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Share
your bungalow's loveable characteristics with other readers
by sending in a photo and brief description of the house
you call home.
New, old, mansion or budget cottage -- we want to see them
all.
Email your photos and descriptions to editors@ambungalow.com.
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| Tacoma,
Wash., Dawn and Michael Nanfito
Our home, built in 1918, was one of the first on the street.
The original owners were Norwegian immigrants who occupied the
home until the late 1960s. We have lived here for seven years,
attracted by details such as the dining room's built-in buffet
and clear floors. The original-looking dormer, added by the
previous owner, gives us 1-1/2 stories. So far, with more work
likely, we have replaced damaged fir floors, updated the wiring
and remodeled the tiny downstairs bathroom to a more period
look.
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Santa
Clara, Calif., Barry and Jackie LaFrance
We purchased our 1950s stucco frame home in 1987 and have
been converting it to bungalow style. I have added crown molding,
installed my own handmade stained-glass windows, handmade
garage doors, both straight-cut and fish-scale cedar shingles
and a bungalow porch complete with tongue-and-groove fir flooring
and a stained and varnished beadboard ceiling. The front has
been completely transformed to give it a bungalow look. People
constantly stop and comment about its appearance, and some
are using it as an example for their remodeling ideas. Many
of them have a porch story to reminisce about. We're trying
to start a trend.
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Kansas
City, Mo., Juliet and Greg Nations
From our bungalow in the Brookside neighborhood of Kansas City
we can walk to shops and restaurants and take advantage of a
walking trail, yet we are just a 15-minute drive to the city's
downtown. Our house has the original wood window frames, a built-in
butler's pantry with original leaded glass, original and reproduction
period light fixtures, crown molding, and built-in shelves around
the Arts and Crafts-tiled fireplace, which has a detailed quartersawn-oak
mantel with a mirror. The custom stained glass in the oversized
front door matches an Arts and Crafts nature scene on the fireplace
tile. There is a small open front porch under an eyebrow gable
and a screened sunroom on the side.
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Prescott,
Ariz., Jim and Nancy Burgess
This is one of six Craftsman vernacular cottages built in
1940 on the grounds of the Hassayampa Country Club by the
club's owners, Maud and Harvey Cory, to be rented to families
with children. Maud Cory designed the houses, which, along
with eight others, remained in the Cory family until 2002,
when a group of investors purchased them, created a protected
subdivision and began restorations that earned an Arizona
Heritage Preservation Award in 2003. The exterior is native
stone over a wood frame; the interior woodwork is pine, and
the floors are red and white oak.
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Dixon,
Ill., Ralph G. Pifer
Built in the 1920s, our home was to the point of becoming
a "handyman's special" when we bought it five years
ago. I spent the first month caulking windows and stuffing
insulation into cracks. Since then, we have replaced the roof,
furnace, appliances, exterior doors and front porch. Last
summer we replaced most of the first floor with new oak flooring.
We finished tuckpointing the fireplace chimney in time to
enjoy the heat and light the fireplace offers in the fall
and winter. Because the house faces due north and the prevailing
winds are strong, we have glassed in the front porch to save
on heating.
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Ann
Arbor, Mich., Joann Cavaletto and Dave Fanslow
Our 1930 bungalow is a Sears Honor Bilt kit, "The Hampton,"
which was available from 1924 to 1929. Its reverse floor plan
gives the double windows in the kitchen and the living and
dining rooms a sunny southern exposure. The house is constructed
of yellow pine and cypress and has oak floors in the dining
and living rooms and the front bedroom. The original doors
and hardware are all in good condition. The front porch was
screened in, as suggested in the catalog, very early in the
house's life. We've enjoyed living in this house for 12 years
and find the floor plan very efficient. It does indeed "afford
a greater amount of room than is usual in a house of this
size."
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Edgewood,
Pa., Suzanna Gribble, on behalf of her parents, John
and Agnes Lesko
My mother had her eye on this 1920 bungalow for years. She
repeatedly approached the owners and told them, "Whenever
you want to sell, I want to buy." Her dream came true,
and in 1988 my parents became proud owners of this magnificent
home. As a child, all I wanted in my new home was a fireplace
and window seat. This house gave me both in grand fashion.
Growing up, I remember summer evenings on the front porch,
opening Christmas presents by the cozy fire and building a
hut in my walk-in closet. With its warm hardwood floors and
bright windows, this house still makes a wonderful home.
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Tampa,
Fla., Cara and Mike Davis
We are purchasing this beautiful Foursquare in the historic
neighborhood of Seminole Heights. According to the listing
agent, the house was most likely built before 1914 and has
spent some time as a boarding home and also as a bordello.
Inside are four bedrooms upstairs, a hall bath, a master bath
and a cedar linen closet; downstairs is a bath with a very
old six-shower-head setup. Most of the floors are original
heart pine. The ceilings are all 12 feet high, so it feels
very big and airy inside. It is nestled in the old historic
district, where there are dozens of bungalows of all types
-- some restored, some rehabbed and some awaiting a new life.
This will be the third old jewel we have owned.
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We're
running low on great homes to feature in upcoming issues,
but we know they're there. Send your photos and descriptions
to the address on our Contact Us page. Include your first
and last name on each photo submitted.
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