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OLD HOUSE
SHELTERS
NEW LOVE
Couple find a
Terrell Hills
home connection
By ROBYN BARNES
Photography AL RENDON
Walk down any residential street in San Antonio and chances
are, one house will stand out. One house will hold your attention,
pique your interest and create a desire to linger just a
little longer, gazing at the structure.
Linda Hummel-McAlpin and her husband, Chico, live in such
a home in Terrell Hills. The two-story Georgian Colonial
ensemble of white brick, shingle roof, black shutters and
iron balcony above the red front door draws the eye and holds
it. Built on the diagonal on a large triangular corner lot,
it was at one time a San Antonio Symphony Showcase house.
“I’ve always felt a connection to this house,” Linda
says. “Little did I know that my future husband grew
up one block down the street.”
Chico McAlpin recalls the neighborhood. “I had friends
who lived in this house when I was a boy,” he says
with a smile. “We carpooled to school together, so
I was in and out of the house a lot. I never thought I’d
actually live here one day!”
NEW
HOME,
NEW HUSBAND
Several years ago, Linda toured the house right after the
Symphony Showcase ended. “The minute I came through
that front door, I knew I was home,” she says. “I
had another house under contract at the time, so I immediately
called Phyllis Hall, my Realtor, and told her she had to
work her magic — she did, and the rest is history.”
Linda and her teenage son, Corky, moved into the house and
set about making it their home. “I grew up in a house
like this in upstate New York, so I knew the bones of the
place would be great,” she says. “Although the
house was built in 1937, most of the major renovation had
already been done. No walls had to be moved, but there was
plenty of opportunity to draw the different themes of a Symphony
Showcase house into the warm cohesiveness of a home.”
Linda and Corky moved in and returned to their busy lives.
As the CEO of Humana, her days are long and packed with meetings
and travel. Corky was equally busy as a student athlete at
Alamo Heights High School. Neither was thinking about expanding
their familiar horizons.
Three months later, Phyllis (Hall) introduced Chico to Linda
at a dinner party at the San Antonio Country Club. They fell
in love on their first date, and within a year, they were
married. Combining the two households was a challenge for
this old house, even if it did have good bones.
RENOVATION
RESULTS
T“I had a house of my own, full of furniture,” Chico
says. “Now I have a large overstuffed storage unit.
Truthfully, moving all my things in wasn’t realistic,” he
continues. “Linda had just completely remodeled, and
there wasn’t enough room. I needed some office space
in the house, but I had no idea where it would fit. So we
worked through our space requirements and decided that maybe
we could renovate the utility room.”
As a psychotherapist, Chico wanted an office with a private
entry. The utility room had a back door with convenient street
access, and it also opened into the garage. The remodeling
solution was to enlarge the home’s den by adding French
doors and a wall enclosing an outside hallway. The “new” hallway
leads to the utility room, which also received a total makeover.
“What a mess it was!” Linda says. “We gutted
the room, re-bricked the floor and connected the den and
office through the hallway gallery with French doors leading
to the back patio. At the same time, we renovated the garage
to increase storage space and make room for the washer, dryer
and second refrigerator.”
The result was a cozy, masculine den that reflects Chico’s
interest in nature and his family. Paintings by wildlife
artist Charles Frace mix with photographs of Linda riding
her National Champion Arabian horse. A sculpted bust of his
father rests on a leather-topped writing desk. A small flat-screen
television is mounted just below the ceiling, perfectly positioned
for viewing from both his favorite leather chair and extra-long
leather couch.
“This is where Chico gets away from it all,” Linda
says. “I love it,” Chico adds. “It’s
a peaceful place to work and a great room to relax in.”
TEENAGE
HIDEAWAY
Simultaneously, Corky got a new hangout, too. He happily
moved his digs from a first-floor bedroom up a richly paneled
stairway to the attic bedroom. It’s the perfect teenage
hideaway, with its own bathroom and enough space for visiting
friends.
What about shouting up the stairwell when Linda needs to
get her son’s attention? “Not necessary,” she
says as she steps to the door opening onto the stairway. “I
press this specially rigged doorbell. What other teenager
do you know who has his own doorbell?”
The bedroom he exchanged is now the guest room. A large platform
bed rests on the original pine floor. An antique dresser
anchors one wall, while an antique Spanish chest, dating
from the 17th century, occupies a corner. The craftsman who
made the chest carved the metal and wood with loving detail;
it shows the patina of polish and age.
“The chest came from my family’s ranch,” Chico
says. “It’s a family heirloom.”
ART
AND ANTIQUES
Next door to the guest room is the formal living room.
A fireplace centers one long wall of the room with a colorful
painting of two Polynesian girls hanging above the mantel.
“It’s a Gauguin-inspired painting by a Russian
artist,” Linda says. “I love the rich colors
and the mood.” As an art history major, she knows what
she likes and has filled her home with thoughtfully selected
art.
Another wall in this room frames a recent addition to the
collection — a large painting of a pensive nude painted
by local artist Steven Daluz.
