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From basement to Bella Casa

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Brick ceiling in a lower level wine room
Visitors to the wine room are surrounded by beautiful details like the arched brick ceiling and built-in storage for 450 bottles. The table and chairs, and everything else, are custom.

Quartz adds color to a bar area

There is a place where countertops glow and fine wine flows, where friends gather to bask in, or take shelter from, the elements, where every detail of beauty and comfort has been embraced so that all that remains to be done is enjoy them. This exquisite and intoxicating oasis is known as…a basement in Brecksville. For visitors, the word “basement” never actually comes to mind, and homeowners Mary Ann and Dennis Bednar have fittingly christened their newly remodeled lower level “Bella Casa” because it is indeed the basement that doesn’t seem like one at all.

Remodeled lower level boasts a cozy seating area

Divine design
The Bednars knew they wanted an old-world, Tuscan-inspired space. “We knew we wanted a wine room and complete bar and kitchen and cigar room,” says Mary Ann. “We didn’t know how to get it to work. They made it work,” she adds, referring to Architectural Justice, the company that brought the project to life.

The Bednars lived in this house for decades. The basement started out as a typical concrete-and-cinder-block affair that later included a laundry area, bare-bones exercise space, a barely functional bathroom, and the humble beginnings of a business (which now employs 140 people).

Home decor displayed on window wells

Built as a ranch in 1948, the house underwent three additions, including one to add a second level. A few years ago, Mary Ann and Dennis brought in Sal’s Landscaping of Brecksville to add a dramatic outdoor living space. Finally, it was time to make the basement beautiful for its own sake, and also to blend with the stylish patio space beckoning just outside the glass basement doors.

While browsing appliances at Trevarrow, Inc. of Parma, the Bednars admired the in-store display by Architectural Justice. Soon, owner James Justice and his wife and partner, Darlene, had begun the design process for the Bednar’s lower level remodel. Following several months of patient listening and re-working of drawings, they were ready to start the build.

Cozy seating area in a remodeled basement

Completely custom
“When we first went down there, it was a real mess,” says James. “We had to tear out a lot of the floor. A lot of the ducts needed to be rerouted in critical areas and we changed some things we had to, to get the ceiling heights and doorways that we needed. And we changed the whole direction of the stairs.”

James continues, “We had multiple design meetings and tried to lay out each design meeting with the decisions that needed to be made.” First, they had to define the spaces, then materials, and then details. Software allowed the Bednars to virtually walk through the space before it existed in reality.

James says, “We love when a customer is really involved in the design (like the Bednars). It makes us put more time into it and usually those with a lot of owner input make the projects come out the best.”

Lower level bar with an open design

In the Bednar basement, warmth oozes from the cabinetry in an antique blackened finish, the hand-sculpted seven-inch-wide planks of American hickory floors, the stone and stucco walls, the iron scrollwork in the doors and stair railing, and so much more.  The glowing countertops are natural Brazilian quartz artfully lit from below, enhancing their translucence.

Brick ceiling in a lower level wine room

The wine room features an arched brick ceiling, walls of built-in storage for 450 bottles, a corking station, and a custom table and chairs. The backsplash at the kitchen cooktop features a one-of-a-kind mural printed on travertine tile.

Lower level kitchen designed with Tuscany in mind

“That’s a photo of a real place in Tuscany,” Mary Ann explains about the mural. Mary Ann and Dennis purchased the digital file of the photo from a photographer. Then, James and Darlene transferred the image to the Bednar’s tile.  They even altered the image so a previously blank wine bottle in the photo now appears labeled with Mary Ann and Dennis’ names and their fictitious winery. The vintage is 1995, the year of their marriage.

“I love just being in here. It makes me feel good,” Mary Ann smiles. “We thought we’d use it more in the summer months but we find ourselves down here all the time.”

Apron-front sink in a lower level kitchen

Go with the flow
Although the finished space feels large, open and flowing, that is due more to insightful planning, than to actual square footage. To achieve this, everything in this project had to be custom designed and built. Architectural Justice was up to the task.

“I started out 30-some years ago,” says James. “I was doing remodeling and had a cabinet shop. I got into granite about 20 years ago. We added a metal shop about ten years ago and then cast stone also.” James’ company now makes all those elements in-house and has their own install teams, which James describes as “absolute artisans and the best of their crafts.”

Lower level includes a cigar room

The cozy cigar room features custom hair-on hide seating, built-in cabinets that include a humidor, deep window wells and beautiful views of the outdoors, plus a venting system in the ceiling to keep the space smelling fresh. A spacious pantry fits under the stairs, behind doors that match the kitchen cabinets. There are two TVs and three gas fireplaces. A utility closet hides behind a beautiful sliding barn-wood door. A bathroom with marble counters includes a steam room/shower combo.

Corking station in a wine room

Everything here is purposeful, intentional and well thought out and it is just that intense planning that makes it all feel effortless in this true Bella Casa.

Resources: Designer and contractor: James and Darlene Justice, Architectural Justice; Furniture: Laurie Kotik, Leopold’s Fine Home Furnishings; Window treatments: Timan Custom Window Treatments

Article by Lauri Gross / Photos by: Thom Sivo



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