Year
2023 - 2025
Company
Drana Inc.
Name
House Design
Location
New York, USA

Tucked into the tree-lined streets of downtown Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, a quiet architectural trick is playing out. Passersby pause in front of 807 N 6th Street with the same lingering curiosity—When was this place remodeled? The truth always surprises them: it wasn’t. This home wasn’t updated or restored—it was built from the ground up in 2023.

The home is a study in design restraint and regional fluency. Eschewing fleeting trends or overt declarations of modernity, the build leans into classicism with a quiet confidence. Every lap of the siding, every shadowline beneath the eaves, and every mullion in its wood-framed windows contributes to the illusion of age. But unlike the hundred-year-old homes that inspired it, this one comes with radiant heat, airtight insulation, and a chef’s kitchen that could make a restaurateur blush.

Crafting New from the Language of Old

“We didn’t want to imitate the past—we wanted to belong to it,” says the designer-builder behind the project. And it shows. The home draws from the vernacular of early 20th-century American architecture: simple rooflines, classic proportions, and details that feel earned, not added. Nothing is extraneous, and nothing feels new-for-the-sake-of-new.

Its facade is anchored by tall double-hung windows and a subtly elevated front porch framed by traditional square columns. Painted in timeless monochromes, the exterior looks as though it might have weathered decades of seasonal shifts. And yet, behind the historicist veil is a home that functions entirely in the present.

Modern Inside, Memory Outside

Inside, the home opens up to soaring ten-foot ceilings, reclaimed-style beams, and a seamless living-dining-kitchen plan that emphasizes volume and flow. Natural light washes over European oak floors and hand-built cabinetry. The kitchen, a showpiece in its own right, features Fisher & Paykel and Monogram appliances framed by custom cabinetry that stretches nearly to the ceiling.

There’s a subtle interplay between old and new throughout the house: plaster-like wall finishes meet smart thermostats. Classic five-panel doors swing open to ensuite baths with steam showers. Windows are traditional in proportion, yet built with modern energy performance in mind.

The master suite echoes the language of a classic parlor—only it comes with dual walk-in closets and heated tile flooring. “It’s about balance,” the builder notes. “We want the home to feel soulful, but never stuck in time.”

The Outdoor Room as Ritual

Perhaps the most unexpected luxury is the outdoor kitchen—a fully realized space that predates the home itself. Completed in 2021, the Tuscan-style courtyard is a warm composition of stone, steel, and cedar, anchored by a grill station and fire pit. It’s the kind of outdoor room that encourages slow evenings and unhurried conversation.

This outdoor moment helps bridge the past and present just as much as the house itself. The grill’s patina and the mature landscaping lend the backyard an established rhythm, further dissolving any visual evidence of new construction.

A Home That Doesn’t Ask for Attention—It Earns It

There are no gimmicks here. No exaggerated gestures or flashy displays of luxury. The real success of 807 N 6th Street lies in its humility. It’s a house that understands its neighborhood, listens to its context, and speaks softly with conviction. It doesn’t announce itself—it settles in.

In an era of copy-paste design and disposable builds, this home is a quiet act of defiance. Built not to stand out, but to belong—and in doing so, it has become a classic from the moment the paint dried.

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