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News

Warner turns down televised debate

Perhaps Mark Warner feels he’s had enough television exposure after his speech at the Democratic National Convention. In a press release, The League of Women Voters of Virginia says it won’t hold its customary senatorial debate because former Governor Mark Warner has opted not to participate.


Voters around the state won’t have a chance to see U.S. Senate candidate Mark Warner share a podium with his opponent, Jim Gilmore.

“Exposing voters to a rigorous debate of the critical issues facing this nation today is a cornerstone of the democratic election process in America,” said Peter Maroney, vice president of WTVR, a CBS station that would have aired the debate. “It is regrettable that former Governor Warner has chosen to deny Virginians that opportunity by declining this statewide broadcast opportunity.” WCVE, a PBS station, would have also aired the debate.

Warner and his Republican opponent, Jim Gilmore (another former governor), debated in late July at The Homestead, but the event was not broadcast. They will have one more debate September 18, sponsored by the Fairfax Chamber of Commerce, but it is only slated to be televised in Northern Virginia.

Traditionally, the frontrunner controls the debate lineup, and Warner is certainly the frontrunner. The latest Rasmussen Reports poll puts Warner up 26 points over Gilmore.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
News

Section 8 waiting list to open next week

As previously reported, the Charlottesville Redevelopment and Housing Authority (CRHA) is set to reopen the Section 8 Rental Voucher Program waiting list for the first time in four years, and now the housing authority has released a date: Starting on September 10, CRHA will accept applications through September 16, when the list will close again.

The last time the waiting list was open was 2004. The sheer number of people who applied forced the housing authority to close the list until all of them were helped. Noah Schwartz, executive director of CRHA, says it is normal for the list not to be open for long.

“We get calls from all over the country asking if our waiting list is open,” Schwartz recently told C-VILLE. “Charlottesville is a nice place to live.”

Section 8 is a federally funded program that enables the local public housing authority to pay landlords the difference between 30 percent of household income and the authority-determined payment standard, which is 80 to 100 percent of the fair market rent.

CRHA will give priority to residents who are working and living in the city, to those who have been victims of domestic violence in the past year, to the homeless or those living in substandard housing, to those paying more than 50 percent of their income in rent and to those affected by a natural disaster.

CRHA will reserve 75 percent of the spots on the list for families with an income that does not exceed 30 percent of the area median income. For a family of four, that is $20,550 per year.

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
News

Your tax dollars, at work

Worked for the county for: 3 years

Resides in: Albemarle County

Job title: Principal, Woodbrook Elementary School. As principal, Sterrett ensures the safety of students while ensuring a quality education for students at the school.

Best of times: Observing the excitement in others. “Seeing teachers coming in excited to be here, excited to be bringing enthusiasm and excited to teaching. We’ve all had teachers before as students, and the ones that stand out to me are the ones that make it come alive.”


William Sterrett

Worst of times: Dealing with the unexpected. “As a principal, you don’t know what kind of crises are going to hit. Last year, we had a smell that we thought was a gas leak. Turns out, it was some air trapped in our sewer pipes, and it was just something unexpected.”

Strangest moment on the job: Wearing different costumes for school fairs/theme days. “The past few years I’ve worn a pink beauty queen dress and a crown. Last year, I wore a gorilla ballerina suit, and I’ve also worn Superman and Winnie-the-Pooh costumes.”

If he were a superhero, he’d be: Superman. “I’ve always felt the cool thing about him is he’s able to do it all. He’s human too, the fact that he has a weakness, but he’s still able to prevail.”

C-VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c-ville.com.

Categories
Living

September 08: Tangled up in blogs

In real estate, just like the recently completed Olympics, it really is whether you win or lose. (Think Phelps would have had that look of beatific amazement if he’d bombed out on the eighth gold medal?) How you play the game is just a means to an end. And these days, some of the essential equipment wasn’t even part of the sport just a few years ago: a mouse, a monitor and a working knowledge of Web 2.0.

