The Most Shocking Before & After Home Renovations of 2024
The year’s most remarkable Before & After renovations run the gamut of typologies and locales—from a bland Oakland bungalow to a dated ’60s flat in Spain and a tiny L.A. garage—yet all of these transformations will make you look twice. Read on to see how these daring remodels gave new life to old structures.
10. Rich Color and Millwork Revive a Historic New Orleans Shotgun Home for $198K
In the dining room, Seamus removed the dropped ceiling, refinished the heart pine floors, and relocated the windows from elsewhere in the house. "I wanted a place that was inviting, but with a muted warmth," says Kara. They covered the entire space—including the walls, ceiling, cabinetry, and fireplace (with a relocated mantel)—in Farrow & Ball’s Green Smoke.
The team installed plenty of counter space, a deep sink to fill pots, a six-burner stove, and a skylight for more natural light. The ceilings are painted Benjamin Moore Black Tar for contrast. The 17-inch Ray pendant is from Schoolhouse, and the K65 high chairs are by Alvar Aalto for Artek. The island is inspired by the couple’s trip to Marfa, and their admiration for the work of Donald Judd.
"The living room wanted to be low," says Kirsten, drawing comparisons to a hookah den. SHED started the design with the colorful Roche Bobois sofa, and added the Vitis 5 chandelier from RBW. The couple commissioned artist Anne Siems for the painting, which has meaningful symbols to reference their daughter and family pet.
The Most Shocking Before & After Renovations of 2023
10. With a Little Help From Friends, an Architect Couple DIY Their Bilbao Apartment
Before: When Bonnie and Antonie Basson bought this midcentury home in the Higgovale neighborhood of Cape Town, South Africa, she thought it was a "lost cause." The rear facade had few windows, and didn’t take advantage of the site’s views, which include City Bowl and the harbor, as well as Lion’s Head and Signal Hill mountains.
The couple teamed up with Jenine Bruce of interior design firm Lacuna, Werner Lotz of Hours Clear Architects, and Josephine Noyce Landscape Design on the ensuing transformation. The new pool acts as an "organizing spine" that moves from the outside in, with lots of built-in nooks for seating both inside and out.
During the DIY remodel the family of four kept original features (like the hardwood floors) and introduced whimsical accents (including the built-in reading seat painted Glidden’s Velvet Slipper, and Elli Popp’s A Forest-Into the Trees wallpaper). Twelve-year-old Audrey assembled the living room fireplace hearth using stones from the property.
Before: Blaine Architects were tasked with adding a 545-square-foot addition to this run-of-the-mill 1959 Eichler in Sunnyvale, California. "The client wanted something that was recognizable and distinct," says Megan Blaine. "The design challenge there is, how do you do that when every third or fourth house is exactly the same?"
The new design ethos was to deliberately embrace the apartment’s dark and light zones, and create a compression and release effect through starkly contrasting material choices. There’s no slow fade here—but rather, sharp lines between dark and light. Case in point: The primary bedroom has oak accents, while its connecting bathroom is ensconced in dark tile.
The Most Shocking Before & After Renovations of 2022
10. In Buenos Aires, a Crumbling Home Gets a Major Refresh With a Rooftop Pool
Before: A previous remodel had already reformed the rear of this existing bungalow in San Francisco. The owners needed more space for their family, including out-of-country relatives that stay for longer periods, but didn’t want to change the front exterior or lose any yard. A previous remodel (shown here) had already reshaped the rear of the home.
The new addition features a sliding glass door that brings in much more natural light and creates easy flow between inside and out. The owners especially appreciate how the new deck is at grade with the exterior door for a seamless transition, making the kitchen feel like "a part of the garden," says the homeowner.
Before: Fischer Architecture nearly started from scratch in this complete overhaul of a midcentury Oakland residence. They kept the general layout, but just about everything else changed, including the exterior facade, material palette, and glazing. A dark passageway (shown here) once connected the choppy rooms.
Before: Sogno Design Group reimagined a small 1930s home on an unusually large lot to make room for three generations of a family. "I felt like it was in a park setting," says designer Kathryn Rogers of the boulder-strewn setting. "I don’t think I’ve ever worked on a site this beautiful before in the East Bay—it’s very unusual to have these kinds of features in such a large site."
The original home was converted into a bedroom level, and Rogers introduced a second-story addition and roof deck. The dark exterior color—a charcoal-eggplant hue—lets the landscape colors stand out in contrast. "The existing house roof became the roof deck," says Rogers. "And then I just shifted over the addition so that it floated over the landscape."
The Most Shocking Before & After Renovations of 2021
10. A Brooklyn Brownstone’s Dreary Basement Becomes an Urban Oasis
Before: Architect Susan Nwankpa Gillespie of Nwankpa Design gently expanded this 1924 storybook-style cottage in L.A. by 400 square feet by pushing the walls out on all sides and reorganizing the floor plan. The kitchen was a narrow galley separated from the rest of the living spaces with a vestibule that contained the refrigerator, the laundry, and a door to the yard.
Before: As described by architect Steffen Welsch, this rear extension to an Edwardian weatherboard house in an inner-city suburb of Melbourne, "stretched the building over the entire length of the site, rotated it 45 degrees, and pulled it apart. A somewhat unexpected move, this generated an interesting sequence of interconnected spaces and an experience of gradual revelation as you move through the house."
Before: Georgina Verza had been running her yoga and massage studio out of her remodeled Seattle-area basement for years. She tapped Robert Hutchison Architecture for a more graceful expansion of the home that included additional outdoor spaces. Previously, Georgina and Diego had knocked down interior walls to create an open-plan living room, dining room, and kitchen, but the fireplace prevented the space from feeling connected to the deck.
A main goal of the renovation was to better connect the home with its forested lot. "One of the things that convinced me to buy the house was the fact that when you open the front door, you see all of this green coming in through the backyard," says Georgina. Hutchison enhanced that with a wall of sliding glass doors and clerestory windows on the rear wall.
Before: Risa Boyer Architecture revitalized a 1955 Portland home by extending the roof over an outdoor patio to give it cover and ensure that it’s a comfortable space on both hot, sunny days, and in the rainy spring, or fall. The pink and blue scheme in the kitchen, an ’80s update, didn’t harmonize with the midcentury bones of the home.
New custom walnut cabinetry syncs with the rest of the built-ins throughout the home, to create a pleasing rhythm in the open plan. The backsplash is Heath Ceramics tile, and the counter is Pental Quartz. Open shelves at the rear overlook a cozy den, and allow sight lines out the new windows at the front of the home.
Read more Before & After stories here.
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