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Paradise found
Thomas J. Story
Joe Rivers Altieri, with his family in their indoor-outdoor dining space, wanted a garden that was visible from every room in the house.
Paradise found
A young couple turns a condemned beach shack into their dream home

Slideshow: Before and after
Slideshow: Pieces of paradise
Lessons learned

There are fixer-uppers, and then there are complete wrecks. Joe and Kalli Rivers Altieri were determined to put down roots in the desirable beach town of Venice, California. But given their $300,000 budget, their dream seemed like a long shot — until the couple found a place that required an absolute leap of faith.

The house, an uninhabitable 1920s shack with no studs or insulation, had served as base camp for 39 squatters and a taco truck. The side yard had been used as an outhouse; the living room was beset with bamboo. Infested

 
Diary of a kitchen remodel
 
 
with rats, it had been condemned by the city several times over. “Joe cried when he first saw it, but I always knew it had potential,” says Kalli, an actress. With previous experience as a woodworker on film sets, Joe (who now fronts his own rock band, Piracy) soon came around to the idea of a massive remodel. “We were young, poor, and crazy,” he says with a smile.

Paradise found
Thomas J. Story
Redwood-framed sliding acrylic plastic doors create privacy along the dining area.
Not only did the couple take on the unwieldy project themselves, they also camped out on the property throughout most of the more than four-year process. The first order of business was to apply some much-needed first aid — erecting poles to hold the roof up, as well as positioning five car jacks under the house to keep it from collapsing. “I wish we could have demoed the lot, but we couldn’t afford to,” Joe says. Instead, he removed mold- and fire-damaged interior walls and stripped off the exterior wood siding, which he later recycled as beams, baseboards, and door casings. He cut down the indoor bamboo forest and reemployed it in a gallery area above daughter Ocelli’s bedroom.

The footprint of the 800-square-foot original structure remains largely the same. The kitchen and bathroom traded places, and the roof at the back of the house was raised to 12 feet. A wall was added between the den and living room to form an office.

Paradise found
Thomas J. Story
Exposed beams — from recycled wood — and multiple storage spots are featured in the office.
A mudroom connects the original house with a two-story front addition. Upstairs is a 440-square-foot master suite; downstairs is the space they call the “lanai,” where a wall of sliding doors yawns open to embrace the entire front garden. “I created several entrances and windows, so you can come and go lots of ways and always have a view of the garden from inside,” Joe says.

For much of the construction, the couple lived in the unfinished front addition, with a hot plate for cooking and a tub for washing dishes. Within two weeks of moving in, Kalli became pregnant with Ocelli, and Joe took work on other job sites until their loans came through. Sharing downtime with Kalli and the new baby was rare. “I missed so many of Ocelli’s firsts,” Joe confesses.

But the results were worth the hardships. The home perfectly expresses Joe and Kalli’s design philosophy: Find creative ways to make the most of what you have. The couple’s proudest moment came during a neighborhood garden tour, when their resurrected shack was featured next to much more grandiose homes. “People’s mouths dropped to the ground,” Joe says. “This is what you can do when you don’t have $2 million.”

Published: April 2006