
Designer brings drama and style to an aging dame’s $1.5-million makeover.
Before its transformation, Tamara Kaye-Honey’s 1924 Tudor suffered decades of inattention.
With
its wood-shingled roof, gumwood cabinetry and beige walls, the
four-bedroom Altadena home lacked charm and modern comforts when
Kaye-Honey first laid eyes on it.
Yet
the interior designer “fell in love with the bones,” drawn to the
home’s openness and dramatic arches, she said. Sensing its potential,
she and husband Ryan Honey purchased the property for $1.175 million in
2007.
Over the next
decade, the couple turned the cutesy storybook home into a more modern
hideaway while preserving its Old World soul.
The renovation came in two major phases.
The
first, in 2008, saw Kaye- Honey rework the first floor. She enlarged
the kitchen by combining it with a nearby bedroom and gave it a trendier
look by switching out autilitarian island for a Calacatta marble
waterfall one. Viking appliances, French doors and Italian porcelain
floors completed the revamped space.
The
designer also allowed more light downstairs by replicating the home’s
front-facing arching windows in the back of the house. She then turned a
garage into a guesthouse with a private bath and vaulted ceilings.
The
second phase was done with the help of architect Tom Marble in 2012.
The sloping woodshingled roof came tumbling down, to be replaced by a
striking standing seam roof with skylights more commonly seen in Europe.
“I
wanted to create drama with that roof,” Kaye-Honey said. “It also added
a touch more style to a traditional architecture while still reading
like a Tudor home.”
But
it wasn’t an easy task because of the asbestos beneath the wood
shingles. The couple and their two children vacated the home for two
weeks while workers in hazmat suits removed the tile.
Kaye-Honey,
who heads the boutique design firm House of Honey, said she was careful
to stay true to the original character of the home, emphasizing its
bold triangular spaces whenever possible.
“We let the gables and the architecture speak to us,” she said.
The couple’s headboard, for example, was made in leather and cut precisely to fit the pitch in the roof just above them.
The
master bath, which features a triangular gold-trimmed mirror chosen to
accentuate the angle of the roof in that room, is one of her favorite
places.
“It took a lot of time and planning before we started working with an architect,” she said.
For
inspiration early on in the remodeling process, Kaye-Honey temporarily
placed a Victoria + Albert Napoli bathtub atop twoby-fours, facing a
window. There, overlooking the San Gabriel Valley beyond, the designer
sketched and planned.
Today the bath is decadence in white, accented with brassware and surrounded by textured rugs and midcentury furniture.
“This space is as big as my apartment in New York,” she said.
After $1.5 million in renovations, Kaye-Honey is ready to move on.
“The home is perfect,” she said.
“To me, that’s the time to say farewell and do it all over again somewhere else.”
It’s listed for $2.875 million.
hotproperty@latimes.com