The words "one-owner home" in a real estate listing can drive interest among buyers of the regular sort. But for buyers with a predilection for midcentury modern architecture, they can create a frenzy.
"It was a shark feed," Ashley Bull said of the showing she and her husband, Jeff, attended for the 2,300-square-foot home in Wayzata they now own. True to the Zillow description, the home's only owner had been Gordon Jones, an engineer at Honeywell, and his wife, Kaye, who had the home built in 1953.
Ashley first saw the for-sale-by-owner listing on the TC MCM (Twin Cities Mid-Century Modern) Facebook page — a group with more than 14,000 members who share an interest in midcentury architecture, furniture and art. The person selling it was Kaye's niece, Sherry Holtmeyer, who inherited the house after her aunt died in 2019. (Gordon had died six years earlier.)
Holtmeyer worried that the house, which sat on nearly 2 acres in high-demand Wayzata, would be purchased by someone who would tear it down or denude its distinctive architectural character.
"It was almost like I was putting the house up for adoption," she said. "My aunt and uncle had no kids and put their heart and soul into this house. It's their legacy."
Well-preserved design
Designed by Minneapolis architect Loren B. Abbett, the house is strategically positioned on the sloped site to provide privacy from neighbors and maximize natural light and views of the backyard woods. It also has many hallmarks of midcentury design, including window walls and materials that extend from the interior to the exterior to blur the boundary between indoors and outdoors — vertical redwood siding, a brick fireplace and tongue and groove cedar ceilings.
These details, plus unique touches such as a floating staircase with inverted triangle treads and the fact that the home had never had any sloppy updates, made it highly appealing to midcentury enthusiasts.