Posted by: Dean Brenneman
on Feb 25, 2009
Tagged in:
Whole House Makeover ,
Transformation ,
Tear-Down ,
Sustainable Building ,
Potomac ,
Not So Big House ,
New-Old House ,
Montgomery County ,
Master Builder ,
Maryland ,
Green Remodeling ,
English Cottage ,
Cotswold Cottage ,
Architect ,
Anti-Mansionization
You've seen it. In almost every older neighborhood someone is tearing-down a modest home to make way for another McMansion, insensitive to the scale of the surrounding homes, and sticking out like a sore thumb. Putting aside the social implications of this "screw the neighbors" attitude -- and forgetting about the incredible waste of resources -- these folks are just plain missing the opportunity for a much richer living environment.
Instead of building an unimaginative and over-inflated box, why not recycle the structure of an existing house - searching for the best aspects of it and incorporating them into an updated "New-Old House"? The cool thing about this is that the compromises inherent in recycling an old structure force us to be more creative; a "New-Old House" is always quirkier and more romantic than a sanitized new home tends to be.
Before & After:


This approach especially lends itself to older, close-in neighborhoods with an eclectic mix of housing styles. A Cape Cod might transform into an Arts & Crafts Cottage, a Dutch Colonial into an Italianate Villa - even a Rambler into an English Cottage like the one shown here. It always amazes me that the seeds of these "New-Old Houses" lurk in the souls of the everyday homes that surround us.