Okay, I've been flooded with emails about my post yesterday. I guess I've struck a chord that makes me realize I'm not the only one that loves modern adaptations of classical and period revival homes. The work that some talented architects are doing simply amazes me with their incredible eye for detail, scale and proportions. Their imagination and ability to take what they see in their head and put it on paper sometimes astounds me. As I wrote yesterday, there are many failures in trying to do this. However, another architect (who trained under Bobby McAlpine) is doing it very, very well. I recently came across his work and have already become a huge fan. His name is Ruard Veltman and his staff of Ruard Veltman Architecture in Charlotte, North Carolina. They describe their company as "an atelier residential firm, fluent in a range of historical styles without being bound by tradition." The designers render their drawings by hand which I love. While I am not an architect, I do design many of the homes we build. I have been a student of architecture for many years, drawing floor plans and rearranging furniture since I was 11 years old and I find it impossible for someone to truly put their creative imagination for a design into a computer without drawing or sketching it out first.















5:02 AM
home desaint
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This house you've probably already seen in earlier posts. This house was originally built as a one story and previous owners found plans hidden in the walls dated 1929 before the stock market crash. Today's owners hired us to carry out the plans very similar to what was to be done 75 years earlier.
The above French eclectic house started out as a 1940s vernacular. My client desired a French style home, so I designed it to face what was previously the side street but one of Fort Worth's most prominent streets. We added the entire front side and almost doubled the size of the original house. Using many antique building products like the clay tile roof, the front door surround and the antique french iron doors that the owner found, the house now fits in with the rest of the neighborhood of homes built in the 1920's and 30's. Most people think that this is one of the street's original houses.



