Neo Bungalow Remodel
2015-2019
We conceived this project as a series of strategic interventions to adapt a small house to an owner’s new requirements while maintaining its intimate scale. We made the new elements sympathetic with the low-key architecture of the house and its working-class neighborhood a few miles north of downtown Houston, Texas. These vernacular urban landscapes are becoming increasingly precious as the pace of Houston’s inner-city redevelopment accelerates and is replaced by much larger new building.
The great irony of this entire project is that this little wooden house set on a rudimentary foundation of concrete blocks on the dirt, which looks so old, was actually built in 2007. We took its sly, chameleon-like styling into consideration when we were commissioned to remodel and expand it. The cosmopolitan new owners, originally from Brisbane, Australia, had lived on three continents and returned to Houston, where they had lived in the 1970s, for their retirement. Growing up in pre-air-conditioned Brisbane, they were accustomed to hot weather living and insisted that a major component of the project include multiple verandas, a memory of tropical Queensland. To achieve this, they acquired the adjacent, unbuilt lot for a garden. We reoriented the long, narrow house to open to this extensive side yard. Another issue was accessibility as one of the owners was in a wheelchair.
We located the new, free-standing carport with a storage closet adjacent to the house close to the street to provide privacy for the garden. Because there was a giant, native pecan tree we wished to keep at the center of the side of the house facing the new garden, we added two new porches instead of a single, long veranda, to allow it to remain. We added a new lap pool, located as far from the tree’s crown as possible. Around the pool we used a raised, wood deck so as not to cover the roots with concrete. We lengthened the master bedroom at the rear of the house by ten feet and reconfigured the existing bathroom to make it barrier-free. We added a six-foot-long addition to the front of the house to provide a reading alcove and more defined entry off a new front porch. We equipped the porches with ramps for the wheelchair. The porches and carport are framed with exposed, dark stained cedar posts and exposed, white-painted rafters with a beadboard soffit.
Four years later we came back and added a rose garden at the rear of the house and two new patios paved with reclaimed bricks in place of flower beds that had become too unruly. To increase the natural light levels inside, we added skylights in the living room and rear bedroom. This was a design-build project


Before

After