Restoring a Home? There are lots of design and materials
decisions to make
When building a new home or renovating an old one, there are
innumerable choices in commercially produced building and
finishing materials; but when you want to restore an old home,
particularly one built before standardized building materials
were widely available, you may need help from a custom
millworks. Stairways in old houses are narrow and steep, rooms
are off square, and dimensions vary tremendously from home to
home. How do you incorporate a modern, functional kitchen, for
instance, into the design of a home restored to its original
1850s design?
You may have the expertise or the research capability to make
the design decisions yourself; otherwise, hiring an architect
who specializes in the restoration of antique buildings is a
must. Many antique buildings, particularly in New England, were
built and renovated over a period of centuries, with additions
in different styles (sometimes compatible, sometimes not) tacked
on to the original building. You probably don't want to remove
the additions, particularly if they're a substantial part of the
building; but do you restore them to their original state, or do
you impose the style of the original building onto the addition?
If embellishments were added to the original structure, do you
keep them or get rid of them? If your house is a hodge-podge of
different styles from different eras, can your architect
incorporate a new design which will blend the warring styles
together? And do you want him or her to do that, or are you
enough of a restoration purist not to want to add modern
elements to the design?
Antique buildings were most often created using materials
locally available at the time of its construction; but some
materials may have been imported from far away; by the
nineteenth century, New England ruled the seas, importing goods,
including exotic woods, from places as scattered as Ireland and
Southeast Asia. Whether originating locally or abroad, these
antique materials may or may not be readily available from local
sources now. Maple, oak, walnut, cherry, ash, hickory, mahogany
- all may be found in an antique home, and all may need to be
specially purchased. You or your architect will probably need to
communicate with manufacturers of custom building materials; so
be sure to choose a millworks company which has experts on staff
who can provide design and specification assistance. These
millworks companies should be able to provide custom milled wide
plank floor
ing, individually designed stairs, historically accurate
reproduction moldings, and special lengths and widths of lumber.
Antique homes offer a fascinating look into the history of a
region and the lives of people who lived through various eras.
The story of a particular house may span centuries of building,
rebuilding, and renovations, making each home a unique
connection to the past. Restoring one of these gems to its
original beauty can not only extend its life to another
generation of residents, it can contribute to the legacy of a
region.