I'm participating in Metamorphosis Monday at Between Naps on the Porch. Thanks to Susan!
I like corner houses. They show at least one more side to the street. This one shows 3 sides as you'll see.
The lot is narrow and deep. The deep side uses different siding materials, colors and bump-outs to break up a looming big wall.
Size: 1,358 sqft Acres .1837 Year built: 1935. The new one 3,400 sqft. and it's for sale: $899,000 Bedrooms: 6 Bathrooms: 5.
That big bush could put your eye out.
Here she is.
Peachtree Hills is a neighborhood of little houses in Buckhead. It's a terrific place in nearly every way. Mansion-free prestige, lots too small for estates, houses close to the street, this isn't the place to demonstrate that you have "Arrived" or "Really Arrived."
The slope keeps the new house from overpowering its neighbor. The tall building on the left edge of the picture is on Peachtree.
This one is on a T-bone intersection, Atlanta's hilly lushness on display. Our teardown's lot slopes down to the west and to the north.
Is that picket fence on the corner charming or what? Little details like that make Peachtree Hills a prime Architecture Tourist drive-through.
It doesn't exactly blend in though.
Looking up at the back, the north facade on the back, west facade on the side.
This is where the big wall will go. I liked it just fine this way. This demonstrates the modest charm that makes Peachtree hills so appealing to me: it's a little time capsule. This is not the "Buckhead" look.
You can see that the modest houses are usually bigger than they look from the street. That retaining wall is serious. Do you suppose it has lasted 80 years? If you don't mow the backyard around here, sooner or later you'll have a forest.
I'll leave you with the big wall. It could have been horrible.
For extra credit I'd urge you to compare this one to last week's teardown in Virginia Highland. Though this one is much more detailed, the Va-Hi house sold long before it was done.
Thanks to Metamorphosis Monday at Between Naps on the Porch.
I like corner houses. They show at least one more side to the street. This one shows 3 sides as you'll see.
The lot is narrow and deep. The deep side uses different siding materials, colors and bump-outs to break up a looming big wall.
Size: 1,358 sqft Acres .1837 Year built: 1935. The new one 3,400 sqft. and it's for sale: $899,000 Bedrooms: 6 Bathrooms: 5.
That big bush could put your eye out.
Here she is.
Peachtree Hills is a neighborhood of little houses in Buckhead. It's a terrific place in nearly every way. Mansion-free prestige, lots too small for estates, houses close to the street, this isn't the place to demonstrate that you have "Arrived" or "Really Arrived."
The slope keeps the new house from overpowering its neighbor. The tall building on the left edge of the picture is on Peachtree.
This one is on a T-bone intersection, Atlanta's hilly lushness on display. Our teardown's lot slopes down to the west and to the north.
Is that picket fence on the corner charming or what? Little details like that make Peachtree Hills a prime Architecture Tourist drive-through.
It doesn't exactly blend in though.
Looking up at the back, the north facade on the back, west facade on the side.
This is where the big wall will go. I liked it just fine this way. This demonstrates the modest charm that makes Peachtree hills so appealing to me: it's a little time capsule. This is not the "Buckhead" look.
You can see that the modest houses are usually bigger than they look from the street. That retaining wall is serious. Do you suppose it has lasted 80 years? If you don't mow the backyard around here, sooner or later you'll have a forest.
I'll leave you with the big wall. It could have been horrible.
For extra credit I'd urge you to compare this one to last week's teardown in Virginia Highland. Though this one is much more detailed, the Va-Hi house sold long before it was done.
Thanks to Metamorphosis Monday at Between Naps on the Porch.
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