The midcentury modern rambler in Barry Riesch's St. Anthony Park neighborhood was marketed as a teardown.
But the St. Paul resident didn't want the home to succumb to a wrecking ball. Nor did he want it to be replaced with a new home that dwarfed the lot and the rest of the homes in the neighborhood.
So Riesch, a retired carpenter and municipal building inspector, stepped in.
"I've been in construction my whole adult life. I love architecture, remodels and transformation," he said. "But I wasn't looking for trouble. I wasn't looking for a teardown."
While the home had "severe" landscape issues and the place was rundown, he said, the structure was in decent shape.
Riesch purchased the 1947 rambler for $154,500 two years ago and has been updating and restoring the place to its midcentury modern glory ever since.
"I could see the value. I knew it was a nice house at one time and it was worth saving," he said. "In certain neighborhoods around the city there are teardowns and rebuilds that a lot of times don't fit into the neighborhood. They're McMansions."
A rescued rambler