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1 SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE NEW MEXICAN Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, [email protected] Design and headlines: Jim Gordon, [email protected] BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM REAL ESTATE E On the hunt? Browse our jobs classifieds. Page E-12 Classifieds E-5 Open Houses E-9 Jobs classifieds E-12 Time Out E-16 Santa Fe’s Local Market Leader sothebyshomes.com/santafe 505.988.8088 Artfully uniting extraordinary properties with extraordinary lives. to see more extraordinary homes, turn the page to view our company ad 1706 PAINTED SKY $499,000 Gracious Three Bedroom, Two Bath Home with Garage and Views. #201201554 Charles Weber 505.670.9377 BIG TESUQUE CANYON $2,895,000 Stunning Compound Adjoining Rio Tesuque and National Forest in Unparalleled Setting. #201200912 David Rosen & Christopher Rocca 505.470.9383 11 PULITZER TRAIL, #B $650,000 In the Gated Community of Bishop’s Lodge Villas With Graceful Living Spaces and Views. #201105696 Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117 ‘Simple and light’ and a winner By Paul Weideman The New Mexican T he house that won the Grand Hacienda Award in this year’s Haciendas — A Parade of Homes isn’t the usual large, expensive place boasting fabu- lous views of multiple distant mountain ranges. Instead, it’s a 3,000-square-foot $538,000 abode nestled in on a Cordova Road site that’s almost invisible from the busy thoroughfare. “This is as infill as it gets,” said Jesse Gries, principal of Green Star Builders, which built the house for his family. “There was a dilapidated half of a basketball court here and a gazebo with a little redwood deck; we used the redwood for base plates for all of our walls.” Gries has been in Santa Fe for 15 years with his wife, Karla Hel- land, a 20-year resident. They included some “Santa Fe style” elements: 200-year-old sabino beams and a simple house design with soft, rounded cor- ners. But after that, it’s all clean, contemporary design featuring cabinetry by his father, Daniel, and metalwork by Gries himself: terrific railings and stairs, an entrance shade structure, canale pipes and cistern covers, and large, sculptural frame elements in the rear patio. There’s also a healthy hydro- ponic green wall at the top of the stairway to the lower level. “It’s growing very well,” he said. “It’s a hobby but it also puts out a lot of oxygen into the house.” The downstairs, basically basement, rooms are brightened by light wells with ivy growing on the outside surface. “In all the design details, Karla and I were really just satisfying ourselves, our specific tastes,” Gries said. The challenge for HVL Interiors, which the owners brought in to stage their house for the Parade of Homes, was to “make it shine,” as Steffany Hollingsworth put it. Heather Van Luchene added, “It’s not to upstage the house but really to put just enough furnishings in to make it read well. We wanted to connect with the handcrafted quality of Jesse’s steelwork and the cabinets by his father, so the rugs and some of the chairs are handmade.” “Also, to let people imagine what they might be able do with a house like that, and to dream: Oh, I would love to live in this kind of context, this kind of lifestyle,” Hollingsworth said. “Because the house is so simple and light, we didn’t want to do things that detracted from that. The furnishings and the art and the rugs that we selected all really blend so nicely with the kind of organic elements and the very soft greiges and tones that we used.” The Parade was a success for the builder. “I think we had 700 people on the first day,” Gries said. “It seems like we had a good response; I have a meeting this week with someone who may be interested in a project.” It was his first Haciendas experience. For Christopher Wheeler, Wheeler Construction & Design, 2012 was his third Parade. “I think the foot traffic was excellent. Last year, we were right in town and so it was very easy to get to, but I think we had at least that many,” Wheeler said. As in the Green Star entry, Wheeler and his wife, Yuki, who was the designer of their Parade entry on Calle San Acacia (off Tano Road), did the house for themselves. “The two things that come to mind about that are the home offices, which are separate from the home, and that has to do with having the kids at home, so it gives us a little separation,” Wheeler said.” And also the jack- and-jill bathrooms in the kids’ bedroom area. If that was for a client, most likely those would have been bedrooms with their own private baths.” The contemporary house is about a thousand square feet smaller than the house he built for the family in 2006. That was intentional. “It works much better for us,” he said. “Small is the new better. The floor plan is more compact and the bedrooms are closer together, which makes for a more pleasant family life and probably will be better for heat- ing in the winter.” The Wheeler home won the Grand Hacienda Runner-Up. “I heard that the judges were split 5-4, which makes us feel good. I was very excited to see Green Star win. Our sort-of argument for years was how can you give the Grand Hacienda to anything that’s not the most expensive, biggest house in the Parade, and this year they didn’t just think outside the box, they shattered the box.” Speaking of awards, Palo Santo Designs won a whopping eight prizes for its two houses on the tour. Among them were