Advertisement
Main Content Read Screen Reader / Printer-Friendly Version
Home & Garden
Habitat

Family Circle

A unique architectural remodel on Mount Tabor envelops its owners in warmth.

By Amara Holstein

Email
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour

Curves abound, and just about everything is rounded in the home, from the bookshelf-stairwell to the fireplace in the living room to the exterior form. “I know how corny it sounds to make a house that hugs you back,” says Papazian, “but there’s really something to it.”

View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
Light dips and pools in the metal arches of the master bedroom upstairs.
View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour

Since very little square footage was added in the renovation, clean lines, lots of natural light from added windows, and open spaces help expand the home’s interior.

View Slideshow » Photo: Lincoln Barbour
View Slideshow » Illustration:

Chair Affair Quirky and dynamically designed by Alfredo Häberli for Moroso, the Take A Line For A Walk chair is Papazian’s dream seat. “I had to separate Edgar from this chair in the store,” remembers Lenzi. From $3,979 at Inform Interiors, 107 SE Washington St, informportland.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Perfect Perch A pop of color from the Egg Bird Feeder by Jim Schatz brightens the family’s back deck. Handcrafted from weather-resistant ceramic and aluminum, its rounded form is appealing to avian and human eyes alike. $135 at Canoe, 1136 SW Alder St, canoeonline.net

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Top Table Midcentury designer Alexander Girard is perhaps best known for his vivid, graphic pillows and prints, but the organic styling and soft edges of this coffee table for Knoll is equally as iconic—and well-suited to any setting. $925 at Design Within Reach, 1200 NW Everett St, dwr.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Sleep Tight Lenzi loves the gentle lines and elegant form of the Sleepi crib from Stokke. “It has a beautiful oval shape that would blend perfectly in the house,” she says. It also becomes a toddler bed, then chairs, as the child grows up. $800 at Little Urbanites, 916 NW 10th Ave, littleurbanites.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Sleek Seat Comfortable and substantial, but compact in a love seat size, the Plaza sofa by Natuzzi lets the family lounge in soft Italian leather in front of their living room fireplace. From $2,050 at Hip Furniture, 1829 NW 25th Ave, ubhip.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Get a Grip Designed by his former professor, the sleek aluminum form of the Lock-It set is “a link between my education and the first home I was able to renovate for myself,” Papazian says. $195 at georgeranallidesigns.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Hot Hood With its sculptural swoop of stainless steel, this style by Franke from the Tube collection “is cool because you have to think for a second before you realize it’s a range hood,” says Papazian. $1,600 at Ferguson, 824 NW 18th Ave, ferguson.com

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Portland Pennies In a house where curves reign supreme, the penny-size Savoy ceramic tile from local company Ann Sacks blends seamlessly into the walls and ceiling. From $10.98/square foot at Ann Sacks, 402 NW Ninth Ave, annsacks.com

ON THE SLOPING SHOULDERS OF MOUNT TABOR, Edgar Papazian and Michelle Lenzi’s house catches the day’s last rays under the winking brows of its arched metal dormers. From the front, it’s a simple white box topped with a clever cocktail of corrugated steel and arcs. A stroll around back, however, reveals a more dramatic effect: circles and swoops have been carved into its framework, giving viewers what seems to be an intimate peek at the warm wood and round surfaces inside. “I have a fascination for the 1950s and ’60s, when people were really optimistic about the future and curves were seen as aerodynamic,” says Papazian, who designed the form himself. “You could call this Eero Saarinen on a very, very small budget.”

The couple is originally from New York. Enticed by walkable neighborhoods, thoughtful urban planning, and a vibrant foodie community, they packed up their car for Portland in 2008. But perhaps even more compelling for Papazian, an architect with his own practice, Doon Architecture, was the dream of building his own home. “New York is built—it’s there already,” he says. “Here real estate is affordable, and we could actually have some fun with a project. It was about breaking the mold and trying something different.”

