When the property next door to their home went up for sale, Martha Dayton and Tom Nelson snapped it up.
"We knew it had potential," said Dayton. "But we weren't sure what we wanted to do with it."
The couple had lived in their 1890s stucco house, designed by renowned architect Harry Wild Jones, since 1997, and were committed to staying in Minneapolis' Kenwood neighborhood, which they loved.
But their home's small compartmentalized rooms didn't provide enough space or flexibility — indoors or out — for entertaining large groups and for their two teenagers to hang out with friends.
The couple, who also enjoyed regular visits from out-of-town family members, wished for more inviting private guest quarters, as well as additional garage stalls and more storage space.
But the first step was tearing down the older cottage-style home on their newly purchased lot.
"It was in poor condition, and we wanted to start fresh," said Nelson, a real estate developer.
While waiting out the yearlong process of getting a permit to demolish a structure on Kenwood Parkway, the couple explored creative building possibilities with architect Mark Larson of Rehkamp Larson Architects.