Locally and nationally, real estate blogs, forums and websites of all descriptions have proliferated and changed the industry, as buyers and sellers (and agents and brokers) have more fluid, flexible ways of getting information. In Charlottesville, someone getting ready to make a deal can bone up on buyer-broker agreements at Jim Duncan’s blog (http://realcentralva.com), watch a video entitled “How to sell your home (in black & white)” at Daniel Rothamel’s blog (http://real estatezebra.com), or peruse an aggregation of gloomy national news mixed with skeptical takes on local listings by the anonymous authors of Real C-ville —The Bubble Blog (http://realcville.blogspot.com).

And that’s just barely scratching the surface. There’s nowhere near enough space in this column to thoroughly cover the many hills and valleys of local real estate sites—especially since that landscape changes many times per day. For real estate pros, the Internet can be a great, if time-consuming, way to market themselves. Even though Rothamel’s blog is aimed squarely at the industry, for example, he says that “I still get clients who look at it and get a sense of who I am.” But what’s it all mean to your average only-sort-of-Web-savvy, pressed-for-time consumer?

First of all, it really is worth it to cosy up to the ’net when you’re getting ready to make one of the biggest transactions of your life. The data is out there, people, and even if you’re not regularly a reader of blogs or a scroller of tax records, you should become one during your buying/selling process. The anonymous bubble bloggers e-mailed us a list of online resources they like that hints at the vastness of what’s available: city and county tax assessors’ sites for property records, the Calculated Risk blog for market perspective (http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com), finance calculators like The Latte Factor, and Charlottesville Tomorrow for development savvy.

It’d be a little dumb, honestly, to turn your back on all that information. And it doesn’t take advanced ’net knowledge to take advantage of it. “If you go and type general search terms into Google, you’ll get tons of results. It’s a great way to get yourself more comfortable with the process, especially for first-time homebuyers,” says Rothamel.

Still, if knowledge is power, information alone isn’t exactly the same thing as knowledge. “Interpreting it, that’s where the rubber meets the road,” says Rothamel. “A bunch of housing stats, that’s just information. If it’s misinterpreted it’s useless.” Put on your analyst hat, and read widely to develop your own understanding of the market. You might be skeptical of a new site or one whose authors stay anonymous, like the Bubble blog, but when a respected source like Jim Duncan trades interviews with them (as he did in August), they pick up some cred.

Similarly, an agent’s blog—and more of those come along every month—is only one source about that agent; another, essential one is your own impression of her in person. “We know someone who fell in love with an agent based on a blog,” say the Bubble bloggers. “But when they met, the buyer’s dog went insane. This happened three times, so eventually the buyer switched agents.” Intuition still means something, even if it takes a riled-up spaniel to deliver the message.

Categories
Living

September 08: News and ideas for sustainable living

 

Amount due: zero

One hot August day in Albemarle, a crew of workers installed an impressive number of solar panels on the roof of a 2,500-square-foot house. Thirty-six of them, in fact. They nearly cover the south roof face of this house, which is being built on a fairly ordinary lot in a small, quiet subdivision. The workers—many of them Virginia Tech students involved in the 2009 Solar Decathlon program—clung to the steep slope of the roof, passing tools back and forth as they installed the bottom row of 12 PV panels.


A crew of workers, many of them college students, received a quick training before installing solar panels on this house, expected to be a "net zero" dwelling.

Charles Hendricks, an architect with the Gaines Group, which designed the house, explained the “net zero” idea: In the daytime, the house will power itself through these panels—causing the electric meter to run backward. At night, it’ll pull energy from the grid, and the meter rolls forward. At the end of the year, the numbers are supposed to balance out.

It’s not just the panels that make it work. Passive solar features mean the house needs less energy in the first place—larger roof overhangs provide summer shade, while a stone wall near south-facing windows absorbs heat in the winter. Hendricks thinks it’ll be the first net zero house in the area.

Other than the distinctive profile of 36 PV panels, this house looks like any other in an Albemarle subdivision. In that way, it hints at a future of more efficient mainstream life.—Erika Howsare

Spin into savings

A dryer usually takes an hour to dry clothes, using loads of power to heat, cool, spin and eat your socks. Starting the process with the Spin-X, a so-called spindryer, cuts the time in half (true for line drying folks as well). Your average dryer costs $130 per year, and if one of these babies is priced around $560, we’re talking complete buyback within four and a half years if you’re line drying and nine if you’re doing the dual-step drying method. Check out spin-x.com for more deets.—Suzanne van der Eijk

 

Hot counters

Nothing like a freshly cut fruit salad with a side of radon and radiation. Laugh now, but if you’ve got granite countertops you may want to pick up a tester kit (try Martin Hardware on Preston) or give a radon measurement and mitigation technician a call (like Commonwealth Inspection Services, 974-9844). Apparently, according to Grist.org, a small number of granite countertops have been found to be the source of potentially unsafe levels of radiation.