the Grand Green awards in both cat- egories: for homes under 2,000 square feet and for homes over 2,000 square feet. The former, located on Cresta Pequeña near Cañon- cito, is a fairly modest home — 1,213 square feet and valued at $350,000 — but with solid, earthy features including Ameri- can clay wall finishes and an unfinished adobe interior wall both for separation and thermal mass. The LEED Platinum home, on Southern Crescent west of Lamy, is 2,700 heated square feet and priced at $1 million. Cresta Pequeña has high-performance frame construction, and 2 South- ern Crescent is a combination of pumice-crete and high-perfor- mance frame. “The house on Southern Cres- cent is architecturally unique, designed by Justin Larson [of the firm VFLA] out of Fort Collins,” said Palo Santo Designs’ Mark Girogetti. “It’s a state-of-the-art green home, near zero-energy, which means it’s 84 percent more efficient than a code-built home.” Palo Santo also won a special award for best bathroom. “That was I think in part because of some unique choices by the owner, who went for a vintage, art-deco look with subway tile and plumbing fixtures, and a freestanding clawfoot tub that has a window level with the top for great views.” The two Parade entries by Prull Custom Builders took all five awards in the top price cat- egory. One, on Aspen View in Monte Sereno, is traditional and stately with tall stone column supports outside and a tradi- tional, open plan all on one level. The other Prull house, on Lodge Trail behind Bishop’s Lodge, is a neat combination of angles and curves. Will Prull worked with architect Craig Hoopes and interior designer Lisa Samuels on both projects. The Lodge Trail house is accessed through a wonderfully landscaped courtyard. “We had a lot of comments on the wall- plastering job, the cabinets and on the fit of the brushed-marble floor tile, which is set in a four- piece Leon pattern,” Prull said. “All three fireplaces are notewor- thy; they’re Ortal brand, made in Israel.” He said the houses saw more than 200 visitors on the busier days. “The important thing for me is that the people who came this year, besides the locals and people shopping for ideas, are planning to build soon, where last year they were just saying they wanted to build someday. There are real jobs coming out of the Parade of Homes.” Kim Shanahan, executive director of the sponsoring Santa Fe Area Home Builders Associa- tion, said the organization sold more tickets than in 2011. The home-tourists this time saw an unprecedented variety. Just two or three years ago, a large percentage of the Parade houses were in the Las Campanas areas. This year, there were just two. “Also, the fact that we don’t have spec homes these days means people aren’t having to go safe in order to appeal to many potential buyers,” Shanahan said. “It’s more a matter of the owners doing what they want. “I was encouraged that we had four entrants who I’m calling the next generation that needs to be running this association in the future.” He was talking about Jesse Gries, Mark Giorgetti, Chris Wheeler and Shane and Rob Woods of Woods Design Build- ers. “They really represent people in their 30s and early 40s, and for them, green building is not a matter of getting over a learning curve; it’s automatic. That’s just what they do.” HACIENDAS — A PARADE OF HOMES The kitchen of the Green Star Builders house, winner of the Grand Hacienda Award. PHOTOS BY PAUL WEIDEMAN/THE NEW MEXICAN Green Star Builders wins with clean, contemporary design Grand Hacienda: Green Star Builders Inc. Grand Hacienda Runner-Up: Wheeler Construc- tion + Design, Inc. Category 1 Best Design: Green Star Builders Inc. Best Kitchen: Green Star Builders Inc. Best Outdoor Space: Homewise, Inc. Best Craftsmanship: Green Star Builders Inc. Best Master Suite: Borrego Construction Category 2 Best Design: Wheeler Construction + Design, Inc. Best Kitchen: Palo Santo Designs, LLC at 2 South- ern Crescent Best Outdoor Space: Woods Design Builders, Inc. Best Craftsmanship: Palo Santo Designs, LLC at 2 Southern Crescent Best Master Suite: Wheeler Construction + Design, Inc. Category 3 Best Design: Prull Custom Builders at 56 Lodge Trail Best Kitchen: Prull Custom Builders at 2964 Aspen View Best Outdoor Space: Prull Custom Builders at 56 Lodge Trail Best Craftsmanship: Prull Custom Builders at 2964 Aspen View Best Master Suite: Prull Custom Builders at 56 Lodge Trail Green Awards, under 2,000 square feet Grand Green: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, 24 Cresta Pequeña Energy Efficiency: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, 24 Cresta Pequena Site & Resource Efficiency: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, 24 Cresta Pequeña Green Awards, over 2,000 square feet Grand Green: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, 2 Southern Crescent Energy Efficiency: Sundancer Creations, LLC Water Efficiency: Green Star Builders Inc. Resource Efficiency: Green Star Builders Inc. Indoor Air Quality: Green Star Builders Inc. Site Efficiency: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, 2 Southern Crescent Special Awards Most Efficient Use of Overall Space: D Maahs Con- struction, LLC Best Bathroom: Palo Santo Designs, LLC, at 24 Cresta Pequena Outstanding Historic Restoration: Fabu-WALL-ous Solutions, LLC Exceptional Remodel: Woods Design Builders, Inc. Hacienda — A Parade of Homes winners Wheeler Construction + Design won the runner-up prize for this house.

