More than 100 years ago, boys slept in little log cabins at a summer camp on Lake Minnetonka's Sunset Point in Deephaven.
When Patricia Newton bought the nearly 4-acre site in 1990, the camp was long gone, but there were still a few remnants from its history: a wooden sign with the name "Camp Mini-waste" and cast-iron lampposts. But the most striking time capsule was an original split-log cabin at the property's entrance.
The little cabin had a dirt floor, and was smelly and decaying. But Newton thought it had potential. "It was just asking to be something more than it was," she said.
She drove past the little cabin every day to get to and from her home, a 1920s English Tudor, also on her acreage. In 2009, she decided it was time to renovate the cabin and turn it into a personal retreat and guesthouse.
An avid collector of old stone, wood and iron objects, Newton had tons of Platteville limestone, salvaged over the years. That stone inspired her vision for the cabin.
"I could see it as a stone cottage that would mirror the main house," she said. "It just evolved after that."
Residential designer Jeff Murphy of Murphy & Co. Design in Buffalo, Minn., masterminded that evolution, which began with a plan focused on meeting city zoning requirements. If he and Newton wanted the renovated structure on the same site near a pond, his design had to retain the existing L-shaped footprint, roofline and exterior wall locations.
Murphy's solution was to "build it from the inside out" and carve out a new limestone cottage within the old log cabin. But the ultimate goal was to make it look like a charming European-style stone cottage that would appear to have been on the property for more than a century.