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Accessible home sits sky-high over Seattle

SEATTLE ― Anne and Brom Wikstrom have lived in the city’s Magnolia neighborhood for a very long time. They’re used to beautiful views. Blue water. Purple mountains. Rising city.

So when they started talking about a new place, they didn’t talk about a nice view. They didn’t want a nice view.

They wanted a stunning view. This view: Puget Sound from Seattle’s shipping terminals, across Alki Beach, the sweep out to Bainbridge Island, Olympic Mountains, around to Queen Anne Hill, over the Space Needle, downtown, across the Great Wheel and over again. All beneath great various-shades-of-blue skies.

“We wanted as much view as we could get without blocking anybody else,” says Anne, directing her comments at the version of Mount Rainier that causes wrecks on the freeway.

What? Oh. Yes! Of course. We’re hanging off the fourth-floor deck of the Wikstroms’ new tower of a home designed by Mike Butrim of David Vandervort Architects and built atop one of Magnolia’s highest points. Behind it, on a short dead-end street, are cedars even taller than the house. No views blocked.

“This is pretty much where I am all the time,” says Brom. This crow’s nest is his studio. Brom Wikstrom is an artist from a family of them (father, brother), a painter of everything from fine art to greeting cards, and coowner, with brother William, of the Wikstrom Brothers Gallery in the Tangletown neighborhood.
Brom Wikstrom works in his fourth-floor studio, which offers views of Puget Sound. (Seattle Times/TNS)
Brom Wikstrom works in his fourth-floor studio, which offers views of Puget Sound. (Seattle Times/TNS)

Northwest art is in his blood, on his walls and, three floors below, packed into the racks of his new office. Working in all that art (and all those views) was part of the architect’s challenge. But only part.

“I was really nervous about relying on an elevator,” says Brom. “In the old place I could go outside to get my exercise.” The artist moves about the world in a wheelchair and has only limited use of his arms. (He paints with his teeth.)

“But we are at that stage in our lives that if we were going to have a maintenance-light grounds and house and the view and space for my mother, now’s the time.”

And this is the place. Downstairs, Dorothy Wikstrom, 87, is at home in her one-bedroom flat, open living room-kitchen, a large craft room/laundry suitable for quilting. (She makes them for the Moyer Foundation’s Camp Erin for bereaved children.)

“This is like returning home for Mom, because we grew up here,” says Brom. He used to play with the kid who lived on this very spot.

Between apartment and studio is a floor for bedrooms, another for the kitchen, living and dining rooms. Walls are glass.

“Brom calls this my floor,” says Anne, setting out fat slices of blueberry bread in the kitchen, which appears to extend all the way to Bainbridge Island.

Butrim offered his clients three plans and three contractors. “We interviewed them, but David (Vandervort) gave us the questions to ask,” says Anne. “The first two came in suits. No calluses on their hands.” They hired the third guy, Brian De Young, Stonewood Builders.

Items, whenever possible, are American made. Tile, countertops, floors. The architect worked his way up from the old foundation: Cantilevered cedar elements reach for the views and are anchored by the metal-clad central mass. At its base, the home is brick, a nod to those nearby.

“This is our forever house,” says Anne. “The apartment will be for our caregiver.”

But for now? “I think our favorite thing is the sunsets,” says Brom.

“The Ferris wheel (the Seattle Great Wheel on Elliott Bay)!” says Anne. “We love the Ferris wheel. It’s mesmerizing.”

By Rebecca Teagarden

(The Seattle Times)

(MCT Information Services)
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