| Los Angeles Times
Sunday, April 25, 2004
By Kathy Price-Roninson
Pardon Our Dust:
What they always wanted: a door.
Their Granada Hills bungalow was long missing
a main entryway. Now they have that and more.
Since buying their vintage Granada Hills bungalow in
1972, schoolteachers Mike and Jill Tovey have infused
it with what she calls an ?arts and crafts, country
eclectic style. The couple placed an old fashioned
stove in the kitchen, installed claw-foot tubs in the
bathrooms and adorned the walls with collectibles and
old family photos.
But there was one thing the Toveys could not give
their 1921 home wihtout some major rethinking: a front
entrance.
Previous owners added a rumpus rom across the entire
front of the house in 1959, so the original front door
became an interior door that opened into a room. A
side door off the driveway became the main access into
the house.
The absence of a front door confused first-time
visitors, who would pace in front of the rumpus room's picture windows
yelling. Jill! Jill! Where do I come in?
After having living in the house for nearly 30 years
and raising two children there, the Toveys decided in
late 2001 to hire professionals to craft a new
entryway. The $120,000 project, which also turned the
cheaply built rumpus room into an elegant living room
and gave them a new office, family room and covered
patio, took a year to complete.
Their first step was finding a contractor. After
interviewing more than 20, they selected Northridge
general contractor Warren Kreis, whom they had
observed working on a friend's house. They liked that
Kreis worked only on one project at a time, showed up
when he said he would and stayed within budget.
When the Toveys asked him about doing their remodel,
his first concern was who the architect would be.
Since they didn't have one, Kreis suggested Kip Kelly
of Nest Architecture in Los Angeles, who came over to
look at the house.
Jill Tovey explained to Kelly that it was
important the new edition blend in with the old. We told him that we didn't
want a 20's house with a 50's addition and a 2001 porch tacked on the
front, she said, we wanted the home to look like there had never been
an addition.
After a brief tour of the house, Kelly surprised the
couple when he immediately began making sketches. He
proposed a new front porch with thick columns in rock
bases that would be set into the right side of the
family room. An antique front door the couple bought
years ago because it matched their divided-light
windows would fit perfectly, he said. Kelly also
suggested that the new home office be attached to the
other side of the rumpus room, separated by double
french doors.
Inside the new front door, a roomy vestible would
lead straight ahead into a new family room converted
from a covered patio. To the left, the vestible would
lead into the rumpus room. He suggested that the
sloped ceiling of the rumpus room be retained and that
insulation be added under the roofing material to make
the room more comfortable.
The Toveys wanted to keep their favorite feature of
the room--- a curved brick fireplace-- but they looked
forward to replacing the room's green shag carpeting
with hardwood flooring.
More ideas were discussed, and eventually the couple
recieved the final plan for the remodel. Mike Tovey
expected to see several large sheets of paper
revealing every detail, but the whole plan was drawn
on a single page. Three thousand dollars for one
piece of paper? he recalled thinking at the time.
The sheet was sufficient, however, as the contractor
and architect had worked together many times. Warren
will know what I mean, Kip said. Kreis took the reins
from that point and translated the plans into specific
building documents for permit purposes.
The contractor also wrote out a five-page contract
detailing every step of the work, and when each
payment was due: $1,000 on signign contract, $2,500
after recieving plans, $7,500 after demolition,
$10,800 after concrete form work and reinforcing
steel, and so on.
The project also called for updating plumbing,
replacing the heating system and adding air
conditioning. Imagine, Jill Tovey said, almost 30
years in the Valley and we never had air
conditioning.
Kelly also sketched out a covered patio for back of
the house, the master bedroom to replace a narrow tin
overhang that used to bake in the summer sun. The
sketch didn't look like much to the Toveys, but they
were amazed as the pation began to take on weight and
substance with columns set in rock bases matching
those in the front.
As the couple expected, Kreis was on the job every
day that he said he would be, and he let them know if
he wouldn't be there. Kreis wanted to add baseboards
and crown moldings wherever possible to match those in
the 1920's part of the house. When the couple
suggested getting vinyl windows to imitate the
existing wood windows, he insisted on wood windows
instead.
With the remodel nearly done, the exterior paint
color needed to be chose. The Toveys wanted a tan Dunn
Edwards color called Chaparrel, but Kreis recommended
a darker shade. They decided to settle the issue by
askign passersby which color they preferred. The vote
went to Chaparral.
Although the contractor stuck to the budget, the
Toveys added to the cost of the project by upgrading
their faded stucco garage. The house looked so good,
Mike Tovey recalled. We looked at the garage and
said, Man, let's do something. They added siding,
new windows and other improvements.
After living in the newly remodeled house for more
than a year, Mike Tovey no longer begrudged paying
$3,000 for a single piece of paper.
Those architects, he said, they have vision.
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