Granite countertops do look shiny, but a small number could be dangerous.

Ten times as many people are buying granite countertops in the last 10 years, selecting from hundreds of new granite types from numerous different countries. Granite’s long been known to have a little bit of radioactivity, but generally nothing worth reserving a room in the oncology wing.

If you’re in the process of choosing counters, consider checking out some natural stone alternatives. Alberene Soapstone Quarry in Albemarle County is our local source for soapstone, an acid-resistant metamorphic rock. It’s nonabsorbent, nonconductive and can resist extremely high temperatures (2300+ F).—S.V.

You’re either on the bus…

Move over, hybrid owners. The Conscious Goods Alliance (CGA) is touring the country in a 28’ bus that makes your little crossbreed look like a gas guzzler. Sponsored by Whole Foods Market, the CGA is getting the word out about green, and doing it “basically off of what people are scraping out of their deep fryers,” as one member puts it. They also communicate via consciousgoodsalliance.com.

During a July pit stop in Charlottesville, CGA members showed off the fully sustainable features of their tricked out “veggie bus.” Besides solar-powered electronics and recycled paper counter tops, the bus touts wood floors made from coconut palm, an alternative wood source that’s harvested at the end of the palm’s life cycle. Likewise, the bus’s plywood cabinets are made of bamboo grown by farmers who allow the plants to reach maturity. (See plyboo.com for both.)

But the CGA’s message to consumers runs deeper than mere eco-décor. “Our mission is to promote ‘conscious consumerism’—showing people that there are companies that are actually supporting a green, harmonious future,” says Todd O’Brien, another member.

In essence, these enviro-evangelists are encouraging shoppers to “vote with their dollars,” a concept their 15 sponsor companies enthusiastically support.—Kathryn Faulkner

Baby, it’s dry outside

With the last measurable rainfall having happened in July, we all need to get more water-wise. Local water expert Jennifer Watson at Charlottesville’s Public Works recommends spending a day pretending that a gallon of water costs the same as a gallon of gas. (Your five-minute shower just got very expensive!) Other strategies:

Inside
Don’t leave water running while washing, brushing, or shaving. Each minute saves three to five gallons.
 

Stop the flow. Pesky leaks still top the list of EPA’s biggest home water-wasters. To find a toilet leak, drop food coloring in your tank and wait 15 minutes. If the toilet changes color, you’ve got a leak. Speaking of toilets, did you know that commodes made before 1980 consume five to seven gallons of water per flush? The city (970-3211) and county (977-4511) will give you a $100 rebate to replace your old toilets, plus a free water-saving kit.

Outside
Don’t let water (and money) evaporate by daytime watering. Corann Ley, a local horticulturalist, offers this lawn trick: If your handprint stays in the grass, water. If not, leave it. Plant native and drought-resistant plants and don’t forget to mulch. Thorough watering, rather than daily watering, promotes stronger root growth and therefore healthier plants.  Drip irrigation hoses can save you 70 percent on water use. 

Our community
Find a way to connect to our local water this month: Hike at Ivy Creek, fish the James, or volunteer to monitor local streams (streamwatch.org or charlottesville.org).

Categories
Living

September 08: To make heat

In the fateful year of 1993, Tony and Trew Bennett had already put 21 years of sweat, tears and living into their Nelson County property. They’d bought it in 1972, two young potters from Northern Virginia, and they’d built a yurt for housing, as well as a two-story building with a studio and an efficiency apartment. And they’d built an anagama—an ancient technology, a Southeast Asian-style ceramics kiln, its round form molded over the Virginia hillside, looking like a living, fire-breathing creature. And indeed, when the kiln is firing, temperatures inside reach 2,360 degrees.


Crouched inside her hand-built anagama kiln is Nelson County potter Trew Bennett. The kiln is built to follow the slope of the hill where she lives.

