
St. Jude Dream Home
“It is always better to stand out than to blend in,” said Myron Griffing, owner of space: interiors and interior designer of this year’s KTBS 3/St. Jude Dream Home.
The modern farmhouse-style home does just that, wowing visitors.
The 3,200-square-foot home is located in the Lost River subdivision in Benton and features four bedrooms, three and a half baths, and a three-car garage. Its estimated value is $450,000.
Rodgers Home and Construction has built all 27 Dream Homes. Owner and builder Philip Rodgers says he likes to incorporate current trends into the homes. “The trend everyone is doing right now is the farmhouse look,” he said.
The
home’s exterior is a combination of brick and vertical siding and some
galvanized roofing. Texture was added to the brick exterior with
sacking. The garage and courtyard brick are painted white.
The
shutters are hand painted to give them a distressed look, and the porch
ceiling is light blue to deter pests. The porch and courtyard are paved
with slate tiles. Furniture is from Nader’s Gallery.
A
glass and metal door leads into a foyer flooded with sunlight. A modern
“Sputnik” light from Henson’s Lighting shines down on a painting by
local artist Vanika Terhune. A bright blue basket weave console table
and lamps from the space: interiors collection sit beneath the painting.
“We really wanted the palette to be very simple. Mostly black, white and gray with punches of cobalt and gold,” said Griffing.
DeLoach
Painting did the treatment on the living room ceiling. Griffing says it
was a six-part process that alternated sanding and painting to create a
waxy appearance. “It’s impactful. How many times do you walk into any
home and go ‘wow’ over the
ceiling?” The blue velvet sofa and painting above the fireplace are
from Nader’s. Black-and-white chairs, mirrors and the side tables are
from Paul Michael Co. in Monroe. The spiky console and black wooden
bench in front of the fireplace come from Walsworth and Co. in Monroe.
The chicken table is from space: interiors.

Griffing
said the open dining room/ kitchen area is his favorite. “We painted
the ends (of the room) black so it really defined the space,” he said.
Three wood beams were painted gray to highlight them. Lantern light
fixtures hang from each. The black kitchen island is topped with a
quartz countertop and has a black apron sink. The cabinets are also
painted a shade of gray.
A
table with a zinc top stretches the length of the dining area. The
metal chairs look like worn wood. The table, chairs, African masks and
bullhorns came from Paul Michael Co.
A
door off the dining area leads out to the back patio. A retractable
screen from Quality Shades & Shutters can be raised and lowered with
a phone app or a remote control. Porcelain tile wood-look flooring is
laid in a chevron pattern. Petrified wood end tables are from Walsworth
and Co., while the patio furniture came from Corner Collection on Line.
Three bedrooms are on the first floor.
All
of the bedroom furniture came from Ethan Allen. Bedrooms one and two
are staged as children’s rooms. Both have gray ceilings.
“We
always paint our ceilings. It’s generally the largest unencumbered wall
in a room. If you just paint your ceiling and basically do a nice
neutral around the base, then you’re not in a gray room, you’re in a
room with gray,” said Griffing.
The
master bedroom has a photorealistic wallpapered accent wall and his and
hers nightstands. The floor lamp is by Walsworth and Co. A modern bench
is at the foot of the bed.
A trough tub is positioned as a showpiece in the master bath. The shower has handmade, handglazed tiles and a rain shower head.
Honeycomb tiles on the shower floor are echoed in larger travertine tiles on the bathroom floor.
“Color
is tricky … lighting plays a huge role,” Griffing said. “Whenever we’re
picking out colors, we always do big samples so we can see it at night
and day and midday, and how it changes.”
Another bedroom, bonus room and bathroom
are on the second floor. Downstairs, a half-bath adds a surprise
element to the home with the same color palette used in an unexpected
way.

Local
pediatric physician Dr. Donald G. Mack created the St. Jude Dream Home
Giveaway in 1991. The first Dream Home was built in Shreveport and
raised $160,000 for the hospital. Since then, the annual KTBS 3/St. Jude Dream Home fund-raiser has raised more than $30 million for the hospital.
Located
at 200 Sam Willen Drive in Benton, the KTBS 3/St. Jude Dream Home is
open to visitors every weekend through Aug. 6 on Saturdays from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., and Sundays from noon to 5 p.m. Tickets are $100 each and may
be purchased at dreamhome.org, by phone at 1-800- 724-2423, or at any
Porter’s Fine Dry Cleaning or Moffitt Mazda location.
The grand prize drawing will be from 2-5 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 13, on KTBS 3.

