchen — came on the market. Harrell and Benson, seeing the potential, took it “as is”.

Kitchen -Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

They did a temporary remodel back then to reconfigure the house to a four-bedroom, with a kitchen. But in July, they finished a substantial remodel, turning it into a showcase of modern green technology as well as comfortable, lifelong living. They started with a demolition party and invited Benson’s mother and her friends from their San Francisco senior citizens’ home. But many in wheelchairs and walkers couldn’t navigate the hillside house.

What a difference a remodel makes. They built a wooden ramp from the street level down to the front door, winding through oak trees along the way. They removed a wall in the entry hall and a closet in the living room to open the vista from the front door through the living room and out to the hillside views. To make the living room with 14-foot ceilings seem more intimate, they hung what they call “lighted quilts” from the ceiling. Made of glass that is stained in traditional quilt patterns, the floating piece of art is an homage to Benson’s love of quilting.

They reconfigured the kitchen to allow for “hers and hers” refrigerators and sinks. Since Benson is the main chef for the couple, her fridge stores all the fresh food for cooking. With Harrell’s fridge, on the other hand, “you take it out and eat it or put it in the microwave.”

Master Shower - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

The kitchen opens to a small eating area as well as an intimate sitting area that faces an energy-saving, gas fireplace, one of five in rooms throughout the house. They provide their main source of heat and turn them on only when they spend time in those rooms.

They also made “green” plans to cool the house, especially when the morning sun pours into the living room on hot summer mornings. They installed exterior “European Rolling Shutters” that not only descend at the push of a button, but flap shut.

The laundry room doubles as a kitchenette for the downstairs master bedroom. Except for towels, they hang up all their clothes to line dry across the long back wall. A heated counter top for folding dries the moisture from the air.

They installed a sauna in the master bath and curbless showers for the day when they might need wheelchairs themselves. The house has won several awards for universal and green design, including most recently the National Contractor of the Year Award from the National Remodelers Association (NARI) for Residential Universal Design.

Iris and Ann - Portola Valley: Green and Sustainable House on a Hill

This house, Harrell and Benson say, is their “forever house.”

When they completed the remodel last summer, including the ramp and elevator, Benson’s mother and her friends from the senior home returned for a “wrap” party. They all easily navigated the space.

(Photographs by Bill Enos. Harrell and Benson portrait by Desiree Northend.)

Julia - lookiloos.com

You might also enjoy these stories:
Los Altos Contemporary
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Tips: Garden Patio Makeover on a Budget

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Tips: Garden Patio Makeover on a Budget

When Mary Schlichting Francis moved into her four-plex in central San Jose, a small corner patio came with it. It was a blank slate of concrete and gray. For this woman who loves to garden as well as collect vintage treasures, her task was a welcome opportunity. So with a little imagination, a can of black spray-paint and an internal compass leading her to bargains, she transformed her patio into a creative, welcoming spot.

“You get so much more joy out of it knowing you spent so little,” she said.

Here are some of her tips to get your patio ready for spring — on a dime.

Orchid - Tips: Garden Patio Makeover on a Budget

1.  Find a small fountain(Mary found hers at Savers on San Carlos, painted it and added river rocks.) The sound of gurgling water creates a soothing atmosphere.

2.  Rescue orphan plants from friends who are moving or cleaning out. Mary, who has a green thumb, loves to nurse sickly plants back to life — her exquisite white azalea is testament to that. Cast-off cyclamen bulbs from last year are blooming on Mary’s patio this year.

3.  Shop second-hand stores, like Move It Elsewhere on Lincoln Avenue in San Jose that is open one weekend a month for old pots, garden furniture and interesting “found art.” Try Salvation Army on Taylor Street, too, or Marshalls and T.J. Maxx.

4.  Buy a can of black “Painter’s Touch” semigloss paint at Home Depot, and spray a coat on old orange pots, especially plastic ones, to give them a more sophisticated look.

Ivy - Tips: Garden Patio Makeover on a Budget

5.  Create vignettes by combining plants, sculpture (like Mary’s buddha statue), garden mosaics and even cheap paintings or pictures that can hang under the eaves, or over a bench. “Some things can handle the weather,” Mary said. “If it only lasts a season, but it doesn’t cost much, it’s just fine.”

6.  Go green and purchase a compost bin. Mary is sharing it with the other tenants in her complex. 

Julia - lookiloos.com

Related Stories:
Julia’s Screened Porch
My Romantic Home
Move it Elsewhere
Wisteria in Soquel

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Green Building Materials – Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

You know you’re immersed in the Berkeley vibe when you wander down San Pablo Avenue at Ashby. You can’t help but feel all “green” inside when you stop at Ohmega Salvage yard, where re-use and repurpose is at its best. It’s a place that was in business long before the term “green” became vogue, and has even been featured on “This Old House.”

Stained Glass - Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Here in the open lot, you can find everything from old bathtubs to Buddhas from Bali. Ohmega Salvage specializes in pre-1950 architectural artifacts, so if you’re restoring a Victorian or old Craftsman, you can find stained glass windows, chandeliers, sinks and doors. Stacks of old glass block can be purchased for $4 a block. A pair of cast iron chairs sell for $300, plus another $150 for the pub table with the marble checkerboard top.

Ohmega Too is across the street, where the lot has more of a flea market feel. Urban Ore, another salvage yard, is on Murray Street around the corner. It calls itself an “Ecopark”. Hit all three, plus grab an organic, free-range, locally-grown bite at almost any corner restaurant, and you will have experienced Berkeley.

Art Deco Light - Green Building Materials - Ohmega Salvage in Berkeley

Julia - lookiloos.com

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Update:
Lookiloos featured in the San Jose Mercury News
This post is featured in the San Jose Mercury News Home and Garden section here.

Here’s the complete slideshow: