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By the time Grace Gilroy acquired her large arts and crafts
home in Vancouver's popular Kitsilano area, it had suffered a couple
of insensitive, 1970s-style renovations.
But buried beneath the shag carpet and canary yellow melamine kitchen
cabinets was a home once filled with history and character. According
to Architect Keith Jakobsin, who did extensive research on both the
house and its general era before embarking on the renovation- which
included creating this new, larger kitchen- the house was one of Kitsilano's
first, built in 1908 by a hardware magnate shortly after the area was
logged.
As Gilroy & Jakobsen tackled the
project, authenticity was the watchword. And for Gilroy and her
partner, Paul Roscorla, that meant taking many of their cues from the
work of Charles Rennie Mackintosh, the Scottish Architectr and Artist
whose Craftsman ethic can be found in many of the kitchen's surface
details. The custom cabinetry is all wood, painted off-white, the colour
Mackintosh preferred for his wood trim. Poured glass tiles- another
Mackintosh signature- enliven the tumbled slate backsplash.
The lighting fixtures, such as those over the large island, the hardware
and the old-fashioned, mottled glass cabinet fronts, all suggest a turn-of-the-century
kitchen. Gilroy and Roscorla, who love to entertain, are thrilled with
its polished 'urban country' atmosphere. "We spend all our time
here now," says Gilroy."
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