Something old, something new
Adapting a space She and Dr. Irene Schomacker, owner of the Cat Clinic of Johnson County, say they used these strategies to adapt some interesting elements of their existing buildings. > Windows. If you're moving into a 150-year-old farmhouse, as Cats Limited is, you want to keep the classic feel while still adding new elements. Cats Limited added an extra curved window to give the space even more character. "It looks like it belongs there," Smith says. > Doors. The Cat Clinic of Johnson County ran into one element where new and old didn't mix. Code compliance dictated that the doorways had to be 30 inches wide, and all of the antique doors were less than that. So Dr. Schomacker's carpenter took all the doors off and put picture framing around them to make them 30 inches wide. He then re-stained them to preserve the look. > Stairways. When working with a city inspector, Dr. Schomacker discovered that the Cat Clinic of Johnson County needed one fire-code-compliant staircase. The house had two beautiful antique staircases, but they weren't compliant. "It needed a major renovation and I thought we would lose the ambiance," she says. "So we came up with the idea of an official fire escape staircase in the back." They had to add a door to the back of the building, but this approach preserved the interior staircases. >Exterior. Both the Cat Clinic of Johnson County and Cats Limited Veterinary Hospital have embraced the architecture of their pre-existing facilities, and they've merged the look with their practice image. The Cat Clinic of Johnson County used a drawing of the building in invitations to the new clinic and in all of their marketing and yellow pages advertisements. While the design team at Cats Limited didn't change the original feeling of the building, they did redesign their logo. The team incorporated columns from the front of the building, an instantly recognizable feature, into the logo with a cat rubbing against them—melding the character of the building with the character of the practice and carefully combining old with new.
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