Before anyone let me through the front door, I peered through the big windows. (Not the smartest thing to do in Texas.) The house was empty, abandoned. My brain didn't say house. It said canvas. It said connection. It said yes.
Inside, the house told a different story. Worn out paint. Tired wallpaper. Carpet that had given up. Color palettes from a forgotten era. Every surface begging for rescue. But the U-shaped bones whispered home, art studio/showroom, rental income, community events, and something I didn't quite have a word for yet. I went home and sketched out my vision for every room. I still have that piece of paper. And, today, that vision is nearly 100% realized.
It was my first major reno. Twelve months and some change. A lot of change. Every wall stripped, every ceiling scraped, fresh museum white paint, new floors and lighting throughout, four bathrooms gutted to the studs and rebuilt from scratch, kitchenettes built into the Airbnb units, a screened porch, native landscaping, and more trips to the tile shop than I will ever confess to making. I picked every single material myself, room by room, obsessing over every detail, making it up as I went along. And It wasn't without its challenges. From living in a paint-fumed tent straight out of Breaking Bad to learning on the fly what it means to be your own designer and contractor. A local subcontractor ghosted me after the bathrooms were already gutted and after he communicated that we were three times over budget. A tile guy made me return four bathrooms worth of high-end material claiming it wasn't up to his standards, then walked off the site after I made a suggestion. In the end, it all worked out for the better.
The house itself was my art project. I wasn't renovating a building. I was making a piece of art you could walk inside and call home. The house became a collaboration before it ever hosted one. Artists came and painted murals on the walls. I painted on the furniture. And somewhere in the process, the entity that had been living in the closet got the message and moved on.