Having renovated a young family’s midcentury home several years earlier, architect Colin Flavin was summoned once again by the homeowners, this time to create additional space to house guests and serve as a home office and yoga studio. An existing garage was repurposed as the new guesthouse, and the team also created a new carport and storage structure. The main home was built in 1958 by renowned Massachusetts architects Henry Hoover and Walter Hill. Flavin worked on that renovation and knew he wanted to stay true to the main home’s midcentury aesthetic when working on the new project.
“Our client had a deep respect for the original midcentury design and wanted to preserve the footprint of the original house. When it came time to add to the house, they wisely decided to convert the garage structure into living space and asked us to design a separate detached carport structure,” Flavin says.

Who lives here: A couple and their two young children
Location: Lincoln, Massachusetts
Size: Guesthouse: 769 square feet (71 square meters), one bedroom, one bathroom. Carport: 787 square feet (73 square meters)
Architect: Flavin Architects
Contractor: Perkins Custom ContractingThe project was completed during the pandemic, and the timing couldn’t have been better. “The guesthouse has been a perfect spot for the husband to work from home,” Flavin says. “It is also used daily as a yoga studio. The grandparents come for extended stays in the guesthouse as well. They love the connection to the outdoor terrace we designed with Lynch Landscape and Tree Service.” Flavin had the homeowners peruse for inspiration during the renovation.


After: For the new guesthouse, shown above on the left next to the main house, the architects kept some of the original features of the garage and added many improvements, including a wall of glass to replace the garage door, which faces a new patio and plantings.
“Connecting our houses to nature is central to all our architecture,” Flavin says. The unique timber ceiling was kept, and plywood trusses were replaced with steel cable trusses, a modern industrial look that’s also functional. “They are designed to carry the load of the roof, with the cable being in tension. The advantage of this design is it avoids the heavy appearance of the original structure,” Flavin says.


Inside the guesthouse, the team insulated the concrete floor and installed porcelain planks over it. “The existing concrete slab floor was cold in the winter, and we added insulation and radiant floor heat. It’s great for yoga in the winter,” Flavin says. New skylights and the wall of glass that replaced the garage door bring in an abundance of natural light and emulate the skylights over the kitchen in the main house. There are views of the patio and new carport beyond.
Floor tile: Oxford Blanco, Porcelanosa



The guesthouse bathroom is like a woodsy retreat. It features a curbless wet-room-type shower and earthy green tile on the wall that visually connects to the foliage outside. The team custom-cut the tile for the shower floor from porcelain plank floor tiles.
Wall tile: Cadence Jade, Nemo Tile + Stone; bathroom floor tile: Oxford Blanco, Porcelanosa






