What's Hot: Mortgage Rates Fall Towards 6% Following Fed Cut
Best Renovation By A Local Firm: Studio 27 Capitol Hill Row House
✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.
UrbanTurf is taking a week-long look back at the best that DC’s residential real estate market had to offer in 2010. From the best deals to the best renovations to, of course, the best listings, we believe we have sussed out the cream of the crop.
Back in May, UrbanTurf contributor Jennifer Sergent wrote a piece for our Unique Spaces series on a Capitol Hill home that was a prime example that you can’t judge a book by its cover. While the exterior looked like any other traditional row house typical of the neighborhood, the interior had been completely renovated by Studio 27, a DC-based architecture firm known for its work in sustainable urban residential design. Below is the article, originally published on May 25, 2010.
The front remained untouched in the renovation.
From the street, Juan Felipe Rincon and Robert Bates’ Capitol Hill row house looks no different from the neighboring homes: An elegant red-brick, federal-style façade capped with a proper cornice and dentils that reflect the home’s 19th-century roots.
That’s pretty much where the similarities end, though. Open the translucent glass front door, and this row house reveals a modern, 21st-century interior, rebuilt two years ago to the highest green standards.
Bates bought the house in 1998, and when Rincon moved in, they decided to stay put and renovate it, instead of moving elsewhere. Bates said the “pseudo-Victorian” had been “done and redone” over the years, but that the renovations had been nothing special.
“We had to do something drastic,” he told UrbanTurf.
Enter Studio27 Architecture, a K Street architecture firm that has designed homes and offices across the country and is known for its green, contemporary approach.
Much of the side wall – and the entire rear – is glass
allowing light to pour into the soaring interior space.
Because the house is semi-detached, with the exposed side wall facing south, there was tremendous potential to take advantage of natural daylight, Rincon said.
Rear exterior at night.
Architect Hans Kuhn responded with a total interior gut that opened the inside top to bottom, transforming it into a gallery-type space topped with a “light chimney” that creates a breeze from open windows on the lower levels to a skylight above.
“It creates a natural draft,” Rincon said of the chimney, noting that he and Bates have yet to turn on the air conditioning this year. And there is so much natural light, they don’t have to turn on any lights until well after the sun goes down.
“It was all about daylight and openness,” Hans Kuhn said of the project. In addition to skylights, Kuhn added that you can open the back of the house to the yard providing a natural breeze that helps ventilate the entire home.
Attention was also paid to aesthetics. The architects colored a portion of the rear exterior wall orange to match the orange accent inside.
“It fits well with all the wood tones,” Kuhn said.
Kitchen
From a green standpoint, the water heater is solar-powered, the house is insulated with spray foam as opposed to less-efficient fiber, and all the paint is no-VOC. The HVAC system is one of the most efficient on the market and all the materials used were locally sourced and are renewable, such as bamboo flooring and cabinetry, and concrete countertops.
The kitchen island came from Charlottesville, and was brought to the house in three sections. To get the pieces inside, workers had to use a forklift to haul them over the backyard and through the rear wall.
Rincon’s and Bates’ lifestyle change was almost as dramatic as the renovation itself. People now stop over frequently with a bottle of wine just to “ooh and aah”, Rincon said.
The only project remaining is to finish landscaping in the back, so the men can do more outdoor entertaining.
“Once we’ve got that done, we’ll be perfect,” Rincon told UrbanTurf.
Photographs courtesy of Anice Hoachlander
UrbanTurf contributor Jennifer Sergent is the brains behind the DC By Design blog. She was most recently the senior editor at Washington Spaces magazine.
Previous Best Of 2010 entries:
- Best Real Estate Idea That Could Fail Miserably: The Dupont Underground
- The Best Listing of the Year (For Mere Mortals)
- Best Real Estate Resurrection of 2010: 425 Mass
- The Best Listing of the Year (For Well-Paid Lobbyists)
- Best Use of a Magic 8-Ball: The Neighborhoods of 2015
- Best Real Estate Mistake of the Year: The White House is For Sale
- Best Re-Use of a Restaurant as a Home: Tilden Gardens
- Deal of the Year: The Architect’s Three-Bedroom
See other articles related to: best of 2010, dclofts
This article originally published at https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/best_renovation_by_a_local_firm_studio_27_capitol_hill_row_house/2783.
Most Popular... This Week • Last 30 Days • Ever
A plan to add another new residential building to the Friendship Heights pipeline is ... read »
Mortgage rate buydowns can be a good option for buyers who want to save money on inte... read »
Plans filed this week provide the latest look at the 106-key hotel in the works at an... read »
The eight-bedroom, 35,000 square-foot home in McLean known as The Cliffs went under c... read »
The large new development would take the place of the Ballston One office building al... read »
- Donohoe Files PUD For 127-Unit Development in Friendship Heights
- How Does a Mortgage Rate Buydown Work?
- A Look At Georgetown's New 100-Key Hotel Along The Canal
- A $30 Million Sale? One Of The DC Area's Most Expensive Homes Finds A Buyer
- Updated Plans Filed For 328-Unit Development At Arlington Office Site
DC Real Estate Guides
Short guides to navigating the DC-area real estate market
We've collected all our helpful guides for buying, selling and renting in and around Washington, DC in one place. Start browsing below!
First-Timer Primers
Intro guides for first-time home buyers
Unique Spaces
Awesome and unusual real estate from across the DC Metro