Before + After: Wooded Bliss

After 20 months and seven designs, a passive solar failure gets its rightful place in the sun.

11 MIN READ

A new front entry would replace what the couple called “the mouse hole”: a small, dark, unwelcoming space that took visitors down several steep and narrow stairs before entering the main house.

The screened porch would create a connection to the outdoors and remind Waldron of her childhood in a house without air conditioning, where the family spent much time on the porch. “I wanted the porch to be integrated into the house. We’re outdoors people,” she says. “We don’t care about pollen and stuff.”

Back to the Drawing Board

Over a period of about a year, Rochman presented Wilkinson and Waldron with at least seven conceptual designs, some accompanied by a 3-D computer model to show the massing of the back of the house after the greenhouse had been removed. Rochman was project architect and handled the final detailing, specifications, and execution, but he credits another local designer named Jef Forward as a key player in working through the schematics.

Fairly early on it became apparent that the cost would exceed $200,000 by a considerable margin to achieve the couple’s goals. Frustrated, Waldron and Wilkinson enlisted a real estate agent to show them homes that didn’t require so much work. “But they were all so hideous, and we thought of all we would have to do to them to make them reflect our taste and be interesting,” Waldron says.

So they returned to Rochman, and both scaled back and expanded their plan. For instance, they conceded their dream of an away room as a separate treehouse-like “pod” in favor of an “away space” in an existing room.

Rochman says the “bingo” design moment was when he and Forward proposed “flipping” the floor plan, which involved moving the staircase slightly west and south. “It was a big cost issue, but we felt the kitchen was on the wrong side of the house,” he says. “The whole center of gravity” — including the yard and garage, as well as the high-priority mudroom — “was on the other side.”

Yet simply moving the kitchen to the other side of the house wouldn’t allow room for both the living room and the away space. Rochman says relocating the stairs not only improved the home’s flow, but also pointed a natural path toward the eventual screened porch. In earlier designs, “we had the porch all over,” he says.

What’s more, the relocated staircase was wide enough to create a direct visual and aural connection between the home’s two levels. “It also gave us the opportunity to add some more wow and fun to the railings, which the clients wanted,” Rochman says.

Flower Power

Construction took eight months, beginning with a white-gloved approach to Wilkinson’s beloved gardens. Featuring some rare and exotic plant species, they constituted what Rochman came to consider as the “third rail” of the project. Orange hurricane fencing was placed around numerous plants, and lead carpenter Brian Mills had to be present whenever construction vehicles or Dumpsters were near. “We read the riot act to every guy who came on site,” Rochman says.

Rochman’s team removed the two-story greenhouse, then restructured the main roof and removed the solid brick upper-level bearing wall. “It was stunning when they started tearing the house apart,” remembers Waldron, who had by then decamped with her family to a rental home. “Before [the remodel], the roof was really the only place to see the view.”

The removal of the passive solar system didn’t eliminate unsightly HVAC issues. Rochman also had to relocate most of the heat and air conditioning runs that had been installed with the furnace. On the lower level, where the greenhouse had stood, he created a family room with electric in-floor heating — ideal for the children who, he knew, would play on the floor.

Initially, the cantilevered porch extending off the back of the house was going to be supported by two big posts, Rochman says. “And then we discovered that the soil under the lower deck was eroding. The whole hillside was rolling down the hill.” This led to two other major decisions: to cantilever the porch 6 feet, using 12-inch LVLs that extended another 11 feet back into the house, with a mud-set tile floor providing additional anchorage; and to build a 70-foot curved retaining wall just downhill of the deck. “The retaining wall would keep the existing soil from washing away and would also create an area for the kids to play,” Rochman says. It also added more than $18,000 to the contract price.

Elements of Surprise

Strong communication buoyed the clients’ confidence in Rochman Design-Build throughout the process, even as the final price topped $350,000, counting design fees. At weekly meetings, Rochman’s staff took notes, which they typed up for Waldron and Wilkinson to review and sign at the following week’s meeting. “Gary really avoided misunderstandings and made sure all communications were good and clear,” Waldron says.

The family also appreciated Rochman’s attention to them on a more personal level. For instance, Waldron’s grandparents had a cottage on Drummond Island, in northern Michigan, and she liked the idea of her house somehow featuring cedar from the island. “So I called some guys up there and Gary took care of the rest,” she says, referring to the three peeled white cedar logs Rochman had shipped in, which now serve as columns in the house.

Rochman even worked the children into the process.

Besides designing the house and lot to foster play and engagement, he brought in building-related games for the kids to use while he met with their parents. “He had the idea to bury a time capsule while the house was torn apart,” Waldron says. “He had good ways of understanding that [remodeling] is traumatic for kids.”

Not surprisingly, the kids emerged with no psychological scars, and the whole family gets “happier and happier” with their home, Waldron says. “It’s still a weird house, but it has this wonderful element of surprise.” Even without the passive solar heating system, “it still is very green, in some ways,” she adds, noting the new cork floors and natural coolness in summer, thanks to the way the house tucks into the hillside. “Really, it’s like a bird house.”


Questionnaire Extraordinaire

Gary Rochman’s design/build process begins with a detailed “programming questionnaire” that he customizes for each client based on their home and needs. The main programming boilerplate is 17 pages long. Clients complete it on their own, then Rochman meets with them, using their answers as an “agenda to go through and hear the stories behind some of their ideas,” he explains.

“The questionnaire is a great organizational tool to help people calm down from the countless ideas swirling in their heads, and it helps us focus,” Rochman says.

Questions cover basics such as the ages of the inhabitants and the age and style of the home, and explore the client’s flexibility regarding timing, budget, and design. “Gary’s questions were so wonderful and detailed,” remembers client Mary Waldron, noting in particular his “list of 30 adjectives to describe how you want your house to be.” She and Guerin Wilkinson passed on words such as “impressive” and “spacious” (their completed project added just 280 square feet of new space), and checked off words such as “whimsical,” “unpredictable,” and “comfortable.”

The questionnaire also asks questions meant to reveal how the clients actually live, e.g., “What activities take place in the kitchen? Studying, planning, baking, bill paying, homework, gourmet cooking for large parties?”


Getting Away with “Away”

Creating the family’s “away space” was an exercise in creativity. Carved out of the living room, the 14-by-7-foot space is delineated by a 5-foot-wide wall made of painted MDF. Silk-covered screens retract into the wall when the space isn’t in use and slide out of it when the space is in use. “We didn’t know how to engineer it,” says Rochman, who wanted to ensure the cantilevered screens would be strong enough to support run-ins with young children. (See drawing below.)

The solution wasn’t available off the shelf. Rochman’s team built two 1 3/8-inch-thick poplar panels that could extend 28½ inches out on either side. Laterally supported on top with steel bars that could slide past one another when not in use, the panels were secured to the inside of the wall using pocket door slide hardware.

“We had never done anything like it,” Rochman says. “But it was completely worth it.”

About the Author

Leah Thayer

Leah Thayer is a senior editor at REMODELING.

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