It’s ironic, then, that when a fire leveled the buildings in that fateful year, it most likely didn’t start with the kiln at all, but in the yurt. The anagama, and part of the pavilion-like structure that covers it, survived. So did the Bennetts and their young son. But little else. “It was an apocalypse,” Trew says.

They eventually converted a large shed up the hill into their new house and continued with their work—she as a potter, he as the owner of Buck Creek Nursery. And the periodic firings of the anagama—altogether, 16 since it was built—connected the new way of life to the old.

The anagama posts impressive stats: 10 cords of salvaged wood, burned continuously over four days and four nights, fire 400 to 500 pots at once and create a 12’ flame from the top of the kiln chimney. It takes a small army of students, working with the Bennetts in six-hour shifts, to keep the fires stoked, not to mention loading and unloading the kiln. “It’s like sailing a boat,” says Tony. “There’s a lot of camaraderie. You have this goal: to make heat.”

Trew: “I keep Buck Creek Pottery going as a teaching facility. Right now I have four wonderful fourth-year UVA students. Some of these people who have come through our life are still in touch 30 years later. It’s been a very lively resting place for me as a potter.

“The wood-fired work is really inspired by having worked with two Japanese potters. [One of them,] Nakazato Takashi, was a 13th-generation potter. This is the tradition of my teachers—to fire with wood. We preheat [the anagama] with a small propane burner for 24 hours to dry it out and get it warmed up. You start with a little fire; it looks like a campfire. You add and add. [When it really gets going] we’re all wearing head and face bandannas; nobody would let us into an airport!

“As the wood goes into the firebox, it roils, smokes, and the temperature actually falls a little bit before combustion begins again….It takes [the students] a day and a night to get used to the fire. The ash is drifting and being pulled through the kiln. As this happens, it melts. It looks like the pots are covered in honey when you look in there.

“We charge the kiln with a lot of wood at the end to get that smoky, carbon surface and soft grey tones [on the pots’ surfaces]. The unloading takes about four hours with all the students; we make a chain line to get the pots in and out.

“As corny as it sounds, every civilization has gotten some clay in a fireplace and found that it got hard. When you’re working with clay, you’re working with something that has a vital force in it. It’s a wonderful connection to all time.

“[Before the fire], the studio was right by the house. Now there’s a longer walk down to the kiln. One of the things the fire taught us was that the land was still here. We’re an adaptable species."

Categories
Living

September 08: Your living space

 

Simply slip it on

Question for John Floyd, designer at The Second Yard: How do you pick the right slip cover for your couch?

Answer: “You know you’ve got the perfect slip cover when it looks like upholstery,” Floyd says. Whether you choose to have a slip cover custom made for your sofa or you’re in need of a quick fix, you’ve got to keep in mind the size of your piece. “A bigger piece with large arms and puffier cushions might call for something a bit looser,” says Floyd. He refers to this as “shabby chic.”


A slip cover can be a time-saver, or a test run for a new idea.

In terms of fabric, Floyd suggests lighter-weight stuff, especially if there are multiple layers. If you’re going prepackaged, Floyd says “go neutral and solid.” Of course, a room that needs a little excitement can be spruced up with a vibrant color or a sleek pattern—plus it’s removable. Removability also means washability. After washing, “put the cover back on when it’s still a little damp,” says Floyd. “That will give it a snug fit.”


Treehouse Living

Did we mention slip covers are way cheaper than upholstery? You can also think of a slip cover as a test drive for a more permanent decorating change. Another bonus: Once you’ve brought your new slip cover home, all you’ve got to do is throw it on. “With upholstery, you could be out of your furniture for weeks,” says Floyd.—Suzanne van der Eijk

Knob tweak

We usually get skeezed out by the word “adorable,” but that’s the only term for these hand-painted ceramic drawer pulls made in Deruta, Italy, and sold locally at Verity blue. Think how much fun it would be to replace all the knobs on your old dresser with an eclectic flock of these things. It’s practically therapeutic.—Erika Howsare

 

Up in the atmosphere

Treehouse Living by Alain Laurens and fellow architects brings to mind the childhood thrill of being tucked away in a treetop. Hopefully as a kid you weren’t using those private quarters to sip champagne, but for adults a little niche among the branches has become the perfect venue for some much-needed privacy. You’ll peek into a writer’s sanctuary and a chocolate lover’s truffle shelter. But you’ll probably still be asking: How’d they get that up there?—S.V.

