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ANTIQUE REVIVAL
An 1850s Greek Revival in Chatham
gets a new lease on life with an
award-winning renovation that honors its past.
ARCHITECTURE BY SAM STREIBERT
CONSTRUCTION BY MINGLEWOOD HOMES
TEXT BY NANCY BARR
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHY BY SARAH MUSUMECI
The old house hid its weathered face behind a tall evergreen
tree, overgrown bushes and tangled vines. Stately but modest,
the Greek Revival dwelling had changed little since its construction
around 1850 for Chatham sea captain Stephen Howes. But at
more than 150 years old, the home was clearly showing its
age: floorboards sagged onto the dirt atop a crumbling brick
foundation; determined tendrils of ivy snaked up a side wall
and into a downstairs bedroom; rotted shingles marred the
gabled roof; electrical and plumbing systems were hopelessly
out of date. With its elderly owner – who summered
here for more than 50 years – now in a nursing home
more than 1,000 miles away, the historic residence was on
a course to what preservation specialists term “demolition
by neglect.” But it was about to get a reprieve.
In
2001, after two years of planning and working with an architect,
the elderly owner’s four nephews took on
the challenge of rehabilitating and modernizing the sad structure
and soon rediscovered the historic charm hidden beneath – yet
preserved by – the years of neglect.
With a contractor experienced in working on old houses and
willing to take the extra care required to fit modern systems
into the historic home’s many nooks and crannies, a
new foundation was installed, electrical, heating and plumbing
were brought up to code, and the kitchen was fitted with
modern amenities.
Throughout the process, the original floor
plan of the 1,700-square-foot home was not changed and, except
for the addition of a mantel over the fireplace in the gathering
room and modern windows (designed to be in keeping with the
Greek Revival style), almost all elements of the historic
structure were preserved or refurbished, right down to the
wide-board floors, diminutive doorways and steep 19th-century
staircase.
“Anything we weren’t able to save, we duplicated,” says
builder Tim Smith of Minglewood Homes in Chatham, the contractor
for the project.
The $350,000 renovation took more than a year to complete,
with gratifying results. In May 2004, this Old Village home
was among seven properties to receive the first Chatham Preservation
Awards, a new initiative launched jointly by the Town of
Chatham Historical Commission and the non-profit Chatham
Historical Society to honor those who have taken on the old-house
challenge of the three r’s – restoration, rehabilitation
and renovation – and prevailed. The award-winning projects
succeeded in adapting, altering and modernizing old homes
in a manner that preserved their historic character while
creating comfortable abodes with all the necessities of contemporary
living.
“Once you get the house properly founded,” says
architect Sam Streibert, “the design decisions are
the same ones you face with any home.”
The owners are pleased with the results, as well. “The
most gratifying thing was the response from our neighbors
as they walked past the house and said how great it looked
and how happy they were that we worked so hard to preserve
it,” says Alfred Macdaniel, who oversaw the project
on behalf of his three brothers. “That’s not
to say that initially there wasn’t some anxiety about
preserving the house, which, when we started, was scary.
But we got a good contractor who was able to determine that
the structure was sound, so we went ahead. And it became
a very rewarding – and actually fun – process.”
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