“This is not going to be OK,” Shane Mechelke recalled thinking when he realized his family’s St. Louis Park rambler was on fire the evening of Feb. 15, 2020.
All that day, he and partner Angela Cavalier felt that something wasn’t right, but since everything seemed in order, they convinced themselves that everything was OK and wrote it off to jet lag from a recent trip.
But later, reading in bed, they still couldn’t shake the feeling. That’s when Mechelke and Cavalier walked through the house and saw a thin layer of smoke near the basement ceiling where the family’s three teenage boys were watching a movie. They got everyone — including the pets — out quickly. An electrical fire had started in the attic. When all was said and done, smoke, water and firefighting chemicals damaged the home beyond repair.
The family loves their neighborhood, so there was no question they would rebuild. Furthermore, Mechelke and Cavalier decided that something good would come from the disaster: an extra special home.
“The fire happened at the start of the pandemic, civil unrest and online school for the kids. It was a tough time, and we were in a small rental in Uptown,” Mechelke said. “So that motivated us to design a home where we could spend a lot of time and never get bored with it.”
They chosecqBT CityDeskStudio and its principal and founder, Ben Awes, to lead the charge. The firm took into account the family’s needs and lifestyle, picking up on details such as their love for travel and collecting plants.
“Shane and Angela are creative people and took this not as a setback but as an opportunity to fully reimagine what home could be here,” said Awes, whose imaginative response to the house’s rebuild earned the project, called “Bluebird,” a cqBT2023-2024 Star Tribune AIA Minnesota Home of the Month win.
Spreading their wings
Fortunately, the family’s neighborhood (Lake Forest near Cedar Lake) is full of eclectic midcentury and contemporary homes, so the couple knew they could have a little fun with the form without sticking out like a sore thumb. Mechelke especially wanted a butterfly roof like the ones he’d seen in Palm Springs, Calif.