Showing posts with label Houses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houses. Show all posts

Remodeled Historic Fire Station in Houston

Anne Whitlock, Michael Skelly. Portrait by Lisa Petrole 

One Saturday morning in the fall of 2013, Michael Skelly and his good friend and architect Joseph Meppelink were riding their bikes through Houston’s historic east end. “On a lark, I said, ‘let me show you this cool old building,’” remembers Meppelink, who knew that Skelly and his wife Anne Whitlock were in the market to renovate an industrial building to live in. For years, Meppelink had ridden past a boarded-up, 100-year-old fire station, and had once even asked around about buying it. “I was told the owners would never sell,” he says. Still, it was worth taking another look. They pedaled to the dilapidated two-story structure and stopped. The brick was crumbling and there were holes in the ceiling, but its stalwart dignity remained intact. “As soon as Michael saw it, he said, ‘It’s perfect. Let’s see what we can find out.’” By that evening, Skelly had tracked down the owner’s name via HCAD, and early the next morning, the two were knocking on her door. “She cracks it open, and says ‘who are you?’ remembers Meppelink. “Michael is pretty easy to talk to and charismatic, so the next thing you know, they’re involved in a long conversation.” The owner had inherited the fire staton from her father who’d recently passed, and she was willing to sell — with one caveat. She’d also inherited three big lots around it, and he’d have to buy those, too. Each of the lots had houses on them, and all were in terrible shape, Meppelink remembers. Eventually, a deal was struck to buy everything. “Suddenly, our little renovation project had mushroomed into a half a block,” says Whitlock. “We had no idea we were creating a community.”

Houston's Firestation No. 2, renovated. Photo by Lisa Petrole.
For anyone who knows Anne Whitlock and Michael Skelly, it makes sense they’d save an historic old fire station in an older immigrant neighborhood. The two had served in the Peace Corps, and after graduating Harvard — Skelly with a degree in business, and Whitlock with a master’s in public policy — they devoted their lives to making a difference. Skelly was an early pioneer in the wind energy business in the 1990s, and now owns Clean Line Energy Partners, which builds high-capacity lines connecting renewable energy to cities. Whitlock is the founding director of Connect Community, which serves inner city diverse neighborhoods. With three children headed to college, the couple had become empty nesters. “Our house in West University was a great place to raise kids,” says Whitlock, “But it was time to change things up.”  

Renovations had already started on the fire station when they discovered six nearby Victorian houses slated for imminent demolition, as a developer made way for townhouses. They rescued those, too, and moved them onto the property. (The small houses that came with the property had neither architectural nor historic significance, and were razed.) “It was incredibly serendipitous the way it all happened,” says Meppelink, who’d been keeping an eye on the Victorians’ status for two years, hoping someone would buy them. Commissioned by Texas State Governor Francis Lubbock in 1861, the ornate shotgun-style Victorians were certainly worthy of preservation. “That set us off on this extraordinary odyssey,” Whitlock says. 

Inside Firestation No. 2. Photo by Lisa Petrole

Photo by Lisa Petrole

Photo by Lisa Petrole
Built in 1910, Fire Station No. 2 served Houston at the dawn of a modern era, when horse-drawn carriages were starting to give way to motor cars. There’s evidence that one side of the station still accommodated horse-drawn engines, says Meppelink. An old-time firefighter, who stopped by during renovations, pointed out score marks on the concrete floor, which were designed to give traction to scrambling hooves as alarm bells rang. There are remnants of old pegs on the columns, where harnesses and other tack were hung.
The station was decommissioned in the 1980s, and fell into disrepair during the decades that followed. It took two years to bring it back to life, and at the same time, all six Victorian houses were being renovated. It was a massive undertaking. Meppelink, who owns Metalab Architecture, collaborated on the project with his wife, Marisa Janusz, owner Janusz Design. The Fire Museum of Houston was a tremendous resource, he says, providing archives and historic photographs. Almost all of the building’s original materials were retained, including the exterior’s load-bearing, 17-inch brick walls; staircase with original metal braces; worn plaster walls; and patinated bead board ceilings. The brass fire poles — which allowed firemen to slide quickly from the second floor to the first — were missing. They were replaced with a pair purchased from an early 1900s fire station in Boston, undergoing renovations. A new concrete slab floor was poured, and large bay doors were rebuilt, patterned after doors from the Fire Museum. 

