Project Details
- Project Name
- Modern Touches and Stately Skylights Transform a Century-Old Building
- Location
- D.C.
- Project Types
- Single Family
- Project Scope
- Renovation/Remodel
- Year Completed
- 2008
- Awards
- 2008 Remodeling Design Awards
- Consultants
-
Ali Honarkar,Ahmad Amarloui,Mustafa Nouri,Chris Brown
- Project Status
- Built
- Cost
- $400,000
- Style
- Modern
Project Description
Division One Architects is on a mission to bring modernism to the people
in Washington, D.C., a city that is, architecturally speaking, fairly
conservative. Modern projects are rare in D.C., and therefore difficult
for most people to see, says one of the firm’s two principals, Ali
Honarkar. “Our vision is that you can walk up to modern. That’s what
we’ve been doing in urban row houses and infills.”
The 2008 Best of the Year project fulfills Honarkar and business
partner Mustafa Nouri’s desire by transforming a unit in a 100-year-old
city building that had been poorly rehabbed in the early 1990s. But it
wasn’t easy for Honarkar, Nouri, and project architect Chris Brown to
convince site neighbors as well as various historic preservation and
advisory commissions that the project would be a success. Despite
letters denouncing the planned structure as looking “like a VCR” and
“going to a formal dinner party in spandex,” Division One Architects
pressed on for 18 months to get proposals through.
The project originated as a $200,000 interior renovation, but
“after talking with the client,” Honarkar says, “we realized there were
larger issues. None of us was happy with the layout.” Luckily, the owner
was able to double the budget, and the project grew in scope.
Three levels and a mezzanine occupy the 40-by-17-by-40-foot space
that Honarkar refers to as a “little skyscraper.” Working with remodeler
Ahmad Amarloui, of ACT Inc., in Alexandria, Va., the exterior was clad
with Rheinzink panels (which will look like slate as they age). The
judges commented on the risk of “putting something like this on a brick
building”; they appreciated the challenge and liked “the sense of
showmanship and drama.”
ACT crews gutted the interior and added myriad windows and
skylights. The judges liked the use of natural light and how the light
“cascades from space to space.”
The highlight of the renovation is the unique use of space for a
bathroom. “This project has a wow factor, but it’s also functional,” the
judges commented. “What’s beautiful is how complicated it is, and yet
it doesn’t feel complicated.”
After removing the main bathroom from beneath the stairs to allow
in more light, Honarkar joked that “it would be cool to hang the
bathroom because there is nowhere else to put it.” The remark became a
reality, with a room hanging from steel beams under the third floor,
just above the kitchen island. Access is off the mezzanine. “The owner
thought we were kidding,” Honarkar says. “But once we showed him the
renderings, he liked the idea.” The plumbing is underneath the bathroom
floor.
The kitchen, too, shows forward thinking with floating,
wall-mounted cabinets by Bulthaup that “lighten up the space,” Honarkar
says. “It’s the first time this system has been used in D.C.”
That Division One Architects was able to convey its ideas in the
award entry impressed the judges. “It’s a fully documented project with a
beautiful presentation,” they said. “The binder is great.”
Honarkar and Nouri continue to bring their modern sensibilities to
the masses as their company transforms several multi-unit buildings in
the same neighborhood as this winning project. “Now everyone loves it,”
Honarkar says. “The Dupont Circle neighborhood house tour has asked if
we can be part of the tour.”