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Page 1: ?K E>A;B K4 U K 7K 6K BA 9@ ?9=A 4 ?5%! Q+ /T , %'& M0/T , / K% … · 2016-03-04 · 4 tx tlehx gt_ g cl m gtx 1i _mz /_\sxmz_ 9c _i z sm gtsh ax _i ;h /_\sxmz_h h 9 '_ i_ zx lw

dayy, monthh xx, 2010 THE NEWMEXICAN 1SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2012 THE NEW MEXICAN

Section editor: Bruce Krasnow, 986-3034, [email protected] Design and headlines: Jim Gordon, [email protected] BrEAKING NEWs AT www.santafenewmexican.com

REAL ESTATE EOn the hunt? Browseour jobs classifieds.Page E-12

Classifieds E-5 Open Houses E-9 Jobs classifieds E-12 Time Out E-16

Santa Fe’s Local Market Leader

sothebyshomes.com/santafe505.988.8088

Artfully uniting extraordinary properties with extraordinary lives. to see more extraordinary homes, turn the page to view our company ad

1706 PAINTED SKY $499,000Gracious Three Bedroom, Two Bath Home with

Garage and Views. #201201554CharlesWeber 505.670.9377

BIG TESUQUE CANYON $2,895,000Stunning Compound Adjoining Rio Tesuque and

National Forest in Unparalleled Setting. #201200912David Rosen &Christopher Rocca 505.470.9383

11 PULITZER TRAIL, #B $650,000In the Gated Community of Bishop’s Lodge Villas

With Graceful Living Spaces and Views. #201105696Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117

‘simple and light’ and a winnerBy Paul WeidemanThe New Mexican

The house that wonthe GrandHaciendaAward in this year’sHaciendas—AParade

of Homes isn’t the usual large,expensive place boasting fabu-lous views of multiple distantmountain ranges. Instead, it’sa 3,000-square-foot $538,000abode nestled in on a CordovaRoad site that’s almost invisiblefrom the busy thoroughfare.“This is as infill as it gets,” saidJesse Gries, principal of GreenStar Builders, which built thehouse for his family. “There wasa dilapidated half of a basketballcourt here and a gazebowith alittle redwood deck; we used theredwood for base plates for all ofour walls.”Gries has been in Santa Fe for

