A Contemporary Chicago Home Emanates Cozy, Historic Charm

Details

A dog lies under a...

In the mudroom, custom built-ins by Wood-Mode in Vintage Prairie Green provide storage for the family’s many sporting activities. Charming details like the Armac Martin brass hardware and Sandberg Wallpaper’s Pine wallcovering elevate the transitional space.

A home office with yellow-and-green...

Jasper’s Indian Flower wallcovering pops against Wood-Mode’s Vintage Prairie Green cabinetry in the wife’s office. The workspace is complete with a desk chair by Four Hands and table lamp from Jayson Home.

An entryway with a blue...

Personalized details fill this Chicago family home, marked with a custom stained glass transom by Drehobl Art Glass Co. Clad in shiplap painted Benjamin Moore’s Templeton Gray, the entry includes a bench cushion crafted from a Lisa Fine Textiles fabric and artwork by Lie.

A hallway with a barn-wood...

The abode’s warm material palette is immediately established in the entrance hall, where an antique runner from Oscar Isberian Rugs sits atop the wide-plank knotted-oak floors. The Urban Electric Co. globe ceiling fixtures highlight the stained barnwood ceiling.

A green living room with...

Phillip Jeffries’ Herringbone wallcovering, a wool rug from Oscar Isberian Rugs and drapes in a Peter Dunham Textiles fabric help soundproof the music room. A Rohan Ward Designs coffee table, Lee Industries chair and Opuzen-upholstered sofa create a cozy area by the fireplace.

A dining table with plaid-covered...

Handcrafted details bring cohesion to the great room, from the Tabarka Studio tile backsplash in the kitchen to the custom dining table by Old Plank. The Gregorius Pineo chairs are covered in a Mulberry Home plaid.

A black built-in dry bar...

Fabricated by Wood-Mode, the great room’s dry bar features ribbed glass inserts and a butcher-block countertop. Its navy hue contrasts with the light-colored kitchen cabinetry.

A stairwell with white shiplap...

Simple yet painstakingly considered details add richness to the stairwell, which is clad in shiplap layered beneath molding fabricated by builder Steven Cordero. Visual Comfort & Co. sconces illuminate the runner from Oscar Isberian Rugs.

A red rug lies in...

On the sunny second-floor landing, window shades by Hartmann&Forbes soften the sunlight. Custom cabinetry features glass panels by Drehobl Art Glass Co. and is topped with a lamp from Jayson Home.

A bedroom with grass-cloth wallpaper,...

A Phillip Jeffries grass-cloth wallpaper, rug from Oscar Isberian Rugs and drapery in a Kravet fabric envelop the primary bedroom in tactile warmth. A Century Furniture bed and Noir nightstand complete the space.

A bathroom with an oak...

The couple’s inviting bath features handmade Tabarka Studio tile, limestone flooring from The Fine Line and a custom plain-sawn oak vanity. The stool is by Noir, and the sconces are by The Urban Electric Co.

A walk-in closet with built-in...

The couple’s walk-in closet is filled with charming details, including an Emissary garden stool. Benjamin Moore’s Steam coats the built-ins by Wood-Mode. The ceiling fixture, lamp and sconces are by Visual Comfort & Co.

A bedroom with ivory and...

Swathed in Sandberg Wallpaper’s Antonia wallcovering, the guest room is a serene spot for respite. Complementing the vintage iron bed are an industrially inspired Ralph Lauren Home sconce and a Four Hands side table.

Over time, well-loved homes become like characters in a novel. Each room turns a fresh page, revealing the personality quirks and precious memories imprinted by its occupants. New construction on the other hand, however beautiful, risks feeling blank, unmarked with any idiosyncrasies. 

For a Chicago couple planning to build a family house from scratch on a rare double lot in the tree-lined North Center neighborhood, it was important that this not be the case for their new residence. Their life was far too buoyant and colorful, overflowing with live piano music, bountiful dinners, and three children running indoors and out. 

Interior designers Steve Somogyi and Filip Malyszko understood the family’s wants intimately. Since meeting as neighbors in the same loft building 15 years ago, “they’ve become our longest-standing clients,” Malyszko says. As their fourth project together, this latest abode needed to transcend its new construction and “feel like it had been collected over time,” Somogyi adds. “We wanted to make sure that the house was representative of this young, happy family.”

The designers found a like-minded partner in architect Garrett Harabedian, who understands that just because something is new doesn’t mean it can’t have soul. “We’re setting a stage for a story,” Harabedian muses, “creating a place where people live out their lives.” Joined by builder Steven Cordero and landscape architect Phil Rosborough, the team focused on inscribing warmth into every corner.

Harabedian situated the dwelling toward the north side of the property, exposing the interior to abundant southern sunlight and giving Rosborough enough room to carve out ample stretches of grass for the children to play. The home itself has a “traditional form with a crisp, modern sensibility,” the architect says, pointing to the sloped gabled roofline, dormer windows, brick chimneys and cement board siding. 

Personal touches abound upon walking through the front door, where a hand-fabricated stained glass address bar by Drehobl Art Glass Co.—a century-old local workshop—marks the threshold. The generous foyer and elongated hallway introduce many of the materials and hues that mark the vocabulary of the abode: knotted white oak floors, colorful runners and wood planks stained to recall silvered barnwood on the ceiling. “And instead of painting the trim a conventional crisp white, we chose an almond color, which gives the home a more historic, aged appearance,” Malyszko says. 

Eschewing fussy formalities, the layout branches off into spaces built for the family’s specific lifestyle. “It was really important that they have rooms they would actually use,” Somogyi explains. There’s a dedicated music room wrapped in an acoustic-softening wallcovering where the family gathers around the piano. The husband’s office doubles as a listening lounge, featuring custom built-in shelving for his expansive vinyl record collection. In the basement, the team abandoned plans for a conventional rumpus room in favor of a small skate park for the kids. The great room serves as the entertaining hub, where guests can casually circulate through the combined kitchen, dining and living areas while enjoying food and conversation.

Each space is grounded with solid, substantial furniture made for sharing, from the living room’s deep-seated sectional to the dining table long enough to accommodate any surprise visitors who may appear. Layers of natural textiles, as seen in the vintage wool rugs, linen drapery and plush upholstery, swaddle the home in comfort. 

An eclectic mix of patterns and artisanal materials tie everything together. See the many hand-painted and hand-glazed tiles lining the kitchen, bathrooms and laundry. The abundance of botanical wallpaper, from the mudroom’s climbing vines to the powder room’s blooming florals, nods to the wife’s enduring love of nature. The designers also incorporated heritage plaid fabrics for a cozy nostalgia. These diverse patterns live side by side, as “we didn’t want it to feel so color coordinated or prescribed,” Malyszko says. “We were big on the prints and colors being like second cousins rather than brother and sister.” The palette in turn feels rich but lived-in: sage greens, denim blues and earthy ochre yellows.

All together, the home feels like a fully fleshed-out protagonist. And for the designers, there is no greater pleasure than helping clients chronicle their lives. “It’s about their personal connections and their connection with their cherished items,” says Somogyi of their driving inspiration. “We wanted to tell their story in their environment.”