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Cherry Street Residence


CHERRY STREET RESIDENCE


PROJECT INFO

Type: Residential

Scope: Renovation/Addition

Location: Falls Church, VA

Interior Design:

Moore Architects, PC

Structural Engineer:

Advance Engineers, Ltd.


Photography:

Anice Hoachlander


Awards:

Grand Award: Whole-house Makeover Builder’s Choice Design & Planning Awards; Builder Magazine 2005


Best of the Year Award; Whole House Remodeling-Remodeling Design Awards; Remodeling Magazine; October 2005


Merit Award - Residential Architecture, AIA Northern Virginia 2005


Annual Residential Award - The Washingtonian Residential Design Awards; AIA Washington DC 2005


Honor Award - Excellence in Design, Inform Magazine; AIA Virginia 2006


Excellence in Design Award - Falls Church Village Society 2007


2007 Special Focus Award - Builder Magazine; Design Awards; Cherry Street Garage


Merit Award - Custom Home Design Awards; Custom Home Magazine, May/June 2007


Publications:

Builder Magazine; October 2005, page 148; Builder’s Choice Design & Planning Awards; ‘Grand Award’: Whole-house Makeover


Remodeling Magazine; October 2005, page 76; ‘Best of the Year’: Whole-House Remodeling, Design Awards


Washingtonian Magazine; June 2005, page 175; Annual Residential Award


Fine Homebuilding Magazine; Summer, page 106; ‘Houses - Annual Issue’


Dream Homes; Greater Washington, DC; book; Panache Partners, LLC; page 116-119


Custom Home Magazine; May/June, page 113; Merit Award; 2007 Custom Home Design Awards


Cottage Living Magazine; March 2008, page 24; ‘The Good Life – Hidden Potential’


Not So Big Remodeling; Tailoring Your Home for the Way You Really Live; Book by: Sarah Susanka


Fine Homebuilding Magazine; Winter 2011; The Best of Fine Homebuilding ‘Before & After’


Inside + Out Magazine; Best of Fine Homebuilding; Fall 2013

A simple one-story white clapboard cottage sat on a narrow straight street with many older homes, all of which meeting the street with a similar dignified approach. Though the owners fell in love with the charm of the original house, their growing family presented an architectural dilemma: how do you significantly expand a charming little 1920’s Craftsman style house that you love without totally losing the integrity that made it so perfect?

The answer began to formulate after a review of the houses in the turn-of-the-century neighborhood; every older house was two stories tall, each built in a different style, each beautifully proportioned, each much larger than this cottage bungalow. Most of the neighborhood houses had been significantly renovated or expanded. Growing this one-story house would certainly not adversely affect the architectural character of the neighborhood. Given that, the house needed to maintain a diminutive scale in order to appear friendly and avoid a dominating presence.

The simplistic, crisp, honest materials and details of the little house, all painted white, would be saved and incorporated into a two-story version of the house. Across the front of the house, the three original spaces would be saved; these three rooms are punctuated by thirteen windows, which for this house age and style, suggests a more modern aesthetic. The dormers that pop up on the front allow the home to maintain the great proportion that makes this home comfortable on its street.