Categories
Living

September 08: Your kitchen

 

Virginia is for tomato lovers

If there were a seasonal state slogan, in late summer Virginia would be for tomato lovers. Can’t you see the heart on the t-shirt replaced with a hunky heirloom? 

Hot, humid summers and acidic, red clay soil combine to produce a jungle of hairy vines and a staggering array of bulging, exploding fruit just bursting for the chance to be the star of your table. Tomatoes are native to South America but have been selectively bred and hybridized regionally in the U.S. since the early 1900s. Hybrid plants will be the most resistant to disease and pest pressure, and will consistently produce uniform fruit that is easy to handle.  


Heirloom tomatoes’ personality and flavor make them irresistible, especially when local farmers do such a magnificent job of cultivating and bringing them to market.

In comparison, heirloom varieties can be quirky to cultivate and overly sensitive to harvest and transport because they have been bred for flavor and color (not necessarily for their willingness to travel). However, their personality and flavor make them irresistible, especially when local farmers do such a magnificent job of cultivating and bringing them to market. Recent favorites from the annual tomato tasting at Appalachia Star Farm in Nelson County were Cherokee Purple, Brandywine, Green Zebra and Striped German, plus the omnipotent Sun Gold cherry.—Lisa Reeder

Spaghetti with Fresh Tomatoes and Mozzarella

A hot-weather favorite from D’Ambola’s Restaurant.

1 lb. spaghetti
2-3 lbs. vine-ripe tomatoes, cored,
   cut into 1/2" dice
2-3 Tbs. chopped fresh basil
1 Tbs. chopped fresh oregano
1/2 lb. fresh mozzarella, cut into 1/4" dice
1/2 lb. fresh Roma green beans,
   or snow peas
2 cloves garlic (or more to taste),
   minced or pressed through a garlic press
1/4-1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
salt and freshly ground black pepper
   to taste
Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
red pepper flakes, optional

Blanch Roma beans or snow peas in salted boiling water for two to three minutes, until crisp but tender. Remove and place in an ice bath to stop the cooking and retain the color. Drain. Cut into thirds. Place tomatoes, basil, oregano, mozzarella, half the garlic, green beans, salt and black pepper to taste in a bowl large enough to accommodate these ingredients and spaghetti. Let this mixture sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes or up to one hour.

Prepare spaghetti according to package directions, cooking it to just below the “al dente” stage. When pasta is two to three minutes from being done, heat olive oil in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Drain spaghetti, reserving 1/4 cup of cooking water. Add garlic to oil, sauté for 10 seconds, then add spaghetti, a sprinkling of salt and cook and toss for about one minute. Add more oil or cooking water so pasta has a loose sauce.

Place spaghetti on top of ingredients in bowl. Let sit for one or two minutes so the heat from the spaghetti heats the ingredients. Toss mixture, adding more salt and pepper to taste. Top each serving with more olive oil and Parmigiano-Reggiano. Pass the red pepper flakes for those who want a little more heat. Serves four.

Put it through the mill

What to do with that bumper crop of Roma tomatoes? Overwhelmed by heirlooms at the City Market? If you are thinking ahead to sunny flavors in February, make the time now to put away tomato product for winter. The gear of choice for processing tomatoes is the food mill; it will strain the seeds and skins out of your sauce after you make it, while also milling the flesh and any added savories and herbs into a smooth, soup-like texture. What else can the food mill do? Applesauce, soup, jams and jellies, riced potatoes (like mashing, but creates less starch and guarantees no lumps), baby food—and perfect spaetzle, milled right into the cookpot.


food mill

The food mill is a classic kitchen piece that does not require electricity, and can often be found at yard sales and junk shops (must be rust-free!). For a selection of new mills in various sizes, try the Happy Cook at Barracks Road Shopping Center (thehappycook.com; 977-2665).—L.R.

Categories
Living

September 08: Party in the back

Ah, old houses! How do we love your handmade cornices, your characterful proportions, your charmingly slanted floors!

Your size, not so much.


An addition by STOA Design + Construction makes a decisive stylistic break with the 1930 brick house it expands.

