Like many men, Tim Jarvis experienced a midlife crisis. Unlike most men, he solved it by buying a house.
"I was living with all Ikea stuff," said the 36-year-old software developer from Iowa. "I couldn't keep living a transient lifestyle. I don't have a wife or kids. I needed something to anchor me to reality."
That anchor came in the form of a 1940 St. Louis Park home — and its subsequent $175,000 renovation. In the span of three months, Jarvis, working with Danny Hecker of Clairmont Design + Build, transformed the outdated 1,500-square-foot, three-bedroom, one-bath house into a 2,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, three-bath dwelling updated for the 21st century. New plumbing and electrical systems, window replacements and refinished floors were just the beginning of this massive overhaul. A backyard tree was removed to make way for a two-car garage, walls were opened up in the living room and dining room, and doorways were raised to accommodate the homeowner's 6-foot-3 stature.
Jarvis, a body builder and self-proclaimed "car guy," looked at more than 50 homes before settling on his Princeton Avenue bachelor pad. He likes St. Louis Park because it "feels less suburb-y" and is close to his city-dwelling friends. Neighborhood home values and the quality of the school district also factored into the decision, though he doesn't know if fatherhood is in his future. "I have that bachelor mentality. I feel young and with it," he said. "Then I realize now I'm the old guy at the gym."
Living in a made-to-order abode is a big change from Jarvis' previous residences: the Murals of LynLake and a penthouse in the Lime in Uptown. "I was paying, like, $2,100 a month, and it was still 800 square feet and you get to the point where you have no storage," he said. He wanted more room for his photography equipment, and parking spaces for his beloved Audi and Miata. The small yard also is a perk for his 3-year-old French bulldog, Pookie.
That the home needed substantial modernization to fit his taste didn't deter Jarvis; in fact, he preferred it. Many of the other homes he saw were described as updated, but much of the work had been done hastily by the owners.
"The tile would be janky, or the outlets would be crooked," he said. "Other people can maybe deal with that, but it would drive me insane."
Hecker acted as both Jarvis' real estate agent and builder. Together, they meticulously laid out a plan that fit both Jarvis' budget and vision for the home. Not once did Jarvis consider doing a DIY remodel.