
It Took 14 Years to Transform This Charmless Craftsman into a Colorful, Family-Friendly Space
The designs evolved over the years as the family grew.

Sure, renovations that seem to happen overnight can be awe-inspiring, but there’s something to be said about renovations that happen gradually. What you need in your home probably changes throughout the years—another kid, a WFH job, a grandparent that moves in… all of these things could shift your design priorities.

Rafael Soldi
For this home in Seattle’s Phinney Ridge neighborhood—dubbed “Bread & Butter”—renovations happened over the course of 14 years. It all started in 2009 when a young couple (both structural engineers) bought the house, which was an original Craftsman, but had been poorly updated with a lot of its charm removed.

Rafael Soldi
“After purchasing the home, our clients decided to take a collaborative approach to the renovation that could adjust to their lifestyle as they started a family,” explains Ian Butcher, AIA, Founding Partner of Best Practice Architecture. “Despite favoring contemporary design, they leaned into the idea of bringing back the original craftsman in a meaningful way.”

Rafael Soldi
There were three project phases, with the first phase starting shortly after the couple bought the house. This involved an entry porch remodel and a coat of gray and yellow paint.

Rafael Soldi
The next phase commenced in 2011, before the couple’s first child was born. It was a comprehensive update to the main floor—expanding and brightening the kitchen and adding a laundry room and full bathroom.
“Phases one and two targeted bringing back the original Craftsman charm but in an abstract form,” Ian says. “We balanced deliberately modified versions of traditional elements with highly contemporary interventions.”

Rafael Soldi
In 2020, the Best Practice team and the couple embarked on the final part of the renovation, which involved a second-story addition and new garage, all built to accommodate the needs of the couple and their three young children, plus a home office for the wife’s engineering practice.

Rafael Soldi
“Phase three included a completed overhaul of the upper floor including about 600 square feet of additional space,” Ian explains. “We designed the expansion as a distinct and contemporary addition to the original house. It consists of two volumes that complement the scale of the original house while expressing a unique design. The new upper floor plan has a cozy but complete primary suite, a home office, three kids’ rooms, a generous landing, and a fun reading nook and play slide for the kids.”

Rafael Soldi
While the interiors of phase three match up with the style of the main floor, the new bathrooms and the home office have a dose of color. The kids’ bath is a fun, striped space, while the primary bathroom is bathed in green.

Rafael Soldi

Rafael Soldi
The new garage is set up so it can have a future mother-in-law unit above, which can act as an extra income generator or a space for an aging parent. “The garage continues the theme of phase one, demonstrating our clients’ structural engineering work, with a 13-foot-tall concrete wall that acts as a beautiful backdrop to the main yard,” Ian adds.

Rafael Soldi
Throughout the renovation process, the Best Practice team was careful to preserve the home’s Craftsman heritage, much of which was erased when the couple first bought the home. Because much of the original exterior detailing was stripped, they looked at historical photos and also relied on the team’s knowledge of Craftsman architecture to recreate details.
“With the bones of the house re-created, we inserted deliberately modern touches that responded to a practical programmatic need or for better natural light or other ideas that complemented and enhanced the Craftsman roots by comparison,” says Ian.

Rafael Soldi
The family is happy with how their home has evolved over the years. And Ian sees the benefit to having a lot of time to work on a renovation. “While it seems highly atypical for a project to last for so long over so many years, it’s pretty fun to revisit old projects with the benefit of time and maturity (both us as the designers and our clients as the homeowners and structural engineers),” he says. “I feel like the original design still held up as we didn’t attempt to make any changes to the original other than a fresh coat of paint.”