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Home / Exterior

A groovy front porch makeover — on a budget — for Sarah’s 1964 round house

Kate - Updated: September 8, 2020

Retro Renovation stopped publishing in 2021; these stories remain for historical information, as potential continued resources, and for archival purposes.

A local metal shop made the fab escutcheons
The mosaic tiles on the outside wall are from Home Depot

mid century front porchReader Sarah is one creative woman — in fact, it seems we have a lot in common. We are both homeowners (both bought our first home at age 23), both have tackled fixer upper type houses and both of us studied art in college. One thing we don’t have in common — Sarah’s super cool house is round (I’m jealous). When she first purchased her home, the exterior was in sad shape. Sarah used her creativity and design skills along with materials that were readily available in her area and in her budget — and the results are amazing.

house-before mid century house in need of repairSarah writes:

I’m 25 and bought the house — it was built in 1964 — when I was fresh out of college at 23. I was looking for a place to buy, but didn’t know that I would end up in my dream home. I went down …[the street]…to see a house that was for sale by owner and passed up the round house.

I tried to be interested in the house I was viewing, but broke down in the middle of the tour and said ‘what’s up with the round house down the street?!?’ They said no one had been living in it for a couple of years. I got in touch with the next door neighbor who got me in touch with the owner….

It needed A LOT of work. It was so dingy and had been redecorated in the early 90s so I had to bring it back to the 60s. There is also a problem pool in my backyard, so I negotiated and got the house for a thousand less than they had bought it in 1991.

The house was almost torn down too, before I wanted to buy it Walgreens wanted to buy the entire corner and tear everything down, but because one person wouldn’t agree the project didn’t go through (thank goodness!) the ‘we’ is me and my mom, she is the handy man of the family. We spent 3 months working on it before I moved in, and there are still plenty of projects to do! (it never ends lol)

Craziest thing…. Found another round house like mine from the same architect in Magnolia, Arkansas, last weekend and went up there to visit them! Such nice people and so cool to be in another house like mine. It was very twilight zone! They do not however have the same aesthetic as me, theirs is decorated very traditional contemporary with the beige and granite and you know…. But still very nice, very high end.

front-door-beforemid-century-rounded-houseI’m sharing with you my front exterior makeover with emphasis on the door. I… have done lots of work using your site for tips along the way. The house is completely round, but still has the ranch feel. It was built in 1964 and the architect was Gilbert Spindel. The son of the architect said his father sold 25 of these house plans so there may be more of them out there! My goal is to find them all!

The front had wood siding under the porch area before. We took that down and put up concrete board and finished that off with a mosaic tile from Home Depot. I was surprised to find the tile of my dreams there, but it worked out and was a very reasonable price.

mid-century-door-handlesglass-door-insert-retroAs for the door, we replaced a single door with two side lights, for double doors. The double doors were just two plain wood slabs, and we had our local glass company make the window boxes for us.

The dimensions of the windows are 5″ wide x 57″ high with a “cotswold” or “rain” texture. The glass lady tried to convince me not to pick this texture because it reminded her of a shower door, but I didn’t listen LOL. I like it, and I think it looks period.

The round escutcheon is just flat cut steel that a local metals shop cut for us then cut in half. The diameter is 22 in and we spray painted it bronze. The handles are appliance pulls that mimicked the design of the tiles. The door is either open and may swing open with the wind or is shut and locked. Not the most practical, but we must suffer for beauty, and we have learned to live with it.

The outside got a nice pressure washing and coat of paint. the paint is all Benjamin Moore. The green being Lewisville green, the beige is Barbados sand and the orange is Peach Sherbet.

mid century porchThe decorative concrete blocks were found in the backyard in a pile, so I used them to line my beds then repeated the diamond design on the garage doors with the same orange as the front door. I got inspired to paint my garage doors from looking at old advertisements in vintage home magazines.

The patio furniture is Homecrest found at an estate sale.

mid century address numbersretro-wall-plaquesThe house numbers are those plastic wall art panels that you see at every garage sale. I just painted the interior black and put my house numbers in the middle. these were all solutions because I couldnt find authentic or reproduction retro in my area or within my budget.

mid century porchSarah adds:

The house won a GE all electric award when it was built. Heated flooring, internal vacuum system, curtains opened and t.v. Swung out with the touch of a button. Of course none of those features work today! Shucks!

