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Some houses have bones worth fighting for. This 1969 mid-century modern in Blueridge is one of them — perched on a steep slope above a forested ravine, surrounded by rainforest, with the kind of character that newer construction simply can't replicate. When a growing family purchased it, the goal wasn't to erase what made it special. It was to make it work for the next fifty years.
The central move was enclosing the lower structure to create a proper ground floor — transforming what had been open underneath into a third level of living space that the family actually needed. Getting there required solving a significant structural challenge first: supporting the existing home during construction while simultaneously managing the sloping landscape for the long term. The ravine setting that makes the property so compelling demanded as much engineering attention as design attention.
Above ground, the sprawling deck structures that wrap the home were completely rebuilt — updated to provide generous, flowing outdoor spaces that acknowledge the reality of rainforest living. Covered, considered, and connected to the interior, they extend the home into the landscape without surrendering to the weather.
The exterior was fully reimagined while keeping faith with the original architecture — a contemporary take on mid-century modern that respects the language of the 1969 design without being held back by it. Three levels, updated throughout, with the ravine and the rainforest still doing what they've always done just beyond the edge of the deck.
