As she started to think more about aging in place, Victoria Erhart debated whether her St. Paul midcentury could work as her forever home.
After all, her 1953 architect-designed, light-filled house with a fenced-in yard in the St. Anthony Park neighborhood sparked joy. And her dogs, Cooper and Peach, as well as the backyard chickens, seemed like happy campers.
"I wanted to age gracefully in a house but wondered how I would be able to do that here," said Erhart, who has lived in her abode for 27 years. "It was one big room and then two tiny bedrooms and allowed for no flexibility."
She also wanted to look into creating an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) in the basement should the need for a caretaker arise one day. The problem was, the city of St. Paul didn't have a zoning code in place at the time to allow for the same-lot, self-contained residential units.
While she was at it, Erhart wished to fix other things that irked her about the house — namely, a massive fireplace in the middle of the main gathering spaces that blocked views indoors and out. Then there was the front door.
"Nobody could ever find my front door. I've had people wandering around trying to figure out how to get in," she said. "I love my house, but it's very funky."
Erhart reached out to Albertsson Hansen Architecture, the Minneapolis firm that built her Madeline Island cottage a few years back. The project, an early adapter of an exterior insulation system, drew the attention of various publications and even an international podcast. The Lake Superior retreat also received a 2014-15 AIA Star Tribune Home of the Month award, a partnership with the American Institute of Architects Minnesota chapter that honors residential design.
"It was a lot of fun the first time," she said. "It was easy to say, 'Let's do this again.'"