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A ‘design dilemma’

The Reynolds’ house was built in two different styles and had unique features. That made remodeling the kitchen an unusual project.
Diane and Keith Reynolds with designer Sean Lewis (right) in their kitchen, which they renovated after moving to the area in 2023.Read moreWilliam Thomas Cain / For The Inquirer

When Diane and Keith Reynolds moved back to the Philadelphia area from Austin, Texas, in 2023, and bought their house in Rydal, Montgomery County, they knew immediately that they wanted to remodel the kitchen.

But they also knew that project alone wouldn’t make a home they’d be satisfied with.

“We wanted to keep it craftsman style,” said Diane, referring to the arts and crafts movement of the late 19th century. The style is characterized by simplicity, emphasis on natural materials, and closeness to nature.

Keith, a software sales engineer for a technology company, said he specifically wanted to avoid a “cutesy” environment in the home. Diane, executive assistant for a trade association, called it “bringing nature inside.” It was the third house they’d lived in since they married.

Through an internet search, the couple found Philadelphia-based Airy Kitchens and designer Sean Lewis for the remodel.

“It was an interesting design dilemma,” Lewis said.

The house was originally built in the Cape Cod style in 1914, but when the previous owner added onto the home, he chose the craftsman style. By 2023, the kitchen needed significant updating for practical use. It had an unusual layout, opening up into a larger great room with high ceilings and a loft built from reclaimed wood towering over one side of the space.

The loft was retained, but many other details were changed. “We changed a lot of the symmetry,” Lewis said.

For example, a full bathroom tucked behind the kitchen was made into a powder room, giving Lewis more kitchen space to play with.

The refrigerator and gas range were reused. A new hood, dishwasher, and beverage refrigerator were added. The custom island — larger than its predecessor — is a stained cherry wood that was chosen to match the natural wood trim on the existing windows.

The backsplash is a multicolored earth-toned slate material in a chevron pattern, evoking the outdoors from within their kitchen.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen or used that material as a backsplash,” Lewis said, and it was the jumping-off point for choosing the colors in the kitchen.

“The assignment of rethinking a kitchen space is not unusual for us,” he said. But the home’s disparate styles and unique features, like the loft, beams, and open floor plan, created an “unusual design problem.”

“It’s quite unusual for a 100-year-old home to have a great-room layout with a vaulted ceiling,” Lewis said. “The reclaimed wood loft installed by the previous architect is something I’ve never seen before, and I’m sure will never see again.”

Maximizing storage was a no-brainer, and they accomplished that simply by adding cabinets.

One of the key challenges was providing counter space around the range. The range was previously located below the loft, but is now centered on the kitchen’s longest wall, between two windows, with the sink off to the right, just below a window. This allowed Lewis to add counter space around the range, for more practicality.

The windows were left untreated in the Craftsman style.

Inside, woodwork was stained to match the outside.

Diane said she and Keith looked at the house as a “homecoming” from their time in Austin, “a little bit like reclaiming our roots.” He grew up in the nearby neighborhood of Meadowbrook, and she is from King of Prussia.

“From the second we walked into the house it was so warm — we felt immediately connected. There’s something grounding about watching the seasons change," she said. “It’s colors and leaves and movement. Every day it just restores me.”

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