15 years with his wife, Karla Hel-land, a 20-year resident. Theyincluded some “Santa Fe style”elements: 200-year-old sabinobeams and a simple housedesignwith soft, rounded cor-ners. But after that, it’s all clean,contemporary design featuringcabinetry by his father, Daniel,andmetalwork by Gries himself:terrific railings and stairs, anentrance shade structure, canalepipes and cistern covers, andlarge, sculptural frame elementsin the rear patio.There’s also a healthy hydro-

ponic greenwall at the top of thestairway to the lower level. “It’sgrowing very well,” he said. “It’sa hobby but it also puts out a lotof oxygen into the house.”The downstairs, basically

basement, rooms are brightenedby light wells with ivy growingon the outside surface.“In all the design details, Karla

and I were really just satisfyingourselves, our specific tastes,”Gries said.The challenge for HVL

Interiors, which the ownersbrought in to stage their housefor the Parade of Homes, wasto “make it shine,” as SteffanyHollingsworth put it. HeatherVan Luchene added, “It’s not toupstage the house but really toput just enough furnishings intomake it readwell.Wewantedto connect with the handcraftedquality of Jesse’s steelwork andthe cabinets by his father, so therugs and some of the chairs arehandmade.”“Also, to let people imagine

what theymight be able dowitha house like that, and to dream:Oh, I would love to live in thiskind of context, this kind oflifestyle,” Hollingsworth said.“Because the house is so simpleand light, we didn’t want to dothings that detracted from that.The furnishings and the art andthe rugs that we selected allreally blend so nicely with thekind of organic elements and thevery soft greiges and tones thatwe used.”The Paradewas a success for

the builder. “I think we had 700people on the first day,” Griessaid. “It seems like we had agood response; I have ameetingthis weekwith someonewhomay be interested in a project.”It was his first Haciendas

experience. For Christopher

Wheeler,Wheeler Construction&Design, 2012 was his thirdParade. “I think the foot trafficwas excellent. Last year, wewereright in town and so it was veryeasy to get to, but I think we hadat least that many,”Wheeler said.As in the Green Star entry,

Wheeler and his wife, Yuki, whowas the designer of their Paradeentry on Calle San Acacia (offTano Road), did the house forthemselves.“The two things that come to

mind about that are the homeoffices, which are separate fromthe home, and that has to dowith having the kids at home,so it gives us a little separation,”Wheeler said.” And also the jack-and-jill bathrooms in the kids’bedroom area. If that was for aclient, most likely those wouldhave been bedroomswith theirown private baths.”The contemporary house is

about a thousand square feetsmaller than the house he builtfor the family in 2006. That wasintentional.“It worksmuch better for

us,” he said. “Small is the newbetter. The floor plan is morecompact and the bedrooms arecloser together, whichmakes foramore pleasant family life andprobably will be better for heat-ing in the winter.”TheWheeler homewon the

GrandHacienda Runner-Up. “Iheard that the judges were split5-4, whichmakes us feel good.I was very excited to see GreenStar win. Our sort-of argumentfor years was how can you givethe GrandHacienda to anythingthat’s not themost expensive,biggest house in the Parade, andthis year they didn’t just thinkoutside the box, they shatteredthe box.”Speaking of awards, Palo

Santo Designs won awhoppingeight prizes for its two houses onthe tour. Among themwere theGrandGreen awards in both cat-egories: for homes under 2,000square feet and for homes over2,000 square feet.The former, located on

Cresta Pequeña near Cañon-cito, is a fairly modest home— 1,213 square feet and valuedat $350,000—but with solid,earthy features including Ameri-can clay wall finishes and anunfinished adobe interior wallboth for separation and thermalmass. The LEED Platinum home,on Southern Crescent west ofLamy, is 2,700 heated square feetand priced at $1 million. CrestaPequeña has high-performanceframe construction, and 2 South-ern Crescent is a combination ofpumice-crete and high-perfor-mance frame.“The house on Southern Cres-

cent is architecturally unique,designed by Justin Larson [of thefirmVFLA] out of Fort Collins,”said Palo Santo Designs’ MarkGirogetti. “It’s a state-of-the-artgreen home, near zero-energy,whichmeans it’s 84 percentmore efficient than a code-builthome.”Palo Santo also won a special

award for best bathroom. “Thatwas I think in part because ofsome unique choices by theowner, whowent for a vintage,art-deco lookwith subway tile

and plumbing fixtures, and afreestanding clawfoot tub thathas a window level with the topfor great views.”The two Parade entries by

Prull CustomBuilders took all

five awards in the top price cat-egory. One, on Aspen View inMonte Sereno, is traditional andstately with tall stone columnsupports outside and a tradi-tional, open plan all on one level.