Photo by Lisa Petrole
While the downstairs is designed to be more of a public venue, living quarters were created on the second floor, including bedrooms, kitchen, library, and living and dining rooms. “We wanted the area where we live to be modern and clean,” says Whitlock. “So we hired an interior designer to help us figure out how to create a home out of such a cavernous space.” Enter Martha Finger of Martha Baxter Interior Design. With 20-foot ceilings on the first floor and 10-foot ceilings upstairs, antique lighting fixtures had to be customized. A too-narrow staircase meant furniture had to be craned into second floor windows. To signal a transition from the historic first floor environs to the private areas above, Finger mixed new materials with existing old. She hung a contemporary glass and brass chandelier in the stairwell, and Lucite panels divide space from the landing into the main living area. Black marble clads the fireplace, with brass detailing by local artisan James Dawson. In the kitchen, there are white marble counters, and old black stone from Chateau Domingue on the floor. “It feels like you are in a loft apartment in Soho,” says Finger. “It’s clean and white, but we tried to keep it homey.”
To cozy-up the library, she painted it a deep aubergine, and covered the windows and a custom sofa in aubergine Holly Hunt fabric. Bookshelves were designed from lumber salvaged from abandoned buildings in the neighborhood, and in the dining room, Finger commissioned a large wood table from Ben Baron and Jose Martinez of HTX Made, young artisans who have recently set up shop in a warehouse next door to the fire station. Much of the artwork and decorative pieces, such as African masks and antique zebra hide rug, came from the couple’s stints abroad with the Peace Corps. “We have a lot of eclectic things,” says Whitlock. “We wanted it to reflect our personalities — and to make sure it was a little quirky.”
Downstairs, they paid homage to the fire station’s history without going overboard. Still, they had a little fun with it — after all, the space is often used for fundraisers and other events. An antique water hose, such as the kind used on an old fire-fighting engine, is displayed under a custom glass-topped table. The color red is used sparingly, but effectively: A custom bench in the entry greets visitors, decked out in red Cortina cowhide. The powder bath’s light fixtures hang by crimson ropes, and the kitchen faucet gleams red.
Whitlock and Skelly moved into Fire Station No. 2 in 2015, and immediately began integrating it into the neighborhood. “One of our main goals was to keep the fire station accessible to the public, since it had once been a mainstay of the community and was an historic building,” says Whitlock. They’ve hosted neighborhood groups, a wedding, corporate retreats, and political fundraisers. The antique fire poles, which still bear marks from decades of fire fighters sliding down in their gear, are a crowd favorite. “We’ve had the Houston fire chief go down, and a candidate for senate go down. Everyone takes a turn,” says Whitlock. 



Photos by Lisa Petrole

Fire Station No. 2, along with their six Victorian houses in the back, are now woven into the fabric of the community in ways they never envisionedOne Victorian was sold to a young artist, and others have been rented out. A woman down the street was so inspired by all the neighborly goodwill that she, too, saved a couple of old houses and moved them onto her property. When Hurricane Harvey devastated Houston, Whitlock and Skelly opened the fire station to an immigrant family, and moved a disabled woman and her elderly mother into one of the Victorians. Skelly encouraged his Facebook friends to do the same, and many did, opening their homes to strangers in need. Whitlock reflects on the chain reaction their restoration project has had. “It took ten times as long and twice as much money, but it’s been 100 times greater than we ever imagined.” 

Fire Station No. 2 circa 1910
My story on Fire Station No. 2 originally ran in the October issue of PaperCity magazine. Special thanks to photographer Lisa Petrole, Michael Skelly, Anne Whitlock, and Joe Meppelink.

French Artist Claire Basler

Artist Claire Basler in her studio
Claire Basler is an artist working in central France who is known for painting dreamy depictions of the flowers and trees from her gardens — and these are no ordinary gardens. Basler works from a studio on the grounds of the magnificent château where she lives, which she calls Château de Beauvoir. Never mind that there is another famous château by the same name in France — fans of her work are often trekking to the wrong château in hopes of a glimpse her gardens, or Claire herself. She's gaining a following in Texas — last summer, Basler brought her floral canvases to Houston for a show at the Houston Design Center, and I was told sold most of her inventory at the show and is painting furiously to catch up. She also has a backlog of special commissions, and earlier this year, published a book of her work, Claire Basler: Peintures, which has been translated into English.

Her lavishly painted works depict unruly roses, peonies, will dill, parsley, and other flora flourishing in her gardens and the surrounding bois, or woods. It's one thing to see these lovely works on canvas, and quite another to see how she's covered the walls of her château with her paintings. It's like stepping into a dream. 

Basler occasionally opens her château for visits, and I was lucky enough to get an invitation earlier this month. The château is located about three hours south of Paris, halfway between the village of Échassières and Le Lieu-Dit La Bosse. Often referred to as a castle, the 15th-century Château de Beauvoir is situated on the edge of the forest of Collettes with 200-year-old oak and beech groves, said to be some of the oldest and most beautiful in France. The château is surrounded by Scots pine and Douglas fir, planted during the Middle Ages for logging. The formal French boxwood gardens feel more unruly than most, with their lush vines, roses, delphinium, and a slew of other pinks, whites, and purples. It's easy to see where Basler's inspiration comes from. 

