Ryan Knoke and Montana Scheff were just putting the finishing touches on the Colonial Revival in Minneapolis that they'd spent 10 years restoring when they got a call from a Realtor friend.
A "fabulous" house designed by renowned architect Clarence H. Johnston was coming up for sale in St. Paul's Cathedral Hill neighborhood. Were they interested?
"We were not even in the market," said Knoke of that call three years ago, "but we're big Clarence Johnston fans."
So they agreed to take a look at the Classical Revival house, which was built in 1894, several years before Johnston designed Glensheen for the Congdon family in Duluth. The house in St. Paul, which featured stately columns and original oak woodwork, had been designed for a state senator.
"We realized we had books on our shelves with this house in it," said Scheff.
In addition to its pedigree, the house had an unusually open floor plan for its era.
"We completely fell in love," Knoke said. "Within 24 hours, we made an offer."
Back from the '70s
Now the couple had an even bigger restoration project to tackle. The 5,000-square-foot, three-story house had fallen into serious disrepair, with extensive water damage and failing plumbing, not to mention clashing updates like shag carpeting and golden oak finish on its formerly dark built-in buffet.