

Stunning South Highlands Remodel
Nestled
amongst the stately trees in the Sough Highlands neighborhood and just a
few doors down from South Highlands Elementary Magnet School lies the
home of Jason and Jessica Gambill.
After
moving to Shreveport from Texarkana, the Gambills knew they wanted a
home in South Highlands, so they rented and waited for the perfect house
to go up for sale. They originally looked at the home next door, but it
had already been remodeled and Jessica wanted something they could mold
themselves. She says that’s when they noticed the house that was
perfect for their family.
“It
was really rundown … I wanted to look at it right then. So we came over
the next day and walked through,” she said. “When Jason came in and saw
the smile on my face, he said, ‘We’re buying this house aren’t we?’”
Jessica says the home was not in living condition and the yard was
overgrown, but it had potential. “I had a very clear vision from that
first day we walked through – how to make it feel clean, organized,
streamlined and that people live here,” she said. “I want it to be our
family home forever, which is why we changed some things, took out some
walls and flipped things around, because that was what was going to work
best for our family.”
Jessica
says they wanted to keep as much of the home’s character as possible,
so they refinished the original wood floors, salvaged and reused items
like windows and a claw-foot bathtub, and chose vintage-look tiles for
some of the rooms.
Rand
Knicely was the contractor on the home remodel and also drew plans for
the addition that went on the rear of the home. In the living room,
sheetrock was removed from the walls to expose 100-year-old shiplap
beneath. Jessica says she was tempted to leave the shiplap in its
natural state, but ultimately chose to paint it white.
“It
gives so much texture to the wall. We added shiplap in the new parts of
the house and it looks great, but it’s nothing like this rough-hewn
wood,” she said.
The
fireplace was missing a mantel, so the Gambills’ cabinetmaker, Bubba
Hattaway, built one. (He also built the fireplace mantel in the master
bedroom.) The transoms above the room’s French doors had been covered,
so they were opened up.
The
sun porch was previously screened in and sagging to one side. It was
repaired and got vintage tile flooring from United Tile.
The
dining room originally had walls on all sides, so the wall facing the
rear of the home was knocked down. Reclaimed wood beams were added for
support and character. The sheetrock was removed from the lower portion
of the walls to expose shiplap, a chair rail was added, and the original
windows remain. The dining table was purchased from Four States
Furniture in Texarkana. The chairs at the ends of the table came from
Ivy & Stone in Bossier City, while the side chairs are Restoration
Hardware. The majority of the home’s light fixtures were found at House
of Carpets & Lighting in Shreveport.
The
gold lantern light fixtures in the kitchen from Medina in Shreveport
tie in all of the gold in the kitchen. – a white Italian Ilve Majestic
oven with gold fixtures and gold cabinet and drawer hardware. The large
kitchen island is perfect for gathering, eating, and houses the
dishwasher, trashcan, microwave, and has a builtin bookshelf for
cookbooks. Hattaway built the cabinets and vent hood.
A
butler’s pantry was added to replace lost storage. It has an icemaker,
wine fridge, beverage fridge and small dishwasher. The wood countertops,
also made by Hattaway, were salvaged from a downtown building that was
demolished to make way for the Shreveport Convention Center. He used the
same wood to craft counters for the upstairs laundry room and the
guesthouse kitchen.
The
pantry was placed under the stairs for an efficient use of space. “I
found the (pantry) door at Kings Antique Mall. It was (aqua) and
perfectly chippy … I had been looking for something with some
character,” she said.

Jessica
says the addition on the back of the home was originally a small
sitting room that Knicely believed could have been a porch that was
closed in. “It was sagging off the back of the house, so they put a
chain around it, tied it to a truck and pulled the whole thing down.”
The first floor of the addition houses the master suite and a family
room. A fireplace and shiplap walls were installed, along with a bank of
windows overlooking the backyard. The space also has a mudroom with a
dog wash and storage for backpacks and coats, a half-bath, and coat
closet.
A
small nook masks the door to the master suite. Inside the room, a barn
door leads into an office and another fireplace faces the bed. Carrera
marble counters, floors and shower tiles lend a clean look to the en
suite bath. Windows salvaged from the sitting room face a pool in the
backyard that was put in by Morehead Pools of Shreveport. The window
treatments in the bedroom and bathroom are from Sew Elegant Designs in
Shreveport.
A gym was placed off the bath for triathlete Jason. It has storage space for bicycles, a sauna and steam shower.


After
living in previous homes with downstairs laundry rooms and bedrooms
upstairs, Jessica knew she didn’t want to haul laundry to the second
floor. She had a washer and dryer placed in her closet, while the actual
laundry room is upstairs.


The bedrooms of the couple’s three children are also upstairs, along with a playroom, two
full baths, and a halfbath. The wall between the stairwell and the
playroom was knocked out and the opening to the stairs was moved back so
6’2” Jason would not have to duck his head on the way up.
Their
middle child’s bedroom is original and once belonged to another little
boy. Jessica says Sam Brown, the son of the previous owner, contacted
her to see the improvements made to his childhood home. Brown visited
with two of his mother’s, the late Mabel Brown, friends/caretakers. He
told Jessica the space the playroom is now in had been his mother’s
bedroom. When Brown saw her middle son’s bedroom, her son told him it
was his room. Jessica says Brown replied that it had been his bedroom.
“I almost cried, it was so sweet,” she said.

Jessica’s father, who owns a landscaping company in the couple’s hometown, did the landscaping. A large outdoor kitchen is the family’s favorite place to hang out. 
“Jason
loves sitting by the fire, so we put in the fireplace and a fire pit,”
she said. “All winter we would sit out here eating and watching movies.”
The table and chairs are from Restoration Hardware, the seating by the
fireplace is from Corner Collection on Line, and the lounge chairs are
Pottery Barn. Outdoor chandelier is from House of Carpets &
Lighting.
The
carriage house and garage also got a touch up and a new set of stairs.
Three feet were added to the garage to make it large enough to fit a
modern vehicle.
The Gambills have been in the home less than a year, but it is already full of life, love and laughter.
Vendor list
Custom
Bilt CoBurn’s KitChen PlumBing Fixtures southern hardwood Flooring
house oF CarPets & lighting aCtion eleCtriC aCtion air river Cities
Floors united tile Brian laCroux, Painting overhead doors rand KniCely,
Builder