A few days ago, the large white Dutch colonial on Princeton Avenue was still owned by Henry and Pat West, as it had been for 42 years, and tranquillity reigned in St. Paul's picturesque Tangletown area.
But by Tuesday, signs had sprouted in front of the house to "Preserve our neighborhood." And stunned residents were talking about the couple who bought the century-old residence late last week and then told them of plans to raze it, replace it with a new house and divide the lot for a second house next door.
Adding to their frustration: One of the new owners, Sherelyn Ogden, is head of conservation for the Minnesota Historical Society.
"It's just a crime to tear down a house like that," said David McCurdy, a retired Macalester College professor who has lived next to the property for decades. "I believe in historic preservation and I think so do all of us. We bought these old houses and we like to live in them, and we like our neighborhood the way it is."
Ogden declined to comment for this report. But David Hovda, the building contractor, said that Ogden and her husband, Allan Thenen, feel bad about the reaction. As things stand now, he said, demolition won't occur for a couple weeks and construction may have to await better weather.
Hovda said that the new owners had thought about restoring the West house — which cost them $475,000 — until they found it would cost upward of $200,000 for interior work alone. Then they learned that the lot was big enough for two houses, he said.
"They started weighing the pros and cons of renovating it or doing two houses, and [the latter] turned out to be much more economical," he said.
Tangletown isn't an officially designated historic district, and the Wests' former home doesn't have the cachet of the nearby shingle-style house designed by Cass Gilbert. Teardowns in the Macalester-Groveland area are no longer a new thing.