Interior designer Laura Bischoff had always lived in 1920s-era houses — until she decided it would be fun to "dabble in a rambler."
Midcentury style was just beginning its renaissance, and simple, one-level living sounded appealing to Bischoff, owner of Metropolis Design Group (www.metropolisdesigngroup.net) and her husband, Tom Konz. "We're close to being empty-nesters," she said.
So the couple bought a 1952 rambler on a corner lot in south Minneapolis. The house, which had been used as an assisted-living residence, needed work, she said, but they made only a few cosmetic changes at first. "We lived here a couple of years to get to know it."
By the time they were ready to undertake a major makeover, Bischoff was clear on what she wanted to change (the closed-off kitchen) and what she was willing to keep (the pale peach ceramic-tiled bathroom).
"What drove me crazy was you came in the front door and the first thing you saw was the refrigerator," she said. "For entertaining, it was just not a pretty place." She consulted an architect, who suggested moving the front door to the other corner-facing side of the house.
That helped open up the floor plan and make the most of the home's 1,600 square feet. Bischoff also expanded one corner of the house 1 foot in both directions to create a dining area surrounded by a new corner window.
Cinematic inspiration
With the living and dining area both open to the new kitchen, Bischoff wanted to make sure it didn't detract from the ambience."How do we bridge a lovely living room with a very utilitarian kitchen?" she wondered.
She watched old movies for reference and inspiration, and was smitten with the "swank, awesome kitchens" she saw in "Yours, Mine and Ours," the 1968 film starring Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball, and "The Courtship of Eddie's Father," the 1963 film that inspired the TV series.