Linda’s collection of antiques abounds, and many of
them are at home in this room. A carved pine hutch holds
a variety of old pieces of blue and white china. The rugs
covering the wood floors are vintage, as is the pine desk
behind the sofa.
“These pieces hold great memories for me,” Linda
says. She recounts how many of them came from the late San
Antonio interior designer Jessica Stringer, who helped Linda
furnish several of her prior homes down through the years.
“Jessica passed away several years ago, but when I
look at the desk, the chair, the hand-painted trunks, the
side tables — I recall her voice as she’d tell
me what a find she had for me,” says Linda. “We
had great fun discovering unusual furnishings for my houses.”
The living room is a sophisticated mix of periods and styles,
but everything goes together. “I like combining different
styles and textures — it makes for a much more interesting
living experience,” Linda says.
At first glance, the dining room seems small for this couple
who love to host dinner parties; the room is dominated by
large antiques. The marble-topped French sideboard is a carved
piece occupying one wall, flanked by Windsor chairs. The
large blue and white urn and the candelabra that grace its
surface are very old. A heavy wooden table is centered in
the room; in a former life, it was an old Spanish door, now
recycled. A beautiful chandelier hangs above. A variety of
Talavera pottery is displayed on a hanging hand-painted plate
rack.
“This room really suits the way we entertain,” she
says. “We like to keep it informal and serve buffet-style.
This arrangement lets our guests circle the table to fill
their plates.”
A doorway from the antique-filled dining room leads to a
small but very contemporary kitchen. The countertops, surfaced
in black granite, are complemented by the black and white
stone flooring. White cabinets with open shelves display
more Talavera pottery. The stainless refrigerator and stove
reflect the finish of the pressed tin ceiling.
The adjoining breakfast area is a cozy, comfortable room
where Linda and Chico enjoy morning coffee. The room’s
focal point is a big iron chandelier that draws the eye up
to the bead board ceiling. It hangs over the antique table
that’s just big enough for three place settings.
A wooden African mask is a contrast to a small flat-screen
television. A fabric art piece hangs on the opposite wall,
and other types of art are displayed everywhere. Five doors
provide access to the room: One leads to the kitchen, one
to the spacious bricked patio, another to the den, one to
the garage and the last to a step-down butler’s pantry.
“The pantry doorway is so low that I never try to get
into there,” Chico chuckles. “It’s a good
thing Linda is agile!”
The den is a decorator’s paradise. “I regularly
move stuff all around in this room,” Linda says. She
displays her first major art purchases here. A painting by
Kathleen Cook hangs on one wall; an Andy Thomas oil hangs
over the sectional sofa. The long wooden painted trunk from
Germany works as a base for the television; a pegged shelf
above it holds Italian pottery. Large crimson pots displayed
on a table are also from Italy. The sconces and mirror are
antiques.
Again, Linda’s friend and real estate agent Phyllis
Hall made an important contribution. “The large carved
coffee table belongs to Phyllis,” Linda says. It had
once been her kitchen table, and she cut the legs down. “Phyllis’ children
learned to walk by hanging on to the table and toddling around
it,” she adds. “When we were looking at the house,
she told me she didn’t have room for it in her home,
so here it sits until she is ready for it again.”
The master bedroom and Linda’s office are upstairs.
A beautiful Bettie Ward painting brings the stairwell to
life with its bright magical color scheme. A second painting
by the same Russian artist similar to the one in the living
room shares the adjacent wall, while a sparkling chandelier
illuminates it all.
Linda’s office is the first room off the top of the
stairs. It’s a working office that reflects her love
of family, both human and animal. Portraits of Corky and
her horses are all over the room. The many blue ribbons Linda
has won at Arabian horse shows decorate one wall. A large
trestle table acts as her desk, and another antique painted
trunk and an old grandfather clock round out the furnishings.
The room next door could be another bedroom, but at the moment,
Linda uses it as a dressing room. A blue and white toile
chaise longue serves as extra seating, and a large old Welsh
chest of drawers holds various clothing items. The room is
lit from above by a small crystal chandelier.
The master suite’s muted blue walls are the perfect
backdrop for more colorful art. One wall has built-in storage
for clothing, and she has a special closet that holds her
shoes. The tall four-poster bed dominates the center of the
room. A marble bathroom off the bedroom opens onto a rooftop
deck.
AN EASY PLACE TO LIVE
A toLinda and Chico have made this house a comfortable, easy
place to live. For all its beautiful art and antiques, it’s
still a place where you’d feel comfortable shedding
your shoes after coming through the door. The ambiance isn’t
a function of the furnishings but of the loving relationship
Linda and Chico share.
“Corky and I were a happy pair when we moved into this
house, but everything became better when Chico became part
of our lives,” Linda confides. “There is so much
love in this house.”
“She’s a wonderful woman, and I’m blessed
to be a part of such a great family,” Chico adds. “She’s
the love of my life.”
And as philosophers often remark, love is the heart of a
beautiful home.
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