Rich, Decorative Details Reawaken A Historic Home in Denver

Details

Colorful stained glass windows at...

Original millwork and stained-glass windows provide a dramatic backdrop for Global Views’ Elder console, which displays a collection of chinoiserie vessels from DecorAsian. John-Richard sconces adorn walls papered with Phillip Jeffries’ Manila Hemp grass cloth.

A foyer filled with tiered...

Arteriors’ tiered Prescott chandeliers set a glamorous tone in the foyer, which is furnished with a black metal table by Noir, a Villa & House stool and a rug from Shaver-Ramsey. The framed still-life photograph is by Emily Minton Redfield.

A study with green painted...

A Kravet rug and ceiling covering mixed with a Schumacher grass cloth on the walls create a rich backdrop for the study. The desk is Theodore Alexander and an Arteriors coffee table faces the Vanguard Furniture loveseat bedecked in a Christian Lacroix fabric. Benjamin Moore’s Martha’s Vineyard coats the shelves. The sconces are by Wo & Wé.

Living room with colorful drapery,...

Brunschwig & Fils’ Lodi Garden drapery fabric inspired the living room’s palette. The sofa’s Jim Thompson Fabrics upholstery lends a rich note while a sideboard by John-Richard adds warmth. Vanguard Furniture’s Rowland chairs complete the scene.

A garden room with portions...

Original details abound in the garden room, from an old brick arch to an apron-front sink updated with a Corsano faucet by California Faucets. The glass pendant is from Visual Comfort & Co.

Dining room with vintage pink...

The dining room’s aesthetic comes courtesy of the Vogel wallcovering from interior designer Andrea Schumacher’s Liesl collection, joined by a vintage Murano-glass chandelier from 1stdibs and bookcases painted Benjamin Moore’s Crushed Velvet. The armchairs are by Sunpan and the settees are Vanguard Furniture.

Kitchen with emerald backsplash tile,...

Moments of glamour were added to the kitchen’s existing finishes via emerald backsplash tile from Encore Ceramics and hardware by Silk Road Yamba and Emtek. A large custom concrete chandelier by Buzzell Studios crowns the space.

Kitchen dining bay with gold...

A Vanguard Furniture table and chairs tuck into the kitchen’s dining bay, which is illuminated by Visual Comfort & Co.’s bold Hatton chandelier. Draperies in Jab Anstoetz’s Sumatra fabric are trimmed with Schumacher’s Calcada tape.

Pink bedroom with raspberry-colored armchair,...

Benjamin Moore’s Amaryllis kicks off a palette of pinks in a guest room where an accent chair by Sunpan plays off the Kravet fabric covering a Vanguard Furniture loveseat. Beside the bed hangs a photograph by Emily Minton Redfield.

A powder room with a...

Schumacher’s Tortoise wallcovering wraps the powder room in leafy greens. The porcelain console sink is by Signature Hardware and the mirror—cleverly ceiling-mounted in front of an existing window— is by Mirror Home.

Thanks to the likes of Instagram, Pinterest, HGTV and Houzz, it’s easy for anyone to gather ideas regarding the decor of their space. But Tim White, the latest owner of a historic house in Denver’s Curtis Park neighborhood, felt no such temptation. “When I hire professionals who are creative folks, I never want to head them in a certain direction,” says the homeowner, who is a seasoned developer himself. “If I express my leanings before I hear their thoughts, it may inhibit our choices; I prefer to reach a solution organically.”

Besides, this house needed no spokesperson. Built in 1880, the Second Empire-style abode features a dramatic redbrick façade, an ornate front porch, classical wood cornices and a multicolored slate mansard roof. Having already been restored by Colorado Preservation, Inc. with great care, the mansion now begged for interiors with an equal richness of decorative detail—the perfect brief for a design studio known for bold interiors and color combinations.

“This home had a presence, like it was the proverbial house on a hill,” says designer Troy Rivington, who, in close collaboration with firm principal Andrea Schumacher, embarked on a top-to-bottom reimagining of the residence. “When you walk in, you can feel the history,” Rivington marvels, pointing out the original moldings, staircase and striking stained-glass windows. “So many of the details survived over 140 years of existence; it’s amazing.”

But charmed as they were by the home’s carefully preserved details, Tim and his wife, Stephanie, had no interest in living in a period piece. “Historic homes are often restored back to what they used to be,” Tim says. “We wanted the interiors to be sympathetic to the past but still designed for the here and now.” 

The newly expanded kitchen, for example, offers the contemporary conveniences of a sunny dining nook, large island and a wet bar. To its existing palette of natural wood, black cabinets and patterned floor tile, the designers added a dome-shaped concrete chandelier, emerald-green backsplash tile and striking Chinese brass cabinet pulls. “We wanted to bring in modern touches so the interiors wouldn’t lean too historic, but at the same time twist it a bit,” Rivington explains of the eclectic assortment. “Because this home has a very distinctive look, bringing in elements that wouldn’t normally mix together really worked.”

Further proof is on display in the study, where a gilded French antique chair, clean-lined velvet sofa and amorphous metal coffee table hold court between a giraffe-print rug and agate-patterned paper on the ceiling. And in the upstairs gallery, large contemporary paintings mingle with a glamorous curved settee, giant chandeliers and a carved-eagle console table painted a stark white in an unexpected departure from the typical gilt-wood finish.

But even such eye-catching compositions fail to prepare guests for the visual feast awaiting them in the dining room—“one of my favorite spaces because it provides some context for the home’s history, yet is totally different from what most people would expect,” Tim says. Here, the millwork and high ceiling are glazed in a vibrant raspberry-colored paint inspired by the hues of the living room’s exotic drapery fabric—one of several details throughout the house that nod to the Japanese American population that called Curtis Park home after World War II. Books with sky-blue spines line one wall, a mural depicting cranes and cherry trees covers others, and a massive 1970s-era Murano-glass chandelier, also pink, shimmers over a vintage table flanked by patterned settees and armchairs in a soft blush. “When you’re in this room, you can feel people light up,” Tim muses. “It’s as if they’re gathering some of the energy that was put into that space.”

For their private quarters, the owners desired a far quieter palette of creams and black. To compensate for the lack of color, Rivington and Schumacher lavished rich textures on every surface: a woven grass-cloth covering on the walls and ceiling, Belgian linen draperies trimmed with bands of bouclé, an upholstered bed adorned with brass nailheads, and, “for that touch of the unexpected,” Rivington says, a zebra rug. Amid the bursts of color, pattern and texture throughout such a spirited home, this calmer space underscores the design scheme’s all-encompassing quality: an elegance that marries modernity with timelessness.