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A Sneak Preview![]() Photo by Bruce Norlander
The lovely back lawn of the Showcase Home overlooks Lake Minnetonka.
After nearly ninety years, the home known among neighbors as the “house with the mushroom roof” is getting an overhaul. Located on the shores of Lake Minnetonka between Wayzata Bay and Gray’s Bay, this historic home has long been a well-loved feature of the lake community. An easy choice for the 2006 ASID Showcase Home, the Tudor Revival house sits on more than two acres of lakeshore property with views of the sunrise on Gray’s Bay and the sunset on Wayzata Bay. It has a roof that looks like it’s been plucked from the Cotswold hills in England and a charm that has remained solidly intact since it was first built in the early 1900s. What it did need, though, was some updating, and over the past six months the Showcase Home team has been working to renovate the home—and its charming carriage house—without sacrificing the property’s architectural and cultural integrity.
According to Historical and Architectural Resources of Wayzata, Minnesota, the house was built by Dwight F. Brooks as a summer home in the early 1900s. The Brooks family, who owned the Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company, lived for most of the year in a house on Park Avenue in Minneapolis. Their property on Lake Minnetonka once included not only the main house and the carriage house, but also the rest of the point before Gray’s Bay bridge was built, including a boathouse and a guesthouse that is now located across Bushaway Road. “There are so many people who will tell me about how when they were children, they would play in the Brooks home and the butlers would bring them peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on trays,” says Susan Stielow, the home’s current owner. Cotswold Charm The home has changed hands only once in its history, when John Stielow bought it in 1973 as a bachelor. “I looked at the house, walked around it, looked in the windows, and that was it. I decided right then that I would buy it,” he says. Stielow had previously bought the “Pink Palace” on Lake Minnetonka as a real estate investment, but he knew he wanted to live in the house on Bushaway Road—all 12,000 square feet of it. Stielow did make several updates to the home, including the addition of the family room off the kitchen, but there were still some structural issues the ASID designers and general contractor discovered during the demolition and discovery process. “When you’re working in an older home, you often have no floor plans, so many of our design plans were redrawn because of what we found during discovery,” says Suzanne Goodwin of Suzanne Goodwin & Associates, the chairperson of the Showcase Home steering committee and one of the designers who worked on the lakeside cottage (formerly the carriage house). “Each design team has gone back and redrawn our designs extensively.” For instance, they discovered that in what is known as the “black and white” bathroom upstairs, the original builders had poured concrete around the tub to keep it in place, but they hadn’t reinforced the floor to handle the weight of the concrete and the cast iron tub. “It didn’t have any support underneath, so it could have at any moment fallen through to the kitchen,” Goodwin says. The master suite had ceiling joists running in opposite directions; the kitchen and family room had three different floor heights; and some of the upstairs walls had two-inch thick plaster, about twice the norm, says John Morris of Stephenson Construction, the project manager. |
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