Modern and Modular Homes of Santa Barbara , CA
Santa Barbara Independent
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
So you want to build a house in Santa Barbara — but you’re not enamored of
red-tiled roofs, and your budget is a bit smaller than Oprah’s. Can an average
family hope to build a beautiful, modern home here? Behold: Three families who
have done just that.
From Utah , with Love
Even before they married in 2002, San Marcos High School
grads Rain and Dana Longo started looking for a house to buy. In 2009, they
were still searching. “We couldn’t quite get anything,” Rain remembers. “We
were outbid every time.”
We’re standing in the kitchen of the Longos’ brand-new
two-story home. Light streams through the massive windows above the sink and
spills in from the clerestory windows in the dining room. It’s hard to believe
that just a few months ago, this stylish modern house was zipping along the
freeway on the bed of a flatbed truck.
For the Longos, a factory-built house was the perfect
solution: aesthetically pleasing, eco-friendly, and quicker and more affordable
than traditional construction — even cheaper than many of the older tract homes
they had considered buying.
The Longos worked with Irontown Homes, a company in Utah that allows for
custom design. They hired an architect, and they bought what had been a
blighted, undeveloped lot — a 6,000-square-foot corner property near Bishop Diego
High School . They went
door-to-door to speak with their neighbors and found their project
warmly received.
Convincing the Architectural Board of Review wasn’t quite so
easy. “They finally acknowledged that you’re not going to build a 1950s tract
home in 2011,” Dana says.
The final result is an eye-catching, 2,100-square-foot house
with four bedrooms, two-and-a-half bathrooms, front yard and backyard, and
mountain views. With three small children and a fourth on the way, they feel there’s
just enough space for everyone. “We got a big house by Santa Barbara standards,” Rain says. “We
never could have done it without modular.”
Out of the Ashes
In 1973, Donnis Galvan took a risk and bought a piece of
property nobody else seemed to want: an irregular 1.25-acre lot on a steep
hillside, with a creek running through the middle. She and her husband, Peter
Hale, decided to build a house there, and after years of planning and
permitting, they completed the project in 1990, with Hale designing and
managing the construction himself. Their unassuming modern house was set below
the level of the street, providing privacy and quiet. It was cantilevered over
the creek so that, from the kitchen and the back deck, you looked out into a
canopy of leaves. The foundation had been so expensive that they had resorted
to cheaper materials for the house itself, but they loved their home.
Among the many benefits of modular houses, this custom
kitchen was installed in the factory.
Then, in November 2008, the Tea Fire swept through the
Montecito foothills, taking Galvan and Hale’s house with it. Even in the
immediate aftermath of their loss, the couple knew they would rebuild on-site.
So they did, finally completing the new house in November 2011 and living in a
borrowed Airstream trailer for the final year of the project.
The new house appears similar to its predecessor — a petite,
modern structure that from the street looks like little more than a garage.
Inside, a flight of stairs descends to an open-plan living room and beyond to
the kitchen with its views of the canyon below. This time around, with an
intact foundation, Galvan and Hale were able to invest more in their building
materials and appliances. Still, they’ve kept things minimal: exposed steel
beams, bare wood floors, and lots of glass. “We like things simple,
uncluttered, and practical,” Hale explains. With 1,900 square feet of dwelling
space, it’s the ideal size for two — and that’s just the way they like it.
Like the Longos, the Wilson
family worked with modular company Irontown Homes, based in Utah , to design their home.
Prefab-ulous
Until 2011, the Wilson
family lived in a comfortable San Roque neighborhood house. They were happy
with the size of their home, but they ached for more land. So they took a risk
and bought an undeveloped four-acre property, sold their house, and started looking
for a way to build. They had heard about modular houses but associated the idea
with a cheap, prefabricated structure — until they did their research.
Like the Longos, the Wilsons
chose Irontown Homes, in large part because of the company’s willingness to
allow for custom design. They decided to work with area architect Keith Rivera,
who was new to modular and who took on the project with some degree of
skepticism — he worried it might be of a lower quality than a stick-built home
and that it wouldn’t allow for enough flexibility. Two years later, both Rivera
and the Wilsons are modular converts.
Just last month, the Wilsons
moved into their single-story, four-bedroom, two-bath house. It’s sleek and
modern, and unlike their San Roque house, they look out at an expanse of open
land — plenty of space for gardening, and for their three young children to
explore. “This house and other prefabs like it may be an example of a new,
post-recession approach to home building,” Rivera says. “It’s modern, sensible,
and efficient.”
The Wilsons
agree. “Prefab used to be a dirty word, but this is not a mobile home — it’s a
real home,” they say. “It’s beautiful. We’re very happy.”
1 comment:
Kudos to Irontown for solving the client's pain with excellent design and concepts.
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