The other Prull house, onLodge Trail behind Bishop’sLodge, is a neat combination ofangles and curves.Will Prullworkedwith architect CraigHoopes and interior designer

Lisa Samuels on both projects.The Lodge Trail house is

accessed through awonderfullylandscaped courtyard. “We hada lot of comments on the wall-plastering job, the cabinets andon the fit of the brushed-marblefloor tile, which is set in a four-piece Leon pattern,” Prull said.“All three fireplaces are notewor-thy; they’re Ortal brand, made inIsrael.”He said the houses sawmore

than 200 visitors on the busierdays.“The important thing forme

is that the people who camethis year, besides the locals andpeople shopping for ideas, areplanning to build soon, wherelast year theywere just sayingtheywanted to build someday.There are real jobs coming outof the Parade of Homes.”Kim Shanahan, executive

director of the sponsoring SantaFe Area Home Builders Associa-tion, said the organization soldmore tickets than in 2011. Thehome-tourists this time sawan unprecedented variety. Justtwo or three years ago, a largepercentage of the Parade houseswere in the Las Campanas areas.This year, there were just two.“Also, the fact that we don’t

have spec homes these daysmeans people aren’t having to gosafe in order to appeal tomanypotential buyers,” Shanahan said.“It’s more amatter of the ownersdoingwhat theywant.“I was encouraged that we had

four entrants who I’m calling thenext generation that needs to berunning this association in thefuture.”Hewas talking about Jesse

Gries, Mark Giorgetti, ChrisWheeler and Shane and RobWoods ofWoods Design Build-ers. “They really representpeople in their 30s and early 40s,and for them, green building isnot amatter of getting over alearning curve; it’s automatic.That’s just what they do.”

HACIENDAS — A PARADE Of HOMES

The kitchen of the Green Star Builders house, winner of the Grand Hacienda Award. PHOTOS BY PAul WEIdEMAN/THE NEW MEXICAN

Green star Builders wins withclean, contemporary design

Grand Hacienda: Green Star Builders Inc.Grand Hacienda Runner-Up:Wheeler Construc-tion + design, Inc.

Category 1Best design: Green Star Builders Inc.Best Kitchen: Green Star Builders Inc.Best Outdoor Space: Homewise, Inc.Best Craftsmanship: Green Star Builders Inc.Best Master Suite: Borrego Construction

Category 2Best design: Wheeler Construction + design, Inc.Best Kitchen: Palo Santo designs, llC at 2 South-ern CrescentBest Outdoor Space: Woods design Builders, Inc.Best Craftsmanship: Palo Santo designs, llC at 2Southern CrescentBest Master Suite: Wheeler Construction + design,Inc.

Category 3Best design: Prull Custom Builders at 56 lodgeTrailBest Kitchen: Prull Custom Builders at 2964 AspenViewBest Outdoor Space: Prull Custom Builders at 56lodge TrailBest Craftsmanship: Prull Custom Builders at 2964Aspen View

Best Master Suite: Prull Custom Builders at 56lodge Trail

Green Awards, under 2,000 square feetGrand Green: Palo Santo designs, llC, 24 CrestaPequeñaEnergy Efficiency: Palo Santo designs, llC, 24Cresta PequenaSite & Resource Efficiency: Palo Santo designs,llC, 24 Cresta Pequeña

Green Awards, over 2,000 square feetGrand Green: Palo Santo designs, llC, 2 SouthernCrescentEnergy Efficiency: Sundancer Creations, llCWater Efficiency: Green Star Builders Inc.Resource Efficiency: Green Star Builders Inc.Indoor Air Quality: Green Star Builders Inc.Site Efficiency: Palo Santo designs, llC, 2 SouthernCrescent

Special AwardsMost Efficient use of Overall Space: d Maahs Con-struction, llCBest Bathroom: Palo Santo designs, llC, at 24Cresta PequenaOutstanding Historic Restoration: Fabu-WAll-ousSolutions, llCExceptional Remodel: Woods design Builders, Inc.

Hacienda — A Parade of Homes winners

Wheeler Construction + Design won the runner-up prize for this house.