Plenty of local homeowners, given the abundance in Charlottesville and Albemarle of well-seasoned housing stock, face this situation: They love their old houses, but they need more space. And so they decide to build additions.

This choice leads directly to a second dilemma. When one is starting with a late-19th century farmhouse or even a brick colonial, is it better to match that original structure, or to add something that’s obviously different, that actually revels in its newness?

Often, locals and the architects and builders they work with are opting for transparency with their additions. The front of a dwelling—and its place in a streetscape, if it’s in the city—can be preserved and honored even as something boldly contemporary arises in the back. 

Cook’s treat

Here’s your test case: a 1930 brick house in north Downtown, blessed with a wonderful location, solid construction and an extremely tiny kitchen. The owners, one of whom is an enthusiastic cook, felt cramped in there, and what’s more, the appliances were outdated and inefficient.

Cut to the present, with the proud couple standing in their brand-new two-story addition, which turns the old cramped kitchen into a butler’s pantry and adds a spacious new room for cooking, bedecked with windows on three sides and sandwiched between a new deck and a generous stairwell down to the bathroom, laundry and entryway on the ground floor.


Color choices, fixtures and small objects weave an eclectic style that links old and new.

Though the new wing certainly solved space problems and made good use of the least usable part of their backyard, its most notable features are aesthetic. With its Hardiboard and cedar exterior, and its contemporary sensibility, it’s a total departure from the stolid brick look of the original house. “I struggled with the idea of this brick house—what would you add on that wouldn’t look funny?” says the owner. It was Justin Heiser, co-owner of STOA Design + Construction, who convinced his clients that matching the original was virtually impossible and that a clearly modern look would be more satisfying in the end.

What makes it work is a whole series of decisions, on both designers’ and owners’ parts, that link the old and new. For one thing, the brick wall that used to mark the rear exterior of the kitchen is preserved as an interior wall in the new stairwell, its color mimicked in paint on the lower-level floor. For another thing, the countertops (large light-grey patterned ceramic tile), sink (a pale sea green that looks inspired by a 1950s Chevy Bel Air) and smaller decorating touches reveal a fondness for all things retro, art deco and mid-century modern.


A sleek, minimal look in the kitchen addition, and improved energy efficiency throughout, serve as an update to this Belmont cottage.

Such eclectic taste serves to knit all the elements together between house and addition: herb-green stairwell walls showcasing large original artworks, antique furniture, stainless-steel appliances and a great Internet find—a light fixture made from recycled materials whose metal fins bend into a custom form.

A relatively subtle change in the original house seals the deal. Two wall openings connect the dining room visually to the butler’s pantry and the living room. Those openings nudge the house toward a modern way of living, in which rooms flow more seamlessly into each other, and inhabitants are less sequestered, than in 1930. Outside, the interest of the new forms and surfaces is a definite improvement, say the owners, over what used to be a rather bleak exterior, with a looming brick wall punctuated here and there by tiny windows.

Then too, the new space just feels good, regardless of one’s preferred era of design. The kitchen seems to hover in the treetops, light pouring in through its many windows. “We’re incredibly happy,” say the owners.

Built for the moment

The little cottage on Elliott Avenue was built in 1927 and nearly faced its demise when architect Jim Rounsevell prepared to transform the property. Its layout was outdated—again, the small rooms would have sequestered inhabitants—and it was inexpensively built worker housing to begin with. But, Rounsevell says, “It’s cheaper to leave as much as you can than tear it all down.” So he set out to modernize the house and expand its footprint while preserving its bones.


The cottage’s facade is now subtly energized by modern styling.

Whereas the early 20th-century norm called for “Mom in the kitchen, Dad with the guests,” Rounsevell says, “we’ve gone back to the one-room house”—the big flowing space that incorporates kitchen, dining and living rooms. And that is exactly how the little cottage now functions.

Once again, an eclectic approach allows old and new to marry happily. The front facade still blends perfectly into the streetscape, but there are modern touches in the railings and in a large wooden panel that holds the deco-style house number and hides the former front door opening.

