For new condo owner Jared Goodwin, a phone call from his father was perfect timing. Goodwin, who grew up on a farm near Crookston, Minn., had moved to the Twin Cities, and just closed on a loft in the North Loop neighborhood of Minneapolis.
But his unit's open layout, soaring ceilings, raw concrete and exposed metal ductwork felt cold and industrial.
Goodwin wanted to redesign the closed-off kitchen and carve out a second bedroom for guests. And nostalgic for his rural roots, he also longed to "somehow bring the farm to the city."
That opportunity arose when Goodwin's dad called and announced that he was going to demolish a shed on the farm property. Goodwin and his brothers had often used that early 1900s granary as a "fort" when they were kids. "I told my dad not to bulldoze it down because I have a use for it," he said.
So Goodwin took a week off from work, and with his brothers tore down the old shed board-by-board, carefully pulling out hundreds of nails. Then they hauled the lumber to a mill in Wisconsin to have it cut and finished.
Today the shed's rich golden-red cedar and whitewashed pine boards cover accent walls, a fireplace surround and the bedroom floor inside Goodwin's home in the heart of downtown Minneapolis.
And best of all, the DIY reclaimed wood and prep helped him hold down costs — and not bust his $60,000 remodeling budget.
"Every day, I see the journey of the wood from the farm to my home in the city," he said.