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©
2001
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The
house with the tower is done
Ron and Shawn Leis didn't expect
to take five and a half years to finish their house, the one with a tower
at 215 South Spruce Street.
But it's finished, and they
have invited the public to come see what they accomplished. They will
hold an open house on Sunday, December 2, and another on Saturday, December
8 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to view the completed project.
"We aren't going to have refreshments
or anything, but people want to see the house," explained Ron.
Shawn and Ron built the 2,500
square foot home pretty much by themselves.
They originally thought it
would take five months, not five and one-half years.
They were just going to raise
the roof and put some bedrooms on a new second floor to accommodate their
"blended" family of eight.
"We were just going to put
four bedrooms up there so we could house the six children," said Ron.
But then a building inspector
said, "No, the stringers aren't good enough to hold a floor, you have
to replace these stringers."
So they set about replacing
the stringers. The roof was off. Then an October storm dropped 14 inches
of snow on the open structure.
By spring, they had lost ceilings,
walls, the carpets and the floors. They tore into the building and found
that the beams did not go to the foundation, and termites had gotten to
the plates.
They had to do foundation
work, rebeam and repost the whole building.
"By the end of the second
year, we were standing in dirt," said Leis. "It was so pathetic, the police
would stop by in the rain storms and shine their lights, so we could see
where to put the tarps."
But they couldn't stop. "We
had all of our money sunk into it. We would buy some materials, run out
of money; buy some materials, run out of money," said Ron.
One by one, they began replacing
walls.
"We used as much of the old
material as we could, even saved and rehung the stainless steel siding
that was on the house, said Leis.
They laid new beams and hardwood
floors. They bought a spiral staircase in Texas to access the upper floors
and the roof.
Ron's son, Aaron, a "high
end" dry wall contractor in Bend, according to Ron, did the drywall with
an "exquisite" level of detail. About a year ago Leis hired Brian Huntamer
to do some of the wood work so he could meet a balloon payment due this
last Friday.
Inspectors were "very aware"
of the project and knew Leis was building it himself. They were very rigid
in forcing compliance with the regulations, said Leis.
Leis has a pottery shop on
Spruce and Hood.
"I haven't been able to do
any pottery. After five and half years, the house became my art. Then
Shawn caught the spirit, and started undesigning part of my designs."
But together they have created an art shared between them, said Leis.
Shawn is a software engineer
working in Bend.
The house project "really
shaped our lives. Rather than our shaping it, it shaped us," said Leis.
A bus was that was going to
be a motor home for the kids to go camping has not been used.
Two of the six children have
gone on to college.
But children at home have
already been to the top of the "French mansard" design. A tower, at the
top of that spiral staircase that runs through the center of the house,
provides access to the 20X40 deck on the flat roof, soon to have a fence.
And the Leis' will have an
open house.
"We have people as far back
as West Virginia who come by every year to see if the pottery is open,
and if the house is done," said Leis.
It is. Finally.
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