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PARDON OUR DUST
Dec. 23, 2001

Old charm anew

A plain 1950s ranch home gains farmhouse style and a second story.

By KATHY PRICE-ROBINSON, Special to The Times

Matt Plaskoff describes his family’s Hidden Hills home as a "turn-of-the-century farmhouse," but he should explain: the vintage look came about at the turn of this century, not the last.

Early in 2000, the home was a 1950’s one-story ranch with a shake roof and 2,800-square-feet of mostly uninteresting interior space.

Eleven months of labor and $700,000 later, the structure reemerged as a two-story, 5,800-square-foot farmhouse graced by an old-fashioned covered porch with a barn-style metal roof, second-story dormers, and a charming cook’s kitchen with hand-distressed cabinets and a marble-covered island.

Of course, the creation of a dream home so appealing that Plaskoff’s wife, Karry, 35, wants to live in it "forever" did not start a year ago March on the first day of construction.

The process actually began long before the couple bought the house eight years ago. From the time of their marriage in 1986, the couple owned and fixed up several homes until they figured out it wasn’t the house that mattered, but the neighborhood.
Selling all their real estate and leasing a home for them and their twin toddler daughters, the couple waited "like vultures" to find a house is a desirable community.

In 1993, an acquaintance tipped them off to this foreclosed-upon house in the exclusive, gated, 540-home, equestrian-oriented City of Hidden Hills, near the Ventura/Los Angeles county line.

"There was no way on Earth I thought could get in here," said Matt, 40, owner of a construction and remodeling company that had done jobs in the community. The house had never been remodeled, and this suited the couple, who would want to remodel it to their taste. "We were looking for something that hadn’t been messed up," he explained.
The Plaskoffs poured everything they had into buying the house, a barn and one acre of land for $600,000, and then put together another $25,000 for a cosmetic remodel—paint, carpet, appliances, shower doors, etc. "Just so it wasn’t gross," Karry said. "It was nice, but old."

And then, they started dreaming up the "master plan." In two years, they would build a pool. Two years, after that, they would enlarge the family room, add a fireplace, and extend the master bedroom. And in 2000, they would do a massive remodel.

Matt’s journal from 1996 shows the plan as it was detailed while the couple were on a weekend getaway in Cambria. Circles sketched on a floor plan indicate how the various spaces of the house would be arranged—the current living room would be sacrificed to a formal entryway and a grand stairway leading to the second floor where a catwalk would overlook the family room. The children’s bedrooms and laundry room would be on one side of the second floor, with the master suite on the other.

The original footprint of the house would remain essentially the same, except for the addition of a large rec room, which was intended for long-term benefit. While the Plaskoffs’ daughters, now numbering three, are still young—Stephanie and Jessica

are 11, Paige is 6—the day will surely come when they want to spend time with boys, and the couple would prefer that time is spent at the house. The rec room—with a diner motif, a pool table, fooze ball game, and soda fountain and big-screen entertainment center--would be, Plaskoff thought, "a place boys would want to come to."

The cost for the remodel was estimated then at $300,000, but Plaskoff Construction did so well during the 1990s (reaching an annual volume of $9 million) that the eventual budget more than doubled.

On the couple’s 13th wedding anniversary, on March 14, 1999, Matt presented his wife with the finished plans.

Before the transformation could begin, though, the plans had to be approved by the City of Hidden Hills and the Hidden Hills Community Association, a process that Matt describes as "intense" for its focus on the ratio of how much house covers the land, and the ratio between the square footage of the second story and the first. If he were a homeowner, Matt said he "would have been frustrated." But the powers-that-be felt the house agreed with the neighborhood, which Matt characterizes as "a ranchy-family-cozy-Americana-horsey thing."

As the project progressed, the couple were able to skip one step: choosing a contractor. Not only would Tarzana-based Plaskoff Construction build the house, but Matt himself would act as project manager. There was "a little ego involved," Matt admitted, when he chose to oversee the remodel rather than giving that job to one of his company superintendents. He thought: "Hey, I’m going to show these guys how to build a house." Plus, he wanted the "sheer enjoyment" of being involved with every detail of building his own house.

The family moved to a rented house during the nearly yearlong construction process. As was determined years ago, the only walls that stayed intact were in the remodeled master bedroom (which would become the guestroom) and the remodeled family room.
While the couple designed the layout of the house, they relied on interior designer Judith Wilson for help with the interiors--choosing colors, cabinets, tile, knobs, faucets and the myriad other materials that must be determined.

The kitchen includes a farm-style sink, celadon-colored granite counters, a big Viking stove, Viking refrigerator, Viking warming drawer, two Meile dishwashers, a wall of pantry shelves, and hand-made cabinets. In a daring move, Karry Plaskoff asked that the cabinets be stained three different shades—ivory along the wall, black on the island and brown for the rest.

As a 20-year-old bride, Kerry said, she preferred "cutesy sets," and considers it a "maturing" to want a more eclectic grouping of colors. The designer gave her courage to choose rich colors for most of the home’s walls. "It’s paint," Karry realized. "You can repaint."

Upstairs, the rooms reflect the family’s desires. Jessica and Stephanie, who has always shared a room until this year, requested quite different styles. Jessica chose walls decorated with lavender wainscoting, while sportsgirl Stephanie got a maple gym-type floor and permission to shoot baskets with a Nerf ball. Little Paige has a picket-fence bed and a room full of dolls.

The master suite "is where it all happens," Matt said, and includes an exercise room, a balcony overlooking the back yard, limestone counters, and a large Jacuzzi-type tub where Kerry watches The Today Show each morning on the built-in television. "My bedroom is my space," she said.

While the house turned out beautifully, Matt said the experience was "a real eye-opener" for him. He was always aware that homeowners are under pressure during a remodel, "But I didn’t realize how much pressure," he said, "the pressure of making decisions."

From the experience, he can offer three pieces of advice.

First, "Get help so you can do what you do best." By taking his focus off running his business for the year, he figures he lost $200,000 net gain from lost sales. On the upside, he developed "such a large appreciation" for his project managers.

Second, work with a designer. "It’s hard for people to understand," Matt said. "It’s expensive. It’s not tangible. (But) it’s so much smoother with a designer." In this case, the designer not only helped with decisions, but supervised installation of tile and other materials to make sure it was done right. "I wouldn’t know how to do that," Karry said.
And third, "Don’t rush your project. . . . Everybody’s hell-bent on getting it done quickly," Matt said. But even he and Karry said at one point: "Let’s take a few extra weeks or month to do this."

Now that the remodel is complete—save for the circular driveway and front landscaping that will come later—the couple have virtually no regrets.
As Karry put it: "I don’t complain."

* * *

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After—The once-plain 1950s ranch house was transformed into a charming two-story farmhouse.

 

After—Owner Matt Plaskoff had long dreamed of a covered porch for him and his family.

 

The kitchen has everything a cook could want--massive stove, marble covered island and tons of storage.