Heritage renovations typically operate under a preservation logic—original details are restored, surfaces are sealed, and finishes are lacquered to suspend the home in an idealized past state. But at Tryon Hill, a 1929 Cape Cod in Portland, Oregon, designer Sara Gray of Pacific Northwest–based practice Grayhaus inverts this formula. Her material palette—unlacquered brass, Calacatta Viola marble, mohair, velvet, linen, aged wood, and natural stone—is chosen not for its ability to resist wear but to welcome it, treating patina and softening as active contributors in making a nearly century-old home feel hospitable rather than preciously preserved.
These are not distressed finishes performing the appearance of age, but reactive surfaces that develop character in proportion to how much the home is inhabited. Unlacquered brass hardware darkens and mottles with handling. Mohair and velvet upholstery acquire compression patterns through repeated use. Floors and walls subtly record traffic and movement with every slight dip and divot.
The tonal range of the palette reinforces this agenda. Muted jewels tones and inky hues wrap the rooms in warmth, avoiding the crisp contrast between old architecture and new intervention that characterizes many contemporary heritage works. In select moments, the palette tightens into more concentrated, near-monochromatic expressions, giving certain spaces a subtle contemporary edge without disrupting the home’s overall cohesion.
Gray drew this color story in part from the homeowner’s wardrobe. As such, at the heart of the home, a small room tucked between the dining room and kitchen was reimagined as a dedicated salon. Burgundy walls and intentionally low, warm lighting create a space scaled for conversation.
The 18-month renovation navigated the structural idiosyncrasies typical of homes approaching their centennial, including unusual joist directions, construction limitations, and the hidden conditions that come with houses of this age. Gray’s decision to preserve original molding profiles, proportions, and symmetry, while introducing this more expressive material language, allows the home’s bones to remain legible beneath its new interior life.
The result is a residence that will look different in five years than it does today—not through deterioration, but through the gradual accumulation of the life lived within it.
To view more works by the studio, visit grayhaus.com.
Photography by Pablo Enriquez.


















