A True Starter Home in Columbus, Indiana, Nods to Nearby Buildings by 20th-Century Masters

The goal for the roughly 1,000-square-foot residence was that people earning the national median income could easily handle the mortgage payments.

A True Starter Home in Columbus, Indiana, Nods to Nearby Buildings by 20th-Century Masters

The goal for the roughly 1,000-square-foot residence was that people earning the national median income could easily handle the mortgage payments.

The idea for Columbus House No. 1, a modest, single-level home near downtown Columbus, Indiana, began when local resident Nick Slabaugh spotted a vacant lot for sale that he thought he could develop. He bought it, and—after an introduction by his friend Jonathan Nesci, a well-known designer also based there—called on Chicago architect Grant Gibson to, as the latter describes it, "introduce a new type of house" to the area.

Columbus, Indiana, resident Nick Slabaugh tasked Chicago architect Grant Gibson with creating a low-cost home on a small lot near the city’s downtown. Its design references local architectural landmarks. Gibson says the building’s

While the midwestern city is home to a slew of civic buildings by modernist masters like Eero and Eliel Saarinen, "the residential building stock is typical of small American towns, a mixture of Victorian houses and workers’ cottages," Gibson says. "We wanted to build a house that’s tailored to how contemporary domestic life unfolds," he continues, adding that the main goal was "that people earning the national median income could easily handle the mortgage payments." To accomplish this, he and Slabaugh made the layout compact, with the private areas—two bedrooms and baths—situated at the home’s corners, and the living/dining room and kitchen at its core.

The central kitchen and living/dining room sit below a massive dome skylight, which Jamie Goldsborough and her partner, John Slater, call one of their favorite parts of the house.

When Jamie Goldsborough, creative director at Landmark Columbus Foundation (and a former graduate student of Gibson’s at the University of Illinois Chicago), relocated to Columbus for her job in 2021, she jumped at the chance to buy the home. "I immediately asked Gibson to put me in touch with Slabaugh," Jamie says. "I was intrigued from the get-go."

Columbus designer Jonathan Nesci created the angled kitchen island with a single-mold Corian countertop.

See the full story on Dwell.com: A True Starter Home in Columbus, Indiana, Nods to Nearby Buildings by 20th-Century Masters
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