• Reconfigure the entryway to create a better first impression • Add visual interest to the dining room • Update interior overall
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Wiff Harmer Photography
In the updated living room of this Nashville home, designer Ridl…
In the updated living room of this Nashville home, designer Ridley Wills improved upon, but did not eliminate, the home’s traditional origins. The new view to the main entry and stairwell was opened up by removing the wide casing across the top of the doorway.
BEFORE: The existing view from the dining room to the main entry…
BEFORE: The existing view from the dining room to the main entry. The stairs, which turned out at the bottom, interrupted the flow down the hallway.
BEFORE: The existing main floor landing at the front entry way. …
BEFORE: The existing main floor landing at the front entry way. The clients felt the wooden railing was dated and the turn blocked the pathway into the house.
Wiff Harmer Photography
The new stairs spill elegantly into the hallway to welcome guest…
The new stairs spill elegantly into the hallway to welcome guests. Wills replaced the dated wooden handrail with a custom designed iron hand and shoe rail, with curved balusters. The curved molding echoes the railing aesthetic yet gives a nod to the home’s traditional background.
BEFORE: Wide cased doorways lining the hallway made it dark and …
BEFORE: Wide cased doorways lining the hallway made it dark and uninviting.
Wiff Harmer Photography
Wills removed the casings on the doorways for a cleaner, lighter…
Wills removed the casings on the doorways for a cleaner, lighter look.
BEFORE: The existing panel molding on the dining room walls date…
BEFORE: The existing panel molding on the dining room walls dated the room.
Wiff Harmer Photography
To update, Wills removed the panel molding to create a clean fin…
To update, Wills removed the panel molding to create a clean finish in the dining room.
Wiff Harmer Photography
Custom bookcases between the windows and surrounding the entry d…
Custom bookcases between the windows and surrounding the entry door harken back to great libraries of the past while adding color and movement to the neutral palette in the room.
Solutions
The original entry to this Nashville home was blocked by the stairs, which turned directly into the foyer. Designer Ridley Wills reworked the stairs to spill straight out, widening at the bottom in a welcoming way. To update what the clients felt was the “unimaginative” stairwell, Wills replaced the wooden handrails with elegant iron hand and shoe rails and balusters. The effect is light and open and fits with the more updated aesthetic the clients wanted to achieve in the other rooms on the main floor.
To further open the space, Wills improved the entry hall by removing the cased openings and false transoms of transition spaces.
In the dining room, Wills removed dated panel molding from the walls and had bookcases built between windows and on either side of the wide doorway. The effect gives the space an updated look that improves upon—but doesn’t eliminate—the home’s traditional origins.
In keeping with that idea, Wills replaced the single-lite windows in the dining room’s bay with divided-lite windows. “These are more true to the traditional nature of the architecture,” he points out.
Judges’ Comments
For this project, the team was able to do so much within the budget—redoing the railings and stairs, adding built-ins, cleaning up the rooms, raising doors, and removing the wall panels. Using black and whites for the “before” photos and color photos for the “after” shots was a great way to present the work in the award-entry binder.