She translates mist-shrouded forests, moss-covered tree trunks, and wild flowers onto her walls with abandon, her sun-and-shadow-dappled rooms becoming a life-size canvas. Each scene is beautifully composed with contemporary, mid-century inspired furniture and lighting. It's all very dream-like, but you can imagine living there, too. I'm grateful she shares this beautiful piece of property, and her talents with others.


THE CHATEAU DE BEAUVOIR...








INSIDE...
















THE GARDENS...







THE GARDENS COME INSIDE...

 








CLAIRE BASLER'S STUDIO...









CLAIRE BASLER AT WORK...

Patrizia Moroso's House in Italy

Photo by Alessandro Paderni
Dateline Italy   Moroso just opened an amazing new store in Houston, its first Texas location. The company's creative director, Patrizia Moroso, is one of the most innovative talents in the furniture business, teaming up with artists and architects such as Ron Arad and Patricia Urquiola to create designs. In the course of writing about her new store, I had a chance to talk to her by phone from her new house in Udine, Italy, where her family's 60-year-old business is based. She loves to talk about furniture design, but it's her house that gets her most excited. Designed by Urquiola — the Spanish architect who has been Moroso's best friend for ages — the house is set inside a wild, abandoned garden, which she's left intact. “When I saw it, I called Patricia right away and told her I wanted her to design a house for me," she says. "I wanted to feel like I was living in the garden."

Photo by Alessandro Paderni
Photo by Alessandro Paderni
Moroso wanted the house to disappear into its wooded setting, so Urquiola clad the 10,000 square foot abode in cedar with a black painted roof, which Moroso likens to tree bark after a rain. Windows and doors are painted oxblood red, “like the leaves,” she adds. The black and red palette is Moroso’s favorite, and the red reminds her especially of the color of the dirt in Africa, where her husband Abdou Salam Gaye is from (together they have three children). 

Photo by Alessandro Paderni
Photo by Alessandro Paderni

It’s an environmentally conscious house, with cork-insulated walls, solar panels and a cistern for watering plants. Inside, nature is a large part of the design scheme. “I asked Patricia to make the biggest windows possible, so that I could feel like I was living in the garden,” she says. “Many of the walls are totally glass. In summer, it’s like living in a jungle. In the winter, it’s like living in the snow.”


Photo by Alessandro Paderni
Photo by Alessandro Paderni

The first floor is all about hosting family and friends, whether for small gatherings or extended stays. There’s a catering kitchen, indoor pool, guest room and a Turkish bath — the Middle Eastern variant of a steam bath. The children’s playrooms are nearby and a main seating area includes furniture designed by Urquiola and contemporary Iranian rugs. A conversation pit, inspired by Gaye’s African heritage, features a red, black and oak palette, along with an oversize photograph by Boubacar Touré Mandémory, a contemporary artist included in Moroso’s “M’Afrique” exhibition for the 2009 Milan furniture fair.

Photo by Alessandro Paderni

Upstairs are the private family quarters that feature a small living room, dining room and kitchen, along with bedrooms. Urquiola corralled Moroso’s collection of one-off furniture by the designers she works with including Ron Arad, and a mis-mash of prototypes and factory rejects. “Patricia made everything clean and organized out of my mess, because I have a lot of things I love: big pictures, prototypes of furniture. Everything comes from the company. I can change out furniture anytime I want.” Inspired by modern houses from the 1950s, the interiors are “very clean, but very warm with lots of wood,” says Moroso. “In the end, Patricia did the perfect, simple house.”  moroso.it

Lee Cullum's Chic Townhouse

Photo by Steve Wrubell

Perfection . . . Lee Cullum is one of the most talented and respected journalists around. I've always been in awe of her interviewing skills and her ability to elicit fascinating stories from her subjects—Now I'm in awe of her Turtle Creek townhouse (SmithArc in Dallas recently renovated it). I'm only showing enough photos here to get to you excited enough to read my full story in this month's issue of Modern Luxury Dallas. You can read it online here (turn to page 54). Steve Wrubel shot all of the perfectly composed photos for the story. Thank you, Steve, for letting me post a few here...


Photo by Steve Wrubell
The need for an elevator prompted Cullum to begin renovating her townhouse, a process that went room by room over many years. In order to put in an elevator, the entry had to be expanded and opened up... 

Photo by Steve Wrubell
Adding an elevator shaft provided a lot more wall space to hang Cullum's striking collection of art. Also, take a look at the glass ceiling. It's also the second floor walkway—Cullum told me that when she first stepped out of the elevator onto that glass floor she gasped and called the architect, telling him she didn't think she could ever get used to it. He persuaded her to live with it for a couple of weeks. Now she loves it...

Photo by Steve Wrubell


Cullum's second favorite color is green, so she had SmithArc paint the inside of the elevator this high gloss hue. She loved it so much, she painted her laundry room the same color. Can you guess which color is her very favorite? It's a color that Jason Smith says he noticed that Cullum wears a lot (read the story to find out!).