Rounsevell had a sweeping vision for this modest place: He reversed the original floor plan (two bedrooms became living and dining rooms, and vice versa) and took off an existing rear addition to replace it with the new kitchen. That kitchen is unapologetically contemporary, a study in minimalist black cabinets and stainless steel backsplash and countertop, and it’s ornamented mainly by the view through three big rear windows. “I don’t like being in a house and separated from where it is, from the land,” Rounsevell says. “This house is 1,200 square feet, but it doesn’t feel like it because you’ve decompartmentalized it.”

As for the bright line between original house and recent addition, Rounsevell says, “I’m a modern architect. I believe in building for your time and not trying to represent history.” If a new structure is well-designed, he believes, it will work with an existing or traditional building. This one announces itself on the exterior with honey-colored Hardiplank that meets the original white siding. Inside, that juncture repeats where old hardwood floors meet the newer flooring in the kitchen, which is a lighter hue and runs the other direction.


From the older section of the house, the massive fireplace draws one toward an airy new retreat.

Such juxtapositions may stand out on a street of traditional houses, but they seem entirely at home within the larger context of a neighborhood like Belmont, where design-minded owners have been hard at work for at least a decade updating older homes.

Modern farming

Realtor Bob Hughes (voted the best in town by C-VILLE readers, incidentally) lives in an 1880 two-over-two farmhouse, which upon initial approach looks like a classic Albemarle dwelling: white siding, boxwoods and beautiful big trees. Follow the driveway to its end, though, and your car winds up facing a tall stucco wall that Albemarle County, circa 1880, surely would not have recognized.

This is Hughes’ rather grand two-story addition, designed by Wolf-Ackerman to boldly assert itself in contrast to the homey, vernacular building to which it’s attached. (A previous addition, c. 1910, connects the two.) The addition comprises a master suite upstairs and a sitting area downstairs, as well as a screened porch looking onto the backyard, where Hughes cultivates a variety of ornamental plants. Anchored by a substantial granite chimney and dressed up in mahogany flooring, the tower-like structure is “purposefully different” than the farmhouse, says architect Dave Ackerman. His partner, Fred Wolf, says the firm has an interest generally in “using what you have to create a starting point; to bring the old into the new but allow the new to stand on its own.”

In this case, they say, the relationship isn’t about superficial things but about massing and scale. And the addition’s natural materials—cedar siding and granite—allow it to relate to the setting and thus to the very-well-lived-in farmhouse.


Bob Hughes’ Albemarle farmhouse is connected to its contemporary addition by what architect Fred Wolf calls a "knuckle."

Starting in the 1880 portion of the house, one is struck by the low ceilings, which suddenly give way at the juncture—Wolf calls it a “knuckle”—of the airy addition. Here, light pours through an upstairs window and down a decisively modern staircase (the treads seem to float, sans risers, on a single central support). One’s path seems to naturally drift toward the screened porch (which can be fully integrated by folding back the wall that separates it from the fireplace area) and ultimately, outside.

“Part of the idea behind this space was to dissolve the barrier between inside and outside,” says Ackerman. That happens most deliciously in the master bedroom, which has the feel of a treehouse thanks to the clerestory windows that top the walls. From bed, “On a full moon, you can watch the moon as it traverses,” says Hughes.

He also finds himself drawn to the fireplace in the wintertime, and has reserved the area as a kind of retreat: no cable and no phone. “Farmhouses are great, and I like them, but the ceilings are low,” he says. “Out here it feels fresher and more airy…I have the best of both worlds.”

Categories
Living

September 08: Feeling the squeeze

After William O’Shaughnessy’s eight-and-a half-hour shift in the MRI section of Martha Jefferson Hospital, it is 11:30 at night, and O’Shaughnessy is happy that home—the quieter portion of Ridge Street south of Cherry Avenue— is less than two miles away. “Convenience is critical, I have to admit,” he says. “Being home from work in less than 10 minutes…and riding my bike is great. I haven’t ridden a bike since I was 13 and I’m 43 now.”

At a glance

Distance to Martha Jefferson Hospital: about 1.68 miles
Distance to UVA: about 1.5 miles
Elementary Schools: Jackson-Via, Clark
Middle Schools: Walker, Buford
High School: Charlottesville High School
Home sales since 2007: 7

A sharp left off the busy Fifth Street Extended divided highway, and up a short hill, the less-traveled Ridge Street hosts a private, residential area that approaches a dead end in less than nine blocks. Lined with paved driveways and thirsty lawns, the older street overlooks the busy highway below. It feels removed up here: Even in the sweltering heat of a mid-August afternoon a teenage couple, holding hands, walks along the sidewalk past a garden of zinnias and a collection of plastic animals.

