The wide-plank, white oak hardwood is the colour – and seeming breadth – of a prairie wheat field. On it, a three-year-old boy does what appears to be a tap dance. Mid-stride, Jake realizes he needs to free up his hands. He passes a container of bedtime snacks to his mother. Then one hand moves to hold a mock riding saddle horn while the other launches an imaginary lasso. He sings,
Heeyyyy. Waxy lady.
Whoop whoop whoop.
Weeey- waxy lady.
Oop oop oop.
Thanks to Jake, “Gangnam Style” is alive and well in the suburban community of Westridge. He lives in this 3,300 square-foot home with his parents and two siblings. The home, recently renovated by Habitat Studio, was transformed from a leaky 1970s bungalow to an energy-efficient, contemporarily designed space in just six months.
It is the second home Kate McFetridge and her husband, Chris Nicholas, have owned in the neighbourhood. Their first had only three bedrooms, so, when Jake – their first of three kids – was born, the family began looking for a house where every kid could have a room of their own.
After looking all over the city, they found this place just a few blocks away. On a quiet cul de sac, it is backed by green space that the City once planned to transform into a walking trail. In 40 years, almost no renovations had been done to the home. The draughty windows, the heavy, dark wood banisters, the carpets and wallpaper — everything — harkened back to episodes of Knots Landing.
“It was pretty hard to imagine what this could be when we first saw it,” says McFetridge. But the home had “good bones” (meaning it was structurally sound) and they felt pretty sure it could be configured like they wanted: Four bedrooms on one level and an open plan on the main floor. With some major renovations, it could be a home in which their family could grow.
“Before we actually signed the deal, we had Habitat Studio’s designer, Trevor Hoover, look at it with us,” says McFetridge. “We told him what we hoped to do. He felt it was do-able, so we went ahead.”