After house hunting for several months, they came across the perfect place for their design tinkering: a basic 1940s-style, 1,000-square-foot house with a sound foundation, well maintained but never renovated aside from some shag carpeting. “We weren’t erasing a past that the house had—it wanted to be redone,” says Lenzi, a genetics researcher. “It really didn’t have any character, it was just a blank slate.”

Papazian immediately decided to flip the home’s axis from front to back (instead of side to side) to focus attention on the backyard, and extend the house upward instead of outward. Inspired by tunnels, caves, and other shapes with “a visual dynamic that lead up into space,” he decided to redraw traditional top-heavy dormers into something lighter and more modern. The night he first saw the house, Papazian went to a café and sketched the large sweeps of curved dormer overhangs that he envisioned enclosing the house on both the front and back. The remaining pieces slowly fell into place after a year of living in the space, figuring out what they liked (the small size, the wooded backyard) and what they didn’t (lack of views to outdoors, closed-off rooms, and ground-floor bedrooms). The first sledgehammer blow fell in June 2009, and after nearly a year of living in a 12-by-14-foot plastic-enclosed room in the basement, the couple was finished with the project—and Lenzi was eight months pregnant with daughter Giovanna.

The most defining features of the finished exterior are Papazian’s elegant arched overhangs. Six feet in span and made of the galvanized steel beams used in Quonset huts, the pieces were lifted into place by crane after the old roof was lopped off. In addition to giving the house a quirky face-lift, the arches also achieve Papazian’s desired reorientation of the house and open it up to the backyard—an effect heightened by a back wall of glass instead of solid sheetrock.

Mt-tabor-remodel-bedroom

Light dips and pools in the metal arches of the master bedroom upstairs.

The massive curves set the tone for inside, as well. Forget straight-lined modern; everything from chair backs to faucets to the bird feeder is softly rounded in this home. Walls slide and glide their way around the rooms, arching to meet the ceiling rather than colliding at right angles. “Curved shapes are comforting,” says Lenzi. “Everything’s sort of wrapping around you.” Downstairs, in what now comprises the kitchen, living, office, and dining areas, richly refinished wood floors and butcher block countertops, as well as the addition of a Doug fir back deck, complete the feeling of warm enclosure. For some contrast, punctuations of industrial ethos run throughout, from a perforated steel screen in the dining room to metal bolts and screws on ceiling beams and metal arches topping the two bedrooms and bathroom upstairs. White paint, lots of natural light from added windows, and few interior walls make the house live larger than its footprint.

Mt-tabor-remodel-kitchen

Since very little square footage was added in the renovation, clean lines, lots of natural light from added windows, and open spaces help expand the home’s interior.

The changes all aren’t about aesthetics, however. Threads of shared memories are incorporated into the design: a bookcase core that contains their collection of tomes on jazz, cooking, and architecture; a kitchen where expansive countertops are used to roll out the same ravioli recipes that Lenzi’s grandmother makes; and artwork by Papazian’s mother, Janet Gasson, make the entire house is a true reflection of the family. The front door handle was designed by one of Papazian’s architecture professors, and an alcove in toddler Giovanna’s room is the same shape and size of a nook where Papazian used to sleep as a child.


“With all these small houses here in Portland, there’s the ability to really tailor-make a home in a way that’s very authentic and personality driven,” says Papazian. “And that’s what we tried to do here: make a new kind of architecture that’s both modern and improves people’s spirit and mental state.”

Thanks for reading!

 

Published: November 2011

 

Comments Speech Bubble

By Tim Knight on Oct 25, 2011 at 10:24AM

This home is so cool!

By ann bluestein on Nov 06, 2011 at 3:50PM

Great redo. Guadi-like without being gaudy.

Add a Comment Speech Bubble

We retain the right to remove comments containing personal attacks or excessive profanity, and comments unrelated to the editorial content.

Help us fight spam. Please type the words below to submit your comment.

Advertisement
Advertisement