While O’Shaughnessy says he has complaints about the neighborhood, proximity to the hospital is very important to him, and it makes the neighborhood a great place for him to live. O’Shaughnessy moved onto Ridge Street in 2005 and since then, he says, he has had no issues with snow removal, electricity, or any other utility managed by the City of Charlottesville. It’s easy to meet neighbors and make new friends; people like to gather under the shade on hot afternoons.

But, he adds, there are a couple of problems with living in an older house in the heart of Charlottesville. O’Shaughnessy’s house was built in 1973 and is a bit of a fixer-upper. When asked his opinion of new developments in the area he said, “I’m jealous, I guess, that I can’t afford to buy one. They’re nice and new.”

For O’Shaughnessy, traffic through the neighborhood is a more unexpected downside. While he doesn’t have any children or pets of his own, O’Shaughnessy said if he did he would be worried for their safety.

Time travel

Even though many of the homes in this neighborhood are not new, there have been a total of seven sales in the neighborhood since 2007, the homes ranging in size from 750 square feet to a little over 2,000 square feet, according to Real Estate III agent David Cooke and a report from the Charlottesville Area Association of Realtors. CAAR’s website reports the cheapest home selling for $111,000 and the most expensive home, with refurbished hardwood floors and a deck, selling for $253,500.


Along the quieter section of Ridge Street, older homes have seen a succession of changes as the neighborhood’s hosted both white and black residents.

Cooke says he thinks one of the major draws to the neighborhood is its location, but the age of the homes makes homebuyers wary of buying in the area, since constant maintenance would be almost guaranteed. “They like the city location, but a lot of people really like the new construction,” Cooke says.

Developers have, of course, been quick to respond to that preference for new homes. Building company Southern Development recently constructed Brookwood, a neighborhood with around 75 new single-family homes with three to four bedrooms and up to 3,300 square feet. It connects to both the original Ridge Street and Fifth Street Extended. Southern Development has also proposed a development, called William Taylor Plaza, at the busy intersection of Ridge Street and Cherry Avenue. Some residents worry it would encroach upon the historical feeling of the Ridge Street community and destroy some of the area’s natural charm.


New development, like this Brookwood block, is changing the dynamics along Ridge Street, bringing more traffic and drawing protest from some neighbors.

“In most historical districts all the buildings are not the same age, but the point of a district is to conjure a time, conjure a feeling, conjure a look,” said Oak Street resident Antoinette Roades. She said she worries that William Taylor Plaza “will break that mood radically. It’s a project, it’s a complex.” The plaza would sit at the border between the Ridge Street neighborhood and Fifeville.

Historical fabric

When the first homes were being built on Ridge Street in the late 19th century, the area was very different. The street is home to the first African-American Girl Scout troop in Charlottesville and is still the location of Oak Hill Estate, the residency of Thomas Jefferson’s friend and associate Alexander Garrett. Over the shifts and changes of the past 175 years, the street has served as one of the most coveted neighborhoods for both white and black residents, says Roades, and many of its buildings have been designated historic by the City of Charlottesville.

Roades says she is worried not only that people won’t want to maintain the older homes on the street, but that residents are forgetting about the impact the construction phase for the William Taylor Plaza will have on the neighborhood.

“Old houses are quirky. It doesn’t matter how beautiful they are, they always need something. They [residents] have to enjoy living in it,” Roades says. She tells the story of one family that bought a refurbished historic home, originally built around 1844. Although the family seemed extremely satisfied with their purchase, they are looking to sell the home after less than five years of ownership. Roades speculates that their move can be attributed to new developments and the noise and disruption that comes with beeping machines and jackhammers.

Indeed, residents say that new developments have increased through-traffic in the old neighborhood. The same central location that makes O’Shaughnessy’s commute so easy means that development, occuring along the borders of dense city neighborhoods, impacts diverse swaths of residents.

Even so, William O’Shaughnessy says the neighborhood is affordable and he wouldn’t want to live anywhere else right now. It’s still a place where, he says, people bring by a couple of peaches for their neighbors.