Jeff and Linda Warner were fascinated by the regal Queen Anne house decades before they lived in it. Jeff grew up in the 1970s in a home two blocks away from the Como neighborhood landmark built in 1902 by architect and inventor Karl Wessel. He would walk or bike past on his way to Lake Como, gawking at the gothic turret and huge circular porch facing the lake.
"It was so much bigger than anything in the neighborhood," Jeff said. "It was so cool and mysterious."
When they were dating, Jeff and Linda would often stroll by and wonder what it was like inside, recalled Linda. The Warners not only found out, they eventually became the owners — and stewards of the house.
In 2007, Jeff and Linda were content in their suburban Roseville home where they raised five children — until Jeff heard from a business associate that the St. Paul Queen Anne was going on the market. Now that they were empty-nesters, Jeff could imagine himself and Linda moving back to the city and possibly living in the home that touched him as a boy.
The couple arranged a showing. When they walked through the front door, "our jaws just dropped," recalled Linda. They marveled at the well-preserved interiors — from the untouched, pristine rich oak woodwork to the Art Nouveau stained-glass windows in the foyer. The cozy library walls were covered with painted murals depicting scenes from Lake Como, Italy. The charming details from yesteryear were endless — there was even the original call button in the dining room to summon the maid.
"It just kept getting better and better," recalled Jeff. The biggest surprise was a three-tier concrete fountain in the center of a glass-walled conservatory at the rear of the home. "I couldn't wait to sit in there," said Linda.
But they also discovered that the 4,000-square-foot structure had been neglected and needed a lot of maintenance. The tiny, dingy kitchen screamed "1960s." The back yard resembled an untamed buckthorn forest.
Plus, many of the rooms smelled like cat urine.