Redoing back bath - in progress

I have been doing tons of research on the house and it is very clear that the 2 bed 1 bath addition at the very back of the house has nothing to do with the historic details of the house that we are trying to preserve. For that reason, it will be remodeled in a neutral style in mostly white since it isn't really possible to try and make it match the awesome design and woodwork of the rest of the house.

In general, when doing whole house remodels, it's a good idea to repeat design themes throughout. In this case, some elements from work I've done to the house will be repeated - mainly the 6x6 white tiles in running bond pattern and white track lighting that doesn't make a statement but simply illuminates. I used the white tiles in the kitchen above the red 6x6 pattern so that I could add a vent fan in the kitchen which was much needed. I also added white 6x6 tiles above the old clay tiles in the bathroom to raise the shower head. These white tile surfaces provide a functional surface while blending into the wall and not distracting from the old tile work which is probably from the '20s on the bath floor and the '30s on the wall in the bath and kitchen.

The back bath shower was originally 1/8" Masonite which is pretty odd since it is not an effective moisture barrier. If you know the stuff, it seems about as strong as really good cardboard.

The obvious choice was to do the shower in white 6x6 to continue the theme to unify the design throughout as much as reasonably possible.

 
 

The white track light I added has LED bulbs and was also used in the kitchen. It's a flexible system that simply adds light where it's needed. 

The downstairs bath also has unobtrusive white LED lighting in the form of recessed 4" cans. 

 
 

One thing that's odd is the bath has '20s plumbing fixtures. I'm still trying to figure out what has happened to this house over the years but the fixtures may be from an earlier upstairs half bath that was removed when the master dressing room was converted to master bath.

 
 

The wall sink fits well there so I'll simply shine it up.  The '20s wall tank toilet is a 5 gallon flush and will need to be replaced with a modern toilet. Unfortunately, the closet flange (floor drain) will need to be moved back from 16" to 12".

 
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Above you can also see the floor was done in a style to mimic the downstairs bath and will be left for now. 

The ceiling is definitely not large timber redwood like the rest of the house and so will simply be painted fresh white as will the rest of the back addition with this ceiling.

 
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Update:

Back t the toilet... The vent for the toilet is wrong and I have to move back the toilet flange to accommodate a modern toilet so I'm redoing a large section.

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Getting there...

Clockwise from top center: 4" toilet drain, 2" toilet vent, 2" shower drain

Clockwise from top center: 4" toilet drain, 2" toilet vent, 2" shower drain

The 2" vent is now correctly out of the path of water from the toilet flush going down the 4" pipe. The vent is just for displaced air which is why it can have hard bends. The foreground 2" pipe is the shower drain.

The 2" vent is now correctly out of the path of water from the toilet flush going down the 4" pipe. The vent is just for displaced air which is why it can have hard bends. The foreground 2" pipe is the shower drain.

 
It's pretty funny to see the tiny 1 gallon toilet tank next to the old 3-5 gallon wall tank toilet. 

It's pretty funny to see the tiny 1 gallon toilet tank next to the old 3-5 gallon wall tank toilet. 

 

Got the toilet in... 

 
 

What would a late period Maybeck design look like? CED Archive field trip

Caution: contains rampant but reasoned speculation.

From Kenneth Cardwell's book Bernard Maybeck / Artisan, Architect, Artist

"In his later years, Maybeck concentrated on basic design schemes and decorative effects while relegating the actual structural planning to other architects. The results were usually dramatic but less unified and effective than his earlier work."

This gives insight into the process that may have created our house. Christina and I went on a little field trip to the Berkeley College of Environmental Design Archives to look at the plans for Maybeck's Aikin house, 1940. Maybeck essentially retired after this year, and the Aikin plans are notable for not having his name on them but he was seen in some construction photos. Sort of like our house, but without the plans or photos:(

Though pictures are not allowed to be published from the archives without permission, we were able to handle the Aikin associated drawings and look them over for signs of the process.

The floor plans were very minimal and mostly only listed rooms, doors, fireplaces, stove and sink in the kitchen - the bare bones. The elevations, straight-on flat perspective drawings of the exterior walls, were also quite limited and only depicted doors, windows and roof lines.

Being a builder, I understand that these drawings were intended to be the basis of an architectural or structural design. In our case, I believe Rowland, the builder of record, may have been responsible for these structural designs which could probably have been done in the field using standard building practices of the day. These days an engineer is required for foundation and shearwall and structural beams but these requirements were probably much less strict at the time. This is why houses from the '20s are usually in such bad shape these days as best practices in long term stability and earthquake safety have come about more recently. Maybeck was no longer the architect in his works after 1924 but instead the designer. The disconnect between the designer, the architect or builder, and the building department is why I believe there are a few undocumented Maybeck houses from this period. Another notable Rowland project that looks to be designed by Maybeck was the 1926 Reid house in Berkeley. I hope both my house and the Reid house can one day be connected to Maybeck.

