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Old House Journal - Design

Bungalow Redone

A 1909 bungalow in Portland, Oregon, gets an addition and an interior update.

By Donna Pizzi Old House Journal - October 2023
From Old House Journal
A balustraded deck leads from the new rear addition to a brick walkway and the backyard.

When in 2004 we bought this 1909 bungalow in Portland, Oregon, it was so dilapidated that the house inspector asked us if we knew what we were getting into. We could envision what it could become, though, because we work as a writer/stylist and photographer team for OHJ and other shelter magazines. We poured time, money, and sweat equity into the bungalow remodel.

I even designed a Craftsman-style front porch after we spent years removing aluminum siding and cedar shingles to uncover the wood lap siding. We installed wood windows, took the sole bathroom down to its studs for a period renovation, and turned the attic into a spacious bed–sit loft. The narrow staircase to the loft is original.

The exterior of the house is a historic restoration in keeping with the early-20th-century neighborhood.

Deck and Kitchen

The one thing we never addressed, however, was the kitchen. The room was intersected by five doors, making it impossible to add a modern-size refrigerator. It didn’t matter because for years this house was our office space.

Dealing with the cesspool.

Framing the rear addition.

Fast forward to the summer of 2020. Philip, who’d worked in construction as a young man, decided to bump out the back of the house to create an eat-in kitchen and add a mudroom, a laundry (which the house lacked), a second bath, and a rear deck.

Intersected by five doors, the old kitchen wasn’t big enough for a standard refrigerator. New plank flooring is hard-wearing and surprisingly attractive luxury vinyl.
Rounded-arch doorways, typical of the period, were retained or replicated.

Decorated for Rental

We planned to decorate in a more mid-century style as this would become a rental. Our previous contractor, Mark Hereford of Hereford Construction, was unavailable, so we turned to interior-design colleagues and an architect to detail Mark’s earlier concept.

The main bathroom was renovated in 1920s style.

A powder room was added in the kitchen / mudroom / laundry addition at the rear of the house.

Three (new to us) contractors bid on the job. The company we chose assured us that there was no need to decommission the cesspool that dated to 1909. Well, city inspectors then informed us otherwise.

Original architectural elements were retained even on the interior. The palette and furnishings in mid-century style appeal to the current rental market.

Video inspections of the drain helped us locate the old brick-lined cesspool— 15′ deep, 3′ across, and 12′ from back of house. It was intricately built by hand, apparently at great risk to workers back in the day.

The rear elevation of the small house had been closed off from the outdoors.
From the rear kitchen’s breakfast area, French doors lead to a deck large enough for seating.

City ordinance did in fact require decommissioning the cesspool, which hadn’t been used since 1922 but was never filled. This was done by filling it with a cement slurry, a costly operation. Happily no sinkhole had ever opened. The sewer hookup came some-time after 1922 and functions still.

New French doors open from the breakfast area to the rear deck and backyard.

To align the addition with the existing roof, the architect designed nine trusses, which passed city inspection. By mid-August, with framing complete, Philip was acting as construction manager, keeping the various crews moving forward and even cleaning up the worksite each day.

A raised wood patio sits behind the new summer house—a “mini-me” of the original dwelling.

Using his plastering and painting expertise, Philip reiterated the existing archway between the living and dining rooms by constructing a similar archway at the entrance of the new bump-out. He also recycled original kitchen floorboards to create a rustic design on the wall of the mudroom.

With the addition of skylights, the attic became a bed–sit suite.

Budget-Friendly Upgrades

We used luxury vinyl plank Cali Saddlewood flooring throughout the addition, a budget-friendly choice that mimics the fir flooring. The design using an IKEA kitchen eschews upper cabinets, relying instead on shelves to open the space.

Peel-and-stick wallpaper creates an accent wall in a bedroom furnished with mid-century-style pieces.

French doors lead to a Fiberon deck with unique herringbone design by Fernando of Red Framing. Double-hung Jeld-Wen windows continue the look set by handcrafted rafter tails.

The mudroom wall is clad in recycled floorboards that were salvaged from the smaller, old kitchen.

A separate garage had been demolished long before we bought the house. We created a new driveway, however, and built a summer house with a raised wood patio. Turns out we got a nice compliment from one of our city inspectors, who declared that he would love to call this renovated old house home!

— Photos by Blackstone Edge Studios.

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