The front entry of the Balbach-Diem home designed by  architect Christian Dean. The contrasting concrete shell and wood-sided box  gives the home a graphic quality.
A sudden deciding associated with ground brought Ruth Balbach as well as  John Diem to create the current family house they have always wished for.
In 2010, the couple were living in an older house in Edina. “We had  this crazy idea to downsize and modernize,” said Balbach.
They found the ideal lot with a smaller, manageable yard across from an  Edina city park for their two boys. But the 1950s rambler that came with the  lot was far from a good fit for their family. So Balbach and Diem planned to  transform the cramped, cut-up interiors into a clean-lined contemporary abode  with expanses of glass and wide-open spaces. They wanted something like  architect Christian Dean’s boxy addition to his own home, which they had  admired on the cover of Dwell magazine.
“We knew we wanted a house with a strong modern sensibility,”  said Balbach. They connected with Dean, who was with the Minneapolis firm  CityDeskStudio at the time and recently had been profiled as an “emerging  talent” in modernist architecture in Midwest Home magazine.
Dean drew up preliminary plans for a whole-house makeover, using the  existing foundation.
But a surveyor unearthed a big obstacle to the planned project. “The  house was settling into the original bog, and the soil was spongy,”  recalled Dean. “The surveyor said it felt like standing on a water  bed.”
With the renovation option off the table, the couple explored building a new  home. “The budget changes were a little frightening,” said Balbach.  “But I’m a roll-with-it girl.”
Since the rambler was in decent condition, the couple hired a house mover to  transport it to another site where it could be re-used. Starting with a clean  slate, Dean was able to design a flat-roofed, box-shaped home that fits more  narrowly on the site than the existing wide rambler. It boasts better views of  the park and gardens and “breathing room from the neighbors,” said  Dean. “The design has a linear quality shaped by the site, with the  largest views out the front.”
Dean gave the two-story stacked structure a compact 1,100-square-foot  footprint. The base, or main level, is a concrete shell, and the second floor  is a wood-sided box. “We wanted the home to be a smart, sensible use of  the lot, and not sprawl and encroach on the neighbors,” said Balbach.
To give the family more living space, Dean designed cantilevered wood  “bump-outs” on two sides of the house, which also add architectural  interest so “it’s not a straight-up simple box,” he said.
The home’s contrasting concrete and wood exterior, combined with a  variety of window shapes and sizes — from horizontal clerestories to  vertical slits — gives it a striking graphic quality.
Punchy contrasts
“It’s simple and minimal, so it gets its punch through  contrasting materials and graphic elements — like the straight lines of  the steel and cable staircase,” said Dean, referring to the home’s  open black steel stairs leading to the second floor.
Building from the ground up allowed the homeowners to “craft every  space and create a floor plan we wanted,” said Balbach, a creative  director for Target. Raw concrete walls surround the L-shaped open floor plan,  which encompasses the kitchen, dining and living rooms.
Dean used the innovative Thermomass insulated concrete foundation and wall  system. “If a client likes concrete, it’s a fabulous  energy-efficient system, as well as one beautiful wall material for the inside  and outside,” said Dean. “I think concrete is very organic and has  depth — as long as it’s paired with other materials.”
Balbach agreed. “We like the texture of concrete — it’s  true to the material.”
For your family room, Leader decided on a enormous light  weight aluminum industrial local store windowpane dealing with the road and  also the recreation area. This individual actually prolonged the actual  windowpane under the living-room ground in order to attract lighting in to the  cellar TELEVISION space. “We’re pleased to reside in a home  associated with cup, ” stated Balbach, searching the actual movie-screen  dimension windowpane. “At evening, all of us simply draw over the window  blinds. ”
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