With the basic size and shape of the house determined by the floor plans and elevations, one could probably get a building permit and start the foundation work and the framing. The reason I think Maybeck designed the shape of the house, besides the Rowland letter, is his use of changes in floor and ceiling heights to create interior magic. A tucked away front door, perpendicular to the street and far up the hillside, opens to a small, low entry room with a tiny door into the only original bathroom. To the right opens up to a dramatic sunken living room with 1&1/2 story high redwood ceilings and oversized board formed concrete central fireplace with Venturi chimney. Through the living room you enter the kitchen which is back up to the level of the entry way and the ceilings come back down. This creates an "Alice in Wonderland" effect in the living room that is dramatic and interesting and a central feature of many of Maybeck's works. A staircase winds around above the living room to enter the only original bedroom. The balcony over the living room again creates the growing and shrinking Alice in Wonderland effect as you go from a narrow stairwell back to the large living room, back to a narrow stairwell that goes into an oversized single (original) bedroom with a Victorian-esque changing room and observation deck. A Maybeck expert would hear these things and think Maybeck. An average architecture fan would probably think "storybook" or Hansel and Gretel style although those are not quite accurate.

The exterior of the house in a Swiss Chalet style combined with the interesting use of space and the unusual floor plan is very much a Maybeck design. The interior redwood trim work is also something Maybeck would have designed with collaboration from Rowland, who hand carved all the redwood door handles. Maybeck probably designed the floor, which was random width tongue and groove redwood with hardwood plugs and a special filler for the V between the redwood boards. The random width planks with hardwood plugs are seen on other Maybeck's but I don't know of him using redwood flooring in any other projects.

One thing that has muddied the picture of a pure, unadulterated Maybeck design is the tile work in the house which is probably not Maybeck and was probably added a bit later. The kitchen and bath would have been quite sparse originally and may not even have had tile. The Wallen house #1, 1933, looks to have had black 4&1/4" dal-tile added in the kitchen and bath as well.

Back to the design process...

After the house was being built, he would probably stop by to visit and direct certain details about the construction as he is seen doing in a picture from the Aikin house. He would probably have made sketches of interior details such as the fireplace and the doors of the house. The material finishes would have been listed on the floor plans or discussed on site. Mostly the finish details that were listed on the floor plans would likely be information relevant to the framers of the house.

These are the jobs of a home designer, not an architect. Rowland would have been responsible for dealing with the inspections and building department which is why he is listed on the official documents.

We also know from the Rowland letter that there was a landscaping design. Maybeck did some landscaping designs and also hired other people for that. I think what is left in our yard is a very overgrown and not well maintained original landscaping design.

In 1939, Rowland came back to the bay area to do two additions on the house. They were made of pecky cedar and their general form looks to be done from a Maybeck sketch. Maybeck was near retirement and back and forth between Berkeley and Twain Harte with Annie. It's likely that Rowland would have come to visit his old friend Maybeck in Berkeley and have him give guidance for the additions. This may have been done off site. The pecky cedar is one clue that Maybeck was involved. Another clue is the breakfast room added off the kitchen which Maybeck had added to other projects. Increased kitchen area was something that became more desirable through the middle of the century. Another clue was the care to "elevational" magic in the music room which had an odd series of modernist skylights made of wire glass similar to those seen on the Aikin house of 1940 which also used the pecky cedar throughout. The reason I think it was a Maybeck sketch is the overall care to detail is reduced and the fireplace in the music room was faced with cobblestones which is a design Maybeck hadn't used for many decades. The skylights were also poorly implemented and leaked quite a bit over the years. With Maybeck probably not supervising the building process, the quality was reduced.

The two bedroom one bath addition in the very back of the house was done in '47 and is a poor attempt at matching the style of the house. These were done by a different owner and builder than the Rowland/Maybeck team.

If my speculations are correct then we have a Maybeck house with "half a Maybeck" additions in '39 and some crap added to the back in '47. This makes our house about 50% Maybeck by square footage and that creates the opinion of some that it is a watered down design and was a Maybeck copy done by his friend Rowland. It has been difficult to explain this story to experts as the layers of work over the years have created a lot of confusion and the more likely story requires exhaustive research to understand. Finding one more scrap of evidence relating to the house with Maybeck's name on it would help triangulate the wealth of late period Maybeck details with the Rowland letter where he says it was a Maybeck design. Unfortunately, the Maybeck papers at the CED archives are highly guarded and somewhat disorganized. A sketch of a detail of our house could easily be sitting in a box of miscellaneous papers at the CED archives that are uncategorized or tucked into a folder relating to another project. I might have to reach out to an author of one of the Maybeck books I have to see if there are any curious drawings they have seen in their research in the CED archives that might help piece this story together.

This sums it up quite nicely:

"This highly unusual Montclair Swiss chalet is packed full of heavy timbers and interesting embellishments. The home is attributed in the listing to “Rowland” which we presume refers to the little known Berkeley design-builders Rowland & Rowland, but this structure is particularly flamboyant even by their standards. The attention to detail and unity of vision here rivals that of any of the best known and most idiosyncratic of Bay Area designers."

From: https://edificionado.wordpress.com/2014/04/29/1526-mountain-oakland/

 

Maybeck Feature: Stucco Splatter

I didn't notice at first, but the house has an odd textured stucco splatter. This was a technique that only Maybeck used to my knowledge. It is one of my strongest pieces of evidence since it is so unusual and featured on confirmed Maybecks.

