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European Elegance in Cordova Bay Home

Dream house offers ocean views
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Staircase and ocean view from great room. (Don Denton photograph)

Quick facts:

House: 7,000 square feet

Decks: 3,000 square feet

Floors: 3

Bedrooms: 3

Bathrooms: 5

Gas fireplaces: 4

Build time: 1 year

Garage: 2-car

Outdoor kitchens: 2

Wine room: 1

2 acres of land

Plus a 1-bedroom suite on lower floor with a separate entrance

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Stepping into this home, my eyes were immediately drawn to the view beyond the welcoming great room, the stunning windows and the expansive deck. It鈥檚 no wonder the owner fell in love with this property when he first saw it in 2016.

As Dan Schuetze, CEO, and Mike Edwardson, General Manager, of introduced themselves, I had a vague sense of smiling and shaking their hands. But my entire focus was on the visual smorgasbord before me.

The cream-coloured curved walls, the curved staircase, the antique chandelier, the warm wood, the hand-carved marble fireplace and the windows all reminded me of a bygone era. And yet, here they sat in all their splendour in a brand new build.

Beyond the windows, the sight of the Pacific Ocean and the San Juan Islands beckoned to me, and I drank in the view a little while longer.

Meeting the owners, I could see they were obviously pleased with their new home. It was just what they鈥檇 asked for 鈥 not an easy task considering they spent half of the build time out of country.

鈥淭here was a language barrier and a lot of emailing back and forth,鈥 said Dan. 鈥淲e鈥檇 send them video clips as the build progressed. This was actually a reno from a 1960s, 3,500-square-foot home into this three-storey, 7,000-square-foot home.鈥

He added, 鈥淲e designed it so that as you walk farther into the house, the spaces get higher and larger. The original house had eight-foot ceilings, and that height was kept in the foyer and dining area. In the newer area, we created the hallways with nine-foot ceilings and the kitchen is 10 feet high. The great room has a 12-foot celling 鈥 11-foot if you include the depth of the coffer.鈥

鈥淭he biggest challenge was that the original house was built at a height that is currently not allowed,鈥 explained Mike. 鈥淲e had to get a height variance. Then we took the original house down to the studs and concrete, and built up and out from there. We had RJC [structural engineers] assist us with the original design. The addition is 4,000 square feet and built like a tank. It was designed and built in such a way that the addition will hold up the existing house in case of an earthquake.鈥

鈥淭he original house had settled and we had to level it out and make everything right,鈥 explained Dan. 鈥淪eventy per cent of the exterior is granite clad 鈥 tons and tons of granite. We made the entire exterior of the house like a sheer wall, it鈥檚 all built beyond seismic standards to support the stone. Every four feet up there are steel, reinforced cross-members to hold up the stone.鈥

The house is also protected with aluminum-clad windows that mitigate any saltwater spray damage.

鈥淭he three decks were built with quarry-sourced, brushed granite, which easily holds up in all kinds of weather,鈥 explained Mike. 鈥淎nd the roof is a DaVinci roof made with synthetic shake that inhibits moss.鈥

While the house is built to withstand whatever Mother Nature throws at it, the interior reflects the owners鈥 love of antiques and traditional styles.

All three floors feature engineered, long grain, custom white oak, except for the master bedroom, which is carpeted. Eight-inch-high baseboards run throughout the house, giving it an elegant European feel.

鈥淓ven the garage has these baseboards,鈥 said Mike. 鈥淎nd there鈥檚 crown molding throughout the entire home, except in the great room, which has one-foot coffered ceilings. We added LED back lights to the crown molding on the main and lower floor. It gives the rooms a warm glow in the evening.鈥

The windows help pull it all together.

鈥淎ll the windows are a German passive home series by Moser, triple-paned, aluminum-clad wood. Most of them are tilt and turn. This gives this new home a more traditional feel, which is in keeping with the homeowners鈥 love of antiques,鈥 said Dan.

To complete the European feel, the owners had all the doors in the house custom made. Every door has specialty European-style hardware, including multi-point locking systems.

The lower floor was built for fun. The stairs descend into a games room with a fireplace and a 1,300-square-foot deck with an outdoor kitchen. The view from here is just as impressive as upstairs. To the right is the mechanical room and wine cellar. Just past that sits a one-bedroom suite, complete with fireplace, ocean view and its own entrance. To the left of the stairs is the soundproof theatre room.

We headed back up the stairs to the main floor, which has a dining room off the left of the main entrance as well as a kitchen, with great ocean views, and a deck, complete with a walk-through butler鈥檚 pantry. To the right are the guest bathroom, master bedroom, office (complete with library and French doors to the deck) and garden room.

View of the kitchen area. (Don Denton photography)

鈥淭he garden room was specifically made for year-round use,鈥 said Mike. 鈥淲ith its marble floor, six-foot windows and three skylights, it鈥檚 a great spot to start plants in the spring and have an indoor garden in the cooler months.鈥

Great care was taken in selecting antiques for this home. For example, the main floor guest bathroom has a six-foot-long, hand-carved oak vanity with a marble top and copper fixtures. The tiling on the bathroom floor is a custom-made marble design. Then there are the chandeliers.

鈥淭here are nine chandeliers,鈥 said Mike, 鈥渁ll from different places. Some were salvaged out of an old Victorian home and some came from the owners鈥 old home. We had to recondition them all and retrofit them to meet current code standards.鈥

The antique fireplace mantel was one of their greatest finds, and one of the trickier pieces to fit into the build.

鈥淚t took four people to lift one of the five pieces of the fireplace,鈥 said Dan. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all hand-carved marble 鈥 over 1,000 pounds.鈥

We turn our attention back to the staircase, its curve mimicking the wall adjacent to it, and pause to appreciate its architectural triumph and the nostalgia it evokes.

鈥淭he curves of the staircase and the walls were the most difficult thing to build,鈥 said Mike. 鈥淵ou can see the amount of craftsmanship that went into them to make them work. It gives the room great aesthetic value and great flow.鈥

I found it hard to resist touching the cool marble of the fireplace and its intricately carved patterns. The woodwork on the wall also turned out to be a tactile treat as I made my way out of the great room. Then it was up the curved staircase to the upper floor landing. This, Mike and Dan proudly proclaimed, is the best view in the house.

View of the ensuite bathroom. (Don Denton photography)

鈥淲e love this view,鈥 said Dan. 鈥淵ou look down onto the great room and out over the decks to the Pacific Ocean and the San Juan Islands. We came up here quite a bit during the build.鈥

To the right is a guest bedroom with an en suite. The shower in the bathroom is curved to match the curved wall of the great room below. To the left sits another guest room with en suite and a deck. Farther down is the den. All rooms have ocean views.

We made our way back down the curved staircase and onto the deck, where Dan pointed out the garden area below and the dock at the edge of the property.

鈥淲e built a cantilevered concrete deck near the ocean so the owners could fish from it,鈥 he said with a smile.

Later, as I drive away, I can鈥檛 help but marvel at the level of trust between the homeowners and builder. What must it be like to have your dream home built while you are thousands of miles away? Dan, Mike and his team managed to do just that, and they did it spectacularly.

Suppliers List:

Plumbing: Kohler fixtures installed by Tyler Mechanical Contracting

Heating: Heat pump supplied by

Windows: Moser passive home series, aluminum clad

Cabinetry:

Appliances: Wolfe, Sub-Zero

Flooring: Custom made white oak installed by

Roofing: DaVinci roof by

Interior Design:

Counters:

Engineering: stone age marble

Staging Furniture:

-Story by Darcy Nybo

Story courtesy of , a Black Press Media publication
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