As the developer of his neighborhood, George Kassan could have built any kind of home he wanted.
Instead, he bought an ancient farmhouse that was slated for the wrecking ball, moved it 6 miles into a new suburban subdivision, and restored it himself using woodwork and light fixtures salvaged from an old meatpacking plant.
"I like a nice historic home, and I wanted the old look," said Kassan, a commercial real estate broker.
This was in 1990, long before it became green and trendy to re-use salvaged building materials. To Kassan, it was just practical — and a way to add some interesting texture to the new subdivision. "We don't want all the same houses in our development," he told the Eagan Chronicle at the time.
Kassan had already chosen his lot, a wooded half-acre in ForestHaven, the Inver Grove Heights community he was developing, when he noticed the old farmhouse "sitting in the middle of a field," he recalled. The field was in Eagan, and the land was being turned into a residential housing development.
Kassan remembered touring the large, New England-style farmhouse years earlier with his father, also a developer. Now the 3,600-square-foot structure was not looking its best. It had been partially remodeled by a medical company that intended to use it as a home-away-from-home for out-of-town employees. But the company went bankrupt, and a mortgage company had taken title.
The gutted three-story house had been vacant for several years, but Kassan thought it still had potential.
"I liked the look of it, and the layout," he said. "It fit our lifestyle. It was a neat house with a lot of nice features."