Walking up the steps to Scott Endres' front door feels like a trip to Tangletown Gardens, the popular garden center he co-owns in south Minneapolis. That's because Endres brings the best part of his job home with him.
Gigantic-leaved banana plants and elephant ears shoot out of containers spilling over with colorful coleus and 'Red Riding Hood' mandevilla. His vibrant boulevard and terrace gardens blend bold tropical beauties with plume-shaped celosia.
And Endres' fanciful 1880s Victorian, with its newly built front porch, completes this lush, otherworldly setting in the heart of its urban St. Paul neighborhood. "It's the kind of porch this house deserves," said Endres. "It feels right for the house and for me."
A 'worker' Victorian
Endres bought the house, his first home purchase, in 1995 when he was working at nearby Highland Nursery. "I've always loved Victorians and their character and personality," said Endres, who grew up in a farmhouse in Hampton Township. The 1880s "worker" Victorian was 1,800 square feet and not as big and extravagant as the homes on Summit Avenue, but "it was an affordable fixer-upper and the right size for me," he said.
Endres discovered that his house was one of the $1 homes rehabbed in the late 1970s. "An architect bought it for his family and did a good job putting it back together," he said. But by the mid-1990s, the house hadn't been updated in years, and the yard was pocked with scrubby trees, as well as a dog run.
Endres zealously tackled the home from the inside — including remodeling the bathrooms and kitchen — and the outside, as he gradually transformed the front and back yards into a garden oasis. First he put in trees and major elements like walkways, a patio and a pond, followed by shrubs, perennials and annuals.
And over time, Endres deposited money into a porch fund so that he could someday replace the deteriorating 1970s deck-like structure with a welcoming front porch that would complement the architectural quality and the period of the home.
"I wanted to embellish the lady," said Endres. "But still show her blue-collar roots."