You can still see where the horses poked their heads through the stable stalls in Carol Ahlstrand's English Tudor-style home.
Today the square openings serve as illuminated art niches created by Ahlstrand, the homeowner and an interior designer.
But a century ago, the Tudor was a carriage house and stables for the Lake Minnetonka summer retreat of George Van Dusen, the grain storage magnate.
The Van Dusen family subdivided the 10 acres in the 1970s, and the carriage house and connected stable were converted into a single-family home.
Ahlstrand bought the 7,626-square-foot stone and stucco residence in 2001. "It felt like such a jewel in the rough," she said. "I knew it could be made into something magical."
Since then, she's undertaken a top-to-bottom renovation, completed in phases over several years. "I redesigned and updated every room," she said.
The five-bedroom, five-bathroom manor sits on 1 acre near Smithtown Bay in Victoria, and is on the market for $2.173 million.
That "jewel" echoed the English Tudor architectural style of the adjacent Van Dusen lakeside summer mansion, which burned down in 2010.