Project posted by Susan Yeley

Bloomington Flansburgh House

The sunroom. Photo by Sarah Shields
The sunroom. Photo by Sarah Shields
The beverage station, complete with a paneled undercounter fridge and pocket doors to hide the mess. Photo by Sarah Shields
The beverage station, complete with a paneled undercounter fridge and pocket doors to hide the mess. Photo by Sarah Shields
The kitchen cabinets are exposed edge plywood with a mix of rift-sawn oak veneer and Wilsonart Black Velvet laminate. Photo by Sarah Shields
The kitchen cabinets are exposed edge plywood with a mix of rift-sawn oak veneer and Wilsonart Black Velvet laminate. Photo by Sarah Shields
The cabinets in this u-shaped kitchen are exposed edge plywood with a mix of rift-sawn oak veneer and Wilsonart Black Velvet laminate. Photo by Sarah Shields
The cabinets in this u-shaped kitchen are exposed edge plywood with a mix of rift-sawn oak veneer and Wilsonart Black Velvet laminate. Photo by Sarah Shields
The dining space and sunroom carries classic midcentury pieces. Painting "Girl Reading" by Tim Engelland. Photo by Sarah Shields
The dining space and sunroom carries classic midcentury pieces. Painting "Girl Reading" by Tim Engelland. Photo by Sarah Shields
The half wall on the peninsula offers camouflage for the cooking mess. Behind the seamless oak tambour is additional storage. Photo by Sarah Shields
The half wall on the peninsula offers camouflage for the cooking mess. Behind the seamless oak tambour is additional storage. Photo by Sarah Shields

Credits

Posted by
Architect
Leslie Noggle
Interior Design
Susan Yeley Homes
Builder
Rusty Peterson
Photographer
Sarah Shields

From Susan Yeley

Nearly two decades ago now, Susan and her husband put a letter in the mailbox of this eastside home: "If you have any interest in selling, please reach out." But really, who would give up a Flansburgh House?

Fast forward to 2020, when the house went on the market! By then it was clear that three children and a busy home design studio couldn't be crammed into this efficient footprint. But what's second best to moving into your dream home? Being asked to redesign the functional core for the family that was.

In this classic Flansburgh layout, all the rooms align tidily in a square around a central hall and open air atrium. As such, all the spaces are both connected to one another and also private; and all allow for visual access to the outdoors in two directions—toward the atrium and toward the exterior. All except, in this case, the utilitarian galley kitchen. That space, oft-relegated to second class in midcentury architecture, got the shaft, with narrow doorways on two ends and no good visual access to the atrium or the outside. Who spends time in the kitchen anyway?

As is often the case with even the very best midcentury architecture, the kitchen at the Flansburgh House needed to be modernized; appliances and cabinetry have come a long way since 1970, but our culture has evolved too, becoming more casual and open in ways we at SYH believe are here to stay. People (gasp!) do spend time—lots of time!—in their kitchens! Nonetheless, our goal was to make this kitchen look as if it had been designed this way by Earl Flansburgh himself.

The house came to us full of bold, bright color. We edited out some of it (along with the walls it was on) but kept and built upon the stunning red, orange and yellow closet doors in the family room adjacent to the kitchen. That pop was balanced by a few colorful midcentury pieces that our clients already owned, and the stunning light and verdant green coming in from both the atrium and the perimeter of the house, not to mention the many skylights. Thus, the rest of the space just needed to quiet down and be a beautiful, if neutral, foil. White terrazzo tile grounds custom plywood and black cabinetry, offset by a half wall that offers both camouflage for the cooking mess and also storage below, hidden behind seamless oak tambour.


Contractor: Rusty Peterson

Cabinetry: Stoll's Woodworking

Photographer: Sarah Shields