Planning and dreaming

The farm was our first house, our first renovation, and to up the pressure, my ancestor’s first ever home. When it came time to start thinking in earnest about what kind of work we’d like to do on the house, our architect urged us to dream big. Imagine all of the things you’d like to do to the house in an ideal world, she said, and let’s draw up a master plan. That way you don’t spend time and money moving a window, for example, only to realize down the road that you wanted to add on anyway.

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The original layout downstairs

It made sense to Oli and I, and we started to dream in the abstract. “Oooo, I’ve always wanted a stone chimney,” I said. “I’ve always wanted a master suite!” Oli said. We compiled our mile-long wish list and sent it over to the architect to review. I’ll never forgot the panic that washed over me when we first sat down with her and she rolled out the plans. She had done a masterful job of fitting all of our wishes into the new house, but every single wall had been moved, changed, touched. It was an entirely new house. Gone was the dark bedroom on the first floor where my grandfather was born. The kitchen where my Mom sat as a little girl was no longer recognizable, now that it was a hallway. There was a new addition on the back to house the giant kitchen.

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The original layout upstairs

 

I felt tears and anger well up in the back of my throat. It only fully hit me, in that moment, that I wanted to change as little as possible about this house. I wanted to update it, yes. I wanted it to feel fresh and beautiful and revived. But I didn’t want my “dream farmhouse.” I wanted this farmhouse.

We went back and forth with the architect for months before Oli and I realized that what we really wanted was more of an update and less of a renovation. Little did we know, even “updating” results in tearing a house down to its studs and building it back up. But that would be a lesson we’d learn much, much later.

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