Building Memories
This Old House Magazine|May 2018

With a more open (storage-packed!) first floor, a new master suite, and dedicated space for visiting grandparents, this 1879 Italianate’s remodel was designed with family in mind

Jill Connors
Building Memories

For Liz McQuillan Delfino, stepping through her front entry is a lot like step-ping back in time. She pushes open the same heavy wood door, glimpses the same quirky fireplace nook, and passes the same staircase she knew growing up. Once the kitchen comes into view, however, it’s clear things have changed in her childhood home. Framed by a columned half-wall divider, the enlarged, opened-up cook space now has an island at its center, all-new cabinetry, quartz and reclaimed-wood countertops, and gleaming stainless steel appliances—testament to a just-completed eight-month renovation documented on the current season of This Old House television. With the construction dust now settled, the army of contractors, subs, and Generation NEXT apprentices have moved on—and Liz, her husband, Joe Delfino, and their two young daughters are finally moved in.

The 3,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath home in Newton, Massachusetts, has an updated layout perfect for modern family life. But it also carefully preserves many elements of the old house that Liz cherishes. “The stairs even squeak in the same place,” she says, with a smile. “It reminds me of my mom walking up and down the staircase when I was young.”

After Liz lost her mother in 2015, she and Joe inherited the house. Finally ready to make it their own family’s home, they turned to architect Mat Cummings to help them maximize the square footage, including carving out space for extended visits from Joe’s parents. With the Delfinos’ desire to retain the house’s character in mind, Cummings designed a new open-plan kitchen-dining family-mudroom flow on the first floor, a new master suite upstairs, and a garage addition with a second-floor guest suite with its own sitting area.

What the couple hadn’t anticipated when work began were some of the condition issues that surfaced.

This story is from the May 2018 edition of This Old House Magazine.

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This story is from the May 2018 edition of This Old House Magazine.

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