When eating breakfast in their former kitchen, Denny Kemp and Doug Melroe often caught glimpses of an unusual sight inside the house next door.
"We could see the Jesuit priests holding mass in the living room," said Kemp. "They had a little altar in there."
Kemp and Melroe had admired the neighboring house's symmetrical facade and architectural formality whenever they walked by. One day, Kemp even got a glimpse inside the 1910 Federal-style home when he brought over misdelivered mail. He was invited in to the marble-floored vestibule, where he could see the foyer's dark mahogany paneled walls and staircase, all in pristine condition. "I wanted that house," he said, "but I never thought it would ever be for sale."
In 2003, Kemp found out that the Catholic Church was planning to sell the priests' residence. Before long, Kemp and Melroe were the new owners of the 13,422-square-foot mansion in the Whittier neighborhood, just a few blocks from the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
The couple's mission was to restore the home, which had been cut up into apartments, to its single-family grandeur. They already had experience rehabbing their previous house next door, a Harry Wild Jones-designed Colonial Revival that had been divided into offices for a mental health clinic.
"I knew we could turn it around and make it also feel more modern," said Kemp, an A-list hairstylist and owner of Denny Kemp Salon Spa in Minneapolis. "Doug was like, 'Here we go again.' "
Melroe, a fitness trainer and manager at The Firm, was ready to endure dust and disruption because he knew his partner of 25 years could work magic with neglected old houses. "Denny has a good eye for seeing an old home's strengths and potential," he said.
But first they had to tear out wall-to-wall blue, yellow and pink carpet and refinish the hardwood floors. They had painters redo just about every surface and replaced Menards-style light fixtures with period pieces from Architectural Antiques.