| Cover Story | Plant Life | Taste | On Fitness | Now & Then |
WRITTEN BY VICTORIA MEDGYESI PHOTOGRAPHED BY BENJAMIN BENSCHNEIDER
SPACIOUSLY SMALLFrom a Capitol Hill condo, a full life blooms
WHEN I WAS in my teens, I fantasized about setting up house in the family bathroom. It was a spacious space with lots of minty-green tile edged in shiny black. Just being there gave me the inspirational chills.
Even so, the cozy containment fantasy has merit.
After all, there's a certain charm to a doll-sized domain, charm that's hard to replicate in umpteen-thousand square feet. And unlike those who dream but never do, Jan Sewell was brave enough to take on the grown-up challenge of living a very full life in a very small space.
Today, her scant 430 square feet of top-floor condominium space space that opens up to 600 square feet of private deck has been transformed from relatively humble beginnings not once, but twice.
When Sewell first saw the Capitol Hill condo in 1995, it was painted stark-white, had matted wall-to-wall carpet and featured harsh motel-style lighting. It also had a 300-square-foot deck and amazing interior light. And Sewell liked the fact that the courtyard-centered complex had only 11 units, each with a private exterior entrance.
Then there was the view.
From the deck, you could see the Olympic Mountains, much of downtown, the Space Needle, the hilltop architectural landmark that would become Amazon's corporate headquarters, and (at night) the lights at Boeing Field. Nice, too, was the view of three landmark church spires that acted as beacons in the evening sky.
The only problem was that Sewell wanted Old World charm, and this wasn't it. But where there's a creative will, there's a way. She replaced lights, pulled up the carpet, sponge-painted the plywood floors, dry-brushed the walls, added molding, hung mirrors and heavy drapes and filled the place with antiques. In no time at all, a Victorian paradise.
And so things stayed for six happy (though visually cluttered) years. Coincidentally, the home turned out to be a career catalyst times two. When Sewell first saw the place, she was still a renter. In that she'd just become an agent for Windermere Real Estate, she felt compelled to take her own "buy now" advice. Besides, she'd fixed up every space she'd ever lived in. This redo, at least, would bring tangible rewards.
A few years later, an out-of-state real-estate client who knew of Sewell's design talents asked if she'd be willing to furnish his new home down to the kitchen utensils. She had two weeks. "They loved it, and I caught the interior bug," she says.
And so Jan Sewell Designs set up shop in the living room. Today, her business revolves around "staging" homes just before they're put on the market. At first, Sewell pulled decorative items out from under her bed. Today, her collection requires 5,000 square feet of commercial storage space. On top of it all, she continues to sell homes.
She found that her professional exposure to a wide variety of interior styles was also changing her personal aesthetic. "I started to appreciate a simpler look. As time went on, I began to feel suffocated by all my things."
As often happens, one change led to another. "Just new bamboo floors and countertops," she said, at first. But once Sewell took down the heavy drapes and moved everything out so construction could begin, the die was cast.
"When I heard myself asking how much it would cost to put a plaster finish on the walls, I knew there was no going back. The truth is, no matter how much you love a place, sometimes you feel the need to change."
Suddenly, Old World was out, contemporary was in. She wanted a clean, neutral background with shades-of-orange accents. Ambient lighting would soften the space, as would walls of buttery-cream color.
In the new scheme, every item had a specific purpose or two, if Sewell was lucky. She also decided larger pieces of furniture would make the place appear more spacious. As for her prized antiques, most were absorbed into the staging inventory. "It's not easy to get rid of things, but it feels great when you do," says Sewell.
In the end, perhaps the most important change of all was consolidating her business equipment into an office armoire. "Getting the computer off the dining-room table made me feel as if I was home when I was home," she says. With the new interior came a renewed focus on the outdoor space. Intent on staying true to the existing bamboo, grass and lavender theme, Sewell asked her friend (and landscape designer) Christopher Balder to help create an even more lush environment that would look as good in winter as in summer. Today, 50-plus garden pots contain the original plantings, four significant-size trees and ever-changing hits of seasonal color.
In the summer, the deck is in constant entertainment mode. In the winter, she hosts smaller dinner parties inside. "I'm very proud of the fact that I cooked an entire Thanksgiving dinner in this little kitchen," she says.
Without a doubt, Sewell could move to a more spacious space, but for now it's not in the cards. "Living alone in a large house would more than likely make me feel lonely," she admits. "In this space, it never seems as if I'm rattling around. I feel so lucky to live here."
Victoria Medgyesi writes about houses and the people who live in them. Benjamin Benschneider is a Pacific Northwest magazine staff photographer.
|
| Cover Story | Plant Life | Taste | On Fitness | Now & Then |