Bobertz Residence by Craig Ellwood (1953). Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Photo ©Darren Bradley |
View of one of the guest/children's bedrooms out to the courtyard. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
The Yorks' daughter's bedroom, just off the private courtyard. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Courtyard off the two children's bedrooms that had been totally enclosed into an additional bedroom by a previous owner. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
But Keith painstakingly brought the house back, one step at a time. He removed the addition - taking away square feet in the process, something a realtor will usually tell you not to do. And referring to the original plans and design, he was able to recreate a lot of what was missing and what had changed. In fact, he even added in some elements of the original design that had been dropped for budget reasons during original construction.
The kitchen had to be completely rebuilt, using designs consistent with the rest of the house. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
And as icing on the cake, Keith and Jessica have filled the house with beautiful original modernist furniture and artwork from local artists of the time period.
Living area. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
The house seamlessly blends indoors and out. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Photo ©Darren Bradley |
The beautifully curated modernist art is one of the main highlights of the house. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Activity/craft area directly off the kitchen and living area. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Master bedroom. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
The master bedroom is afforded some privacy off to the side of the house, set back from the main living area. Landscape architecture by Todd Pitman, Verde Landscape Design. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Keith surveying his domain. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
An urban oasis. Photo ©Darren Bradley |
Photo ©Darren Bradley |
For more information on how this home came to be, please visit Keith's site, Modern San Diego.
For an interview with Keith by my friend Marco, click here.
7 comments:
TV aerial deliberately retained?
Yes
It is a gem of a house. Is the current owner an architect?
Thanks, Boris. The current owner is not an architect, or in the design profession at all. He's a layman, just like me. ;-)
Great photo set and fantastic renovation on the homeowner's part.Thanks for posting this, Darren.
FLOOR PLANS???...
For what reason is this not quite the same as remaining ceaselessly in view disliking somebody's cologne? Perhaps I don't care for the smell of their astounding ass scent abusing my own space? Is it true that you are conceding that all basis for not contacting are not made equivalent? Thanks, Keep posting This type of article love from parc clematis
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