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PARDON OUR DUST
Sunday, July 15, 2001
A 'Fixer' Becomes a Keeper
The simple plan--buy, improve and move on--hit a snag when this homeowner
fell in love with the house.
By: KATHY PRICE-ROBINSON Special to the Times
Four years ago, Reese Lackey's three-part financial plan was simple:
* Buy a home in what he heard was the most popular Southland style (Spanish).
* Remodel it with trendy features (tile floors, granite kitchen counters,
stainless steel appliances).
* Live in the house for two years to satisfy tax laws and "flip"
it for a profit.
So why is Lackey still living in the Hollywood Hills home he bought and
remodeled in 1997, even though it has increased $300,000 in value?
And why is he talking about his "10-year plan" for future improvements?
"I did it to make money, and the trick was on me," Lackey says.
"I fell in love with the house.... I don't want to leave."
With views of several Hollywood studios and two mountain ranges in the
distance, the 1927 hillside house overlooks a wooded canyon where hawks
circle and coyotes run.
Lackey's first look at the house was not promising. It was during the
late 1990s when "the market was insanely hot," and he was outbid
on one house after another. He saw a two-bedroom, two-bathroom house listed
on the Internet, but when he drove by all he noticed was a rotten wood
fence at the edge of the sidewalk and a dead tree trunk.
"It was gross looking," recalled Lackey, who works for an investment
management firm. "It was so ugly, I didn't even want to look at it."
A real estate agent later pointed out the house, and Lackey realized "there's
that same stupid house." The agent, though, insisted he take a look
inside.
It was a clear day and, after he walked through the gate, Lackey was struck
by the vast views from the French doors and balcony, the wood and tile
floors throughout and the 15-foot-high, beamed ceiling in the living room.
A curving staircase led down to the bedrooms, the bathrooms, a den and
a wide veranda tucked into the treetops in back.
"I should have given this house a second look earlier," he says.
"It had an estate feeling."
After a series of offers and counteroffers, he bought the house in December
1997, all the while worried that no one was making backup offers. But
two inspections--one by a structural engineer--revealed the house was
sound. Plus, it remained leak-free during the El Nino rains that year.
As soon as Lackey decided to buy the house, he knew exactly how he would
turn it around for a profit.
First and foremost, it needed curb appeal, which he would achieve with
a low garden wall fronted with flowering plants. Lackey also decided to
cover the concrete porch with Saltillo tile and replace the front door.
Inside, the bland kitchen would need the most work. It had virtually no
charm with its plain wooden cabinets and counters covered by white tile
with dark grout. The spectacular views were framed with a tacky louvered
window.
To create a kitchen that future buyers would love, Lackey chose stainless
steel appliances--a Dynamic Cooking Systems range, a Sub-Zero refrigerator
and a Bosch dishwasher. For the floors, he used travertine marble tile
that he got at a bargain. For the counters, slab granite. The jalousie
window would be replaced with a French casement.
To get started, Lackey hired a painting contractor and a tile contractor.
He was then working from his home in Redondo Beach and able to visit the
job every day to monitor progress.
However, as the job became more complicated, he hired a general contractor,
Richard Grenier, whom he had seen working on another job in the neighborhood,
to coordinate the woodworker, lather, plasterer, plumber, electrician,
etc.
Within five weeks, Lackey was able to move into the house, while the work
continued for several more months.
The master bathroom was almost completely redone. New French doors replaced
windows to open the master bedroom to the veranda.
Gutters were repaired, electrical upgraded, floors refinished and new
lighting installed.
In the beginning, Lackey budgeted $35,000 for the upgrades, but ended
up spending $55,000. When friends comment that going $20,000 over budget
is not bad, Lackey says, "It felt bad at the time." But he now
sees that he was "naive" about how much work the house needed.
Still, he saved thousands of dollars by shopping, bargaining and negotiating
"everything," including the contractor's fee and the prices
of appliances. The contractor saved him thousands by recommending he not
replace the high-quality metal tile roof with a clay roof, as Lackey had
first envisioned. Lackey saved several more thousand in the kitchen by
simply painting the cabinets, which he determined to be sturdy. A French
window from the master bedroom, removed to make way for a French door,
was cut down and reused in the kitchen.
As he lived in the house, Lackey became more aware of its virtues. The
location was better than his previous oceanfront address in Redondo Beach,
where he rarely got visitors.
"Nobody wanted to drive down there," he recalls. Here, barely
a minute from the 101 Freeway, he can feel "the buzz" of Los
Angeles and is minutes away from his favorite venues such as the Hollywood
Bowl, the Pantages and Ahmanson theaters, and various comedy clubs.
The luxury kitchen, created for future buyers, remains mostly unused by
Lackey, who says: "I don't cook. I literally don't cook."
One weekend, visiting friends wanted to prepare a brunch and they turned
on the oven. Investigating a burning smell, they found the instructions
still inside.
The two-year tax period passed some time ago, but Lackey has no desire
to sell his house. It has a "vibe" to it that makes him feel
very comfortable, even though Spanish was not previously his favorite
style. His 10-year plan calls for a fountain in front and a hot tub out
back.
And he read somewhere that people who live in houses with mountain views
have better mental health. When asked if that's proving true, he says:
"So far, so good."
* * *
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AfterReese
Lackey claims that he never, ever cooks, but he created a kitchen that
any cook would love.

AfterA
stainless steel stove, powerful exhaust fan and granite counters add to
the kitchen's appeal.

BeforeWhile
the view out the window was thrilling, the view inside the kitchen was
tacky.

Even the
front door has a feeling of style and class.

A sunny porch
is a good spot for blooming bougainvillea.

The rear
of the house faces a wooded canyon and, beyond that, Hollywood.
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