Fresh start for 1940s house by midcentury great Gregory Ain
Tony Unruh and Keith Sidley were South African-born architects with an affinity for midcentury master Gregory Ain. Unruh had bought Ain’s old architecture office on Hyperion Avenue; Sidley was living with his family in a Silver Lake home designed and built in the early ‘40s by Ain. They shared a dream of renovating Sidley’s house, but before the restoration could move beyond talk, Sidley died from a brain tumor, leaving his wife, Kathleen Nolen, to contemplate the task before her. “I loved the house and wanted it to live forever,†Nolen said. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
L.A. architect Tony Unruh restores a Silver Lake house by one of his midcentury idols for a family friend looking to keep alive precious memories of the past.
The heart of the house is the living room. Here, from left, Kathleen Nolen’s daughter, Samantha Sidley, a jazz singer, sits with her wife, Barbara Gruska, lead singer of the Belle Brigade. They’re hanging out with friends Jason Greene and Curtis Tyrone. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
LED strip lights in the pitched living room ceiling carry through to the outside. Ain’s original design called for the strips to be miniature skylight wells, but when making repairs to the house, architect Unruh closed the problematic openings to the outside and used the wells for recessed, energy-efficient lighting; it plays like an hommage to the original design. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
The living room, in daylight: The sun streams through the wall of glass. The ceiling, formerly covered with fabric, was painted white. Unruh’s partner, Trish Boyer, oversaw the interiors. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
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Late afternoon shadows fall on mahogany veneer cabinetry that is original to the house. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
Shelves are filled with African textiles and pottery that Nolen has collected for decades. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
Kathleen Nolen and daughter Samantha Sidley in the restored living room. On the right, the original wood tops of the cabinetry and casework running under clerestory windows was replaced with white Formica, which now bounces more light into the room. The mahogany veneer that originally topped the casework could then be used to repair other cabinets in the house. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
A hillside in back of the house was pushed back so the kitchen could be opened up and made more functional for modern living. Though new, the space echoes the spirit of Gregory Ain’s original design. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
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Natural light bounces off the floor and bright counters. The ceiling light carries through to the outside, as in the living room. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
Architect Unruh lightened the hallway leading to the bedrooms by having the dark Douglas fir paneling whitewashed. Dark floor tiles were replaced with lighter Fritz tiles, whose stone chips also reflect light. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
Midcentury furniture by Paul McCobb appears in one of the bedrooms. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
The bathroom’s old cracked maroon tiles were replaced with white tile. Larger windows brought in more light. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
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A Paul McCobb chest of drawers and a raised platform that brings a bit of the outside in. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
Also among homeowner Kathleen Nolen’s collections: vintage Paul McCobb dinnerware. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
A bright blue welcomes visitors to the house. “It was Tony’s destiny to do this house,†Nolen said of her architect and family friend, Tony Unruh. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
The house sits behind Ain’s drive-through garage, which eliminated the need to turn back out onto a narrow street. (Iris Schneider / For The Times)
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Kathleen Nolen with architect Tony Unruh in the restored living room, surrounded by objects collected with her husband before he passed away in 2008. “I see these things and remember every story, every conversation we had with the boy who was selling it, or the man who was making it,†she said.