From the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association: 

Daniella Thompson, BAHA 2006. Joralemon House, 1924

Daniella Thompson, BAHA 2006. Joralemon House, 1924

Ira B. & Dorothy Joralemon House
168 Southampton Avenue
(Bernard Maybeck, 1924)

"As part of a remodel of Bernard Maybeck’s 1924 masterpiece, the new owners rose to the challenge of restoring the unique, original exterior coating. Maybeck had prescribed “earth color,” a composition intermingling four colors of wet stucco—pale chrome yellow, deep ochre, Venetian red, and gray—to be spattered on the walls in turn. At Maybeck’s direction, the young Joralemons dipped whisk brooms into the mix and flipped them toward the walls, which scattered the colored stucco, creating what Maybeck called “vibrant colors.”

"About 15 years ago, because of cracking in the original finish, the exterior was covered with a layer of commercially sprayed stucco. Hidden behind a planter pot by the front entrance, the new owners found a patch of the original finish and color, and sought to recreate the look and technique, but more efficiently executed with sprayed paint.

"Faced with this intriguing challenge, their painting contractor enlisted the aid of a decorative painter known for her faux finishes. With air compressor, sheetrock hopper guns, and hoses, 100 gallons of paint were flung at the thousands of square feet of wall. After trial and error, the technique was refined and mastered, including brushes and sponges in the capable hands of the faux finisher. The result was a spectacular success, replicating the original look and returning Maybeck’s touch to the exterior of this very striking house."

-Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association 

http://berkeleyheritage.com/awards/awards2006.2.html

In the front of the house it looks like black speckle. I breezed by assuming it was mildew or something.

 
 

In protected areas, like under the kitchen balcony, it appears more pronounced. 

 
 

This small area off the laundry has some added colors:

 
 

Seen here is the black that's all over and a couple colors you can't see anywhere else - a buttermilk color and a terracotta red. It's hard to tell what was the intended effect of having more colors there. Best guess would be to blend with colors in the landscaping.

 
I even see the splatter on the original electrical permit which was in a box on the side of the house near the crawl space door! The first two sets of permits were under here. Looks like the electrical permit was near a gap in the door that covers t…

I even see the splatter on the original electrical permit which was in a box on the side of the house near the crawl space door! The first two sets of permits were under here. Looks like the electrical permit was near a gap in the door that covers the meter box.

 

Maybeck also used this type of splatter on the Oakland Packard dealership though this building is no longer around. 

"The dull surfaces of plastered walls never appealed to [Maybeck] and when he used stucco for reasons of economy he always attempted to enrich is by some means. The Jockers house (1911) had rough cast and contrasting troweled surfaces; the Kennedy studio used variously colored plasters without restraint. Most late houses, like the McMurray and the Staniford, had stucco exteriors modeled in several colors of plaster applied in successive dash coats. This method... produced a lively finish. But the hand-controlled application was not economical for use on large structures. A new technique, which covered concrete surfaces with a coat of plaster blown by air guns, took quantities of cement, pigment, and water, and mixed them as they were driven against the surface of the building. Maybeck saw that with this method he could vary the pigmentation of the plaster almost at will. He did so on the Oakland [Packard Dealership] building, first stationing himself across nearby Lake Merritt where he conducted the finishing operations by field telephone." Kenneth Cardwell from Bernard Maybeck / Arisan, Architect, Artist.

To sum up - the colorful stucco splatter is a distinctly Maybeck feature like the Venturi chimney. From what I can tell, the specific whisk broom splatter was done only in the '20s and only to dress up flat stucco exteriors (Maybe 3/4 or more of his projects from the -period were stucco). The Wallen #1 (1932) and J.B. Tufts #3 (1931) of the early '30s are simply plain stucco it appears.

I was lucky enough to see the 1921 Calkins house, and it seems like it is one of the few left with this finish that has not been painted. 

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The streak is from a gutter that was in disrepair. 

The streak is from a gutter that was in disrepair. 

Sneaky Microwave Pantry Closet

I didn't want to change up the original redwood cabinets in the kitchen but the refrigerator was a problem. The space for it was 34" wide, 22" deep and a few inches too short for a standard fridge which is 70" I think. I was able to modify the cabinet above to get a few more inches in height. They do make a counter depth fridge which is 24" deep but a standard fridge is 30" deep. Common widths are 30", 36", 42" etc but a 33" is also made. 

We looked into 33"x24" size fridge but they have the about the same capacity as a standard 30"x30" fridge which is apartment sized and pretty small for a 3 bedroom house. My solution was to move the wall behind the fridge back so we could put in a 33"x30" which is a little bigger.

That left us with a tiny pantry closet and Christina came up with a clever solution. We found a 24"x48" rolling shelf from Costco that fits in there pretty snug. I had to put an outlet in the closet and I made a short extension cord to get power to the microwave. I had to also change the wheels to a smaller size so they wouldn't bind up on the walls. For light I put in a motion sensing LED which is perfect since there isn't a switch. It's a neat little system that saves limited counter space. I'm happy with how it turned out.

 
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