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Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover

  • August 2nd 2011

by Jennifer Sergent

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Almost a year ago to the day, Jennifer Sergent wrote about a 1923 Sears-kit bungalow owned by husband-wife architects Theodore Adamstein and Olivia Demetriou in DC's Berkley neigborhood. The home, originally listed for $2.9 million, ultimately ended up selling for $2.6 million last November.

The article (see below) was part of UrbanTurf's Unique Spaces series, where we take a look at properties that could be considered “one-of-a-kind” in the DC area. If you have a home that you think fits the bill, send an email to editor2011@urbanturf.com. See all of our past Unique Spaces articles here.


Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover: Figure 1
The rear glass of 2318 King Place NW

Husband-wife architects Theodore Adamstein and Olivia Demetriou are the principals at Adamstein & Demetriou, the architecture firm whose modern designs can be seen in DC’s hippest restaurants, including Zaytinya, Poste, and Bistro Bis.

It would stand to reason, then, that they live in a similarly appointed home. And they do, but its vast open areas, clad in three levels of soaring glass, are nearly invisible from the street. Passersby in the couple’s Berkley neighborhood instead see a lovingly restored, circa-1923 Sears-kit bungalow (map). The couple purchased the house in 2003 -- for its location rather than its architecture.

“We were looking for a house on a street that had great views,” Adamstein said of the down-sloping site that offers panoramic views over the trees flanking the Potomac River to Virginia’s shore beyond. “There are not many [DC] sites that have great views and expansive sky.”

Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover: Figure 2
The front of the Sears-kit bungalow

Because the site was their main priority, they had to now make the house their own.

“We felt we could come up with a concept that would tie the new home into the old,” Adamstein said. “We preserved the bungalow piece, but you transition into the modern home with huge expanses of 14- and 15-foot ceilings”

Colors and materials delineate the new and old. The original structure has deep, chocolate hardwood flooring, along with original interior colonnades of the same color. The materials in the addition are a much lighter combination of wood and limestone, but chocolate accents maintain the connection, from a portion of wall in the sunken living room to the pergola and railings off the family room.

Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover: Figure 3
Living room

An addition on the home increased it to six bedrooms, 4.5 baths and almost 6,000 square feet of interior space. And because of the sloping property, Adamstein noted that they were able to almost completely hide the addition behind the original house.

The master bedroom and two other bedrooms (part of the addition) have high ceilings and modern edges, but the two bedrooms in the original house stay loyal to the bungalow style with dark moldings and sloped ceilings. A sixth bedroom on the lower level shares space in the new addition with a light-filled study and exercise/rec room, all of which open to a flagstone terrace below the living room.

Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover: Figure 4
Rear terrace

The limestone flooring in the living room, meanwhile, continues right out to a deck; when the glass doors are opened, the indoor/outdoor space can easily accommodate 200 people for a party.

The Adamsteins are avid cooks, so their 500-square-foot-kitchen has double dishwashers and separate zones for prepping and cooking, which suits family meals, small dinner parties and a catering crew for larger events.

Unique Spaces: Sears Bungalow Gets a Modern Makeover: Figure 5
The kitchen towards the family room

The new-old design of the house fits well into the neighborhood, which is known for its diverse architecture, Adamstein says.

“We think it’s just a fantastic site,” he adds, noting that he and his wife are selling because their two children are getting older, and soon, they won’t need as much space.

Former UrbanTurf contributor Jennifer Sergent is the brains behind the DC By Design blog, and is the marketing director of the Washington Design Center.

See other articles related to: berkley, editors choice, unique spaces

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/unique_spaces_sears_bungalow_gets_a_modern_makeover/2335.

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