Mt. Baker 20s 70s 20s

Located on a tree-lined boulevard in Seattle, this was a craftsman house built in the 1920s from a stock floorplan from Sears or elsewhere like countless others across America. What set it apart was a clever addition in the 1970s which borrowed from the gable form, but with roots in Northwest modernism. The house had been neglected since it’s midcentury refresh, and our clients hoped to add an accessory dwelling unit in an existing basement.

Our design sought to preserve both eras of the house’s history: the original 1920s craftsman base, and the expressive modern addition. We updated many of the rotting, leaking elements of the the addition, while keeping the clean lines and subtle forms.

Scope:

Renovation of an existing house and permitting of an Accessory Dwelling Unit.

Close up view of the sun room and corner windows of the primary bedroom from the outside.
Axonometric drawing of the front of the house.
Axonometric drawing of the back of the house.
Basement floor plan.
Main floor plan.
Upper floor plan.
Architect:

Paul Michael Davis

Completion:

2018

Location:

Seattle, WA, USA

Structural:

Swenson Say Faget

Contractor

Karlstrom Asociates

Photography:

Mark Woods

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