Picture-Perfect
by Alison Bender
The 1960s A-frame on the south end of“When we bought it, we thought we were going to just tear it down,” she says. “But we wanted to be able to spend some time there first.”
Enriquez and Roy first made minor interior repairs to render the house habitable. “Once we did that, we got comfortable” with the idea of a remodel Enriquez says. “We realized it was a great home.”
However, the one-bedroom house was too small to accommodate the Los Angeles–based couple’s large extended family. So they consulted SANDBOX principal Scott Gillespie, whom they found while thumbing through a past issue of Tahoe Quarterly Mountain Home.
“This house wasn’t built particularly well,” Gillespie says of the original 1,755 square foot home. “It was poorly insulated and constructed. But I’m always in favor of saving something existing when it makes sense, not only environmentally but financially as well.”
Gillespie enlisted Brent Ferrera of
The design includes a rich palette of eclectic materials that Enriquez, who owns an interior design firm, wanted to incorporate into her home. Three sets of antique doors were salvaged from demolished houses in
The exterior siding is interior-grade oak that
“We mixed so many styles in the house and somehow it all works together,” Enriquez says.
Ultimately, the home exudes the style of a European chalet, something enduringly classic yet totally unique. “The decisions that we made were not just aesthetic but long term,” says Enriquez. “We weren’t just remodeling to fix it up. This house will, hopefully, never be up for sale, but handed down in our family forever.”
Building Design: SANDBOX
Builder: Brent Ferrera of BC Builders
Interior Design: Melissa M. Enriquez of Sur La Mer Design
Year of Remodel: 2008–2009
Square Feet: 3,799