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A Land Park Sanctuary: Second floor Addition –
Sacramento, CA
This project was one of my first, and
was designed and built under the auspices of Michael Frank
Malinowski, AIA.
This home began as a one-story, 1950s-era house,
built in the Sacramento neighborhood of Land Park,
known for it’s ‘20s and ‘30s-era
cozy Tudor cottages, Spanish “villas”,
and Craftsman architectural gems. My practical
goal was to add a master suite—bed, bath,
and master closet—as well as a small office,
and by so doing create a house that provided a
more private—and spacious—sanctuary
for the homeowners.
The aesthetic goal, along with these practical
considerations, was to create a home that reflected
the neighborhood’s pre-war architectural
heritage: the home should look as if it were built
at the neighborhood’s inception. There were
challenges to this in the front façade,
especially. The garage, as was typical for the
early 1950’s, was prominent and projecting,
whereas a 1930’s home would almost always
have had the garage detached and at the back of
the lot. As budget did not allow a major overhaul
to the site, we kept the garage where it was,
but gave it a different character by the removal
of the low hip roof in place of a cottage-style
gable w/ attic window. This is an example a basic
remodel tenet: if you can’t hide something,
show it off.
As we did not want a monumental structure on
this narrow lot (only 50’ wide) we found
that incorporating the second floor within the
new roof, with dormers projecting as necessary,
allowed us plenty of space yet kept the façade
demure, comfortable, and welcoming.
Sightlines are an essential feature of this floor
plan layout: Alignments are window, door, window,
so that you can stand at one point along this
line and see through one or two rooms to windows
beyond, in either direction. The practical effect
this has is to bring in the most amount of light
possible, especially in small spaces: entrances
to rooms are aligned with windows so that the
light not only fills the room it’s in but
continues into the rooms or hall beyond. The psychological
effect this has is to make the space appear to
have much more volume than it actually has. This,
in combination with a view to the outside, which
relaxes the eye, and incorporates the interior
with the trees and sky beyond, tends to create
a peaceful environment, where flow seems unencumbered
by the brick-a-brack of daily life.
Click here
to read the homeowner’s testimonial.
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