The entire house is decorated with 50s and 60s furniture because I’m a garage sale freak! The bathrooms are original too one is terrazzo and the other is lavender!

I could talk and write about my house all day, I was an art major so this house is my ultimate masterpiece! LOL so I will end here… I hope sharing my reno tips inspires others with their home projects.

house-before mid century house in need of repairmid-century-house-exteriorSarah has made some great design choices. The use of a neutral dark tile around the front door creates contrast from the lighter brick facade — which when combined with the orange door — creates an inviting focal point and directs visitors to the entry. Her use of repetition — the starbursts on the garage doors, diamond shaped address plaques and decorative blocks as well as the rounded metal on the front doors which echo the shape of the house — help to make the overall design feel cohesive. What a fabulous house!

Sarah, the creativity and resourcefulness you put forth in your exterior restoration job is impressive. Kudos to you (and helper Mom) for a job well done. You’ve shown all of us that if you have a vision, a little ingenuity and some creativity that you can successfully restore a home on a budget.

See more of Sarah’s Round House:

  • A tour of the interior
  • Her lavendar bathroom restoration

CATEGORIES:
Accessories and Hardware Exterior Garage Doors Landscaping

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124 comments

Comments

  1. gsciencechick says

    November 5, 2012 at 10:36 pm

    LOVE the entryway with the stunning colors, and I cannot wait to see the rest of the house, especially your lavender bathroom!

  2. tammyCA says

    November 5, 2012 at 9:39 pm

    Standing ovation! Wow, terrific job and for saving a unique house! The porch lit up looks like a painting…David Hockney-esque. 🙂 Just the other day I was thinking about a “roundish” house I remember from childhood in the next town..at least, the front porch was round…it was definitely ’50s-’60’s style. It was in the Chicago suburbs, but haven’t been back for years. I know there was a “mushroom” house…some unique homes, unlike the u*** boxes they throw up today.

  3. Nancy E says

    November 5, 2012 at 9:20 pm

    Another ‘great job’ comment. Looks fabulous. Can we see the inside one day????

  4. Eric Rogers says

    November 5, 2012 at 9:13 pm

    What a great job! That’s incredible! Thanks for sharing!

  5. Nancy Nucci says

    November 5, 2012 at 9:12 pm

    Please, please, please keep posting pictures! We all want to see the inside! Love what you’ve done with the outside..

  6. Jackie Toye says

    November 5, 2012 at 8:35 pm

    I absolutely love the lighting of the Porch area. it illuminates the entire Entry. Great “Drive By” Look. You did a Great Job!

  7. Robin says

    November 5, 2012 at 7:55 pm

    Oh man, I couldn’t be more jealous. My little town doesn’t have much in the way of MCM architecture. We mostly have your basic midcentury modest ranchers like mine.

    Is the little half story accessible or is it just for bringing more light to the center of the house? It’d be cool to have a loft up there so you could look out over your neighborhood.

    • Sarah g says

      November 5, 2012 at 8:24 pm

      The ‘pop up’ as I refer to it, is just my living room. The living room is at the center of the house and it has a 14′ ceiling instead of the traditional 8′ that the rest of the house has. Which is genius really. With that feature they could put the clerestory windows that you see instead of skylights so that the room would have natural light.
      Then a circular hallway (fun to run around in circles) goes around the living and you offshoot into arc shaped rooms.

  8. Jess S. says

    November 5, 2012 at 5:47 pm

    Oh boy, this house is amazing! Great job Sarah, I CANNOT WAIT to see the inside. I’m also a fixer-upper gal who bought my first house at 23, I’m now on my second house at 28, it’s a much neglected MCM ranch… bringing new life to old stuff is my favorite thing. Share interior pics with us soon please!

  9. BrerRabbit says

    November 5, 2012 at 4:38 pm

    Wow! A truly wonderful transformation. Congrats.

  10. Mitch says

    November 5, 2012 at 3:02 pm

    Add my kudos to the list … that facade is GORGEOUS!! Good work! I’m in * love * with that house !!

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