It was love at first sight when Linda Boss stepped inside the St. Paul house that would become her longtime home.
She was enchanted by the quartersawn oak floors, the extensive Craftsman-style woodwork and detailing, and the many leaded- and and stained-glass windows, all in pristine original condition.
"Everything was in marvelous shape," she said.
Boss had first spotted the house while walking in St. Anthony Park, the popular neighborhood where she and her late husband were living in 1984 — and looking for a larger home for their family.
"I was attracted to how it was placed on the property," she said. "I like balance." And it had elements of Prairie School architecture, which she'd always been drawn to.
So she arranged a showing. "Once we got inside it, we had to have it," even though that required winning a bidding war with another prospective buyer.
The distinctive 2,948-square-foot house set on a triple lot — about ⅔ acre — was designed and built in 1914-15 by civil engineer Walter Lovell and was still owned by the Lovell family when the Bosses bought it. "We have all his blueprints and drawings," she said.
The home's original condition extended to the small kitchen, which was rather "primitive," said Boss. So they hired architect Joe Michaels to design a new kitchen, incorporating the butler's pantry, that echoed the home's original character.