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PARDON OUR DUST
Sunday, September 2, 2001
A Retake for '20s Home
Couple updates a Whitley Heights house once owned by a silent-film star.
By KATHY PRICE-ROBINSON, Special to The Times
What would motivate a couple to buy an old house and launch
a six-month, $100,000-plus remodel? Why not just find a house that met
their needs in the first place?
"It was an emotional decision," said Sydney Harvey, who in 1998
bought a two-story, 1924 Monterey Revival-style house with her husband,
Rick Greenwood. "It was love at first sight when we walked through
the door."
The couple had set out looking for a house with a big yard to accommodate
their "mongrel horde" of three dogs. But what made the sale
was the home's star power.
Silent-film star Harold Lloyd had once owned the house in Whitley Heights,
a historic Hollywood neighborhood where Carole Lombard, Rudolf Valentino,
Charlie Chaplin and Marie Dressler also lived. The residential neighborhood
was cut in half in the 1950s to make way for the Hollywood Freeway, and
most houses in its path were razed.
The owners at the time found a new site for the house in what had been
a Whitley Heights park. Said Greenwood: "They liked it so much, they
took the trouble to move it."
He and Harvey liked it, too--the arched doorways and windows, hardwood
floors, bathrooms lined with antique tile and spacious balconies. However,
the home's shortcomings, Harvey said, "were soon apparent."
While the 1950s move provided the house with a modern foundation and upgraded
electrical and plumbing systems, the kitchen remained an inadequate cubbyhole
for a house of more than 2,000 square feet.
Tiled on the floor, walls and ceiling, it was barely able to contain a
dishwasher, microwave oven and large-capacity refrigerator. There was
scarcely 4 feet of space between the refrigerator on one wall and the
stove on the opposite wall--and that was with none of the appliances'
doors open.
"It was unbelievable," said Harvey, who enjoys cooking with
her husband of 27 years. "Even in apartments, you have better kitchens."
Adding on to the kitchen would have been expensive and difficult. The
couple had envisioned a remodeling budget of $25,000 for the kitchen,
a bathroom and other work. And because Whitley Heights is on the National
Register of Historic Places and included in a city Historic Preservation
Overlay Zone, a neighborhood association must approve any exterior changes.
To enlarge the kitchen, the couple decided to steal some space from two
adjacent areas: a long, narrow pantry and a laundry room, which would
become a sunny, bright yellow breakfast room. Extra cabinets would help
offset the loss of the pantry, while the washer and dryer would be moved
to an upstairs closet.
For help with the kitchen, Harvey and Greenwood, who are adjunct faculty
members at UCLA, took their ideas to a kitchen planner at Ikea. To retain
the 1920s flavor of the house, the couple chose white cabinets that looked
like old-fashioned Cape Cod wainscoting, but which were made of a no-paint-needed
laminate placed over metal.
For appliances, they chose a beefy Viking stove with a stainless-steel
top and white base. The stainless trash compactor and white dishwasher
and microwave blended well with the white cabinets and stainless drawer
and door pulls.
The couple also planned a bathroom remodel for the upstairs and a rebuilding
of the living room fireplace that had an out-of-place used-brick facade.
An architect-contractor who was recommended to the couple said the remodel
was too small for his company, but he referred them to a father-and-son
construction crew, who accepted the job. Although they did high-quality
work, progress was slow.
This--coupled with additions decided upon by the couple and the unforeseen
challenges that always arise in old-house remodels--caused the original
estimate of six weeks for the project to grow into six months and the
budget to balloon to $100,000.
The kitchen's bright green tile was a problem from the beginning. Most
owners of historic homes are loath to tear out original tile, as were
this couple. But when work got underway, the tile started breaking up
and falling, some of it hanging by its chicken-wire backing.
"It was a disaster waiting to happen," Harvey said. In the end,
they took all the tile off the ceiling (which allowed for recessed lighting)
and most of the wall tile (which was replaced with new green tile of similar
color and size). The tile counter, originally barely 4 feet on each side
of the sink, was replaced with an easy-care butcher block.
For the floor, the couple decided to retain the original brown and tan
tile. They also chose to keep a nook created by a medicine cabinet that
was set between the kitchen's two windows. Greenwood had a glass artist
paint and install an original artwork in the spot. "We turned a negative
into a positive."
After the kitchen was done, the crew started in on the fireplace. Though
it was flanked with two graceful, arched windows, the old brick mantel
"was the ugliest thing we'd ever seen," Harvey said. To bring
the fireplace up to a level of elegance to match the house, an interior
designer studied books on Monterey Revival architecture to create a refined
wood-and-stucco design, which the crew built.
The upstairs bathroom remodel caused the couple their only real frustration
when, because of a misunderstanding, the yellow tile that Harvey had wanted
was replaced with a mauve shade, which threw off her decorating plans.
Though the job cost nearly four times more and took four times longer
than anticipated, the couple are philosophical about it.
"At first, you're surprised when things go wrong," said Greenwood,
who has remodeled several homes with his wife over the last three decades.
"Now I just expect things to go wrong."
For Harvey, remodeling an old home also brought great rewards. "We
have a house with the charm and feel of 1920s California but [with] conveniences
that 1920 never knew existed."
Source Book
Project: Remodel kitchen, bathroom and fireplace of 1924 Monterey Revival
home in the historic Whitley Heights area of Hollywood.
Designer: Studio C, Studio City, (818) 762-7874
Kitchen Cabinets: Ikea, Burbank, (818) 841-3500
Glass artwork: Rafael Gevorkian, Los Angeles, (323) 222-4001
Duration: Six months
Cost: $105,200
Where the Money Went
Kitchen/breakfast room--$49,000
Master bathroom--$28,000
Doors, windows--$17,000
Exterior fencing and wall--$5,200
Laundry area--$6,000 (including appliances)
TOTAL--$105,200
(Figures are approximate.)

AfterThe
remodeled kitchen is fresh with beadboard cabinets, butcher-block counters
and green wall tile.

BeforeThe
original kitchen had some charm, but it was so tiny. Note the refrigerator
on the left and the appliances on the right, with barely four feet of
room to move around.

By usurping
the space from a pantry, the couple spread out enough to accommodate a
nice Viking stove.

A pleasing
grouping of cabinets helps provide more storage space.

The old laundry
room, off the kitchen, was transformed into a sunny breakfast room.
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