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This Sacramento home narrows to just 8 feet. How did the architectural oddity come to be?

Uniquely is a Sacramento Bee series that covers the moments, landmarks and personalities that define what makes living in the Sacramento area so special.

On the way to a co-worker’s holiday party, Richard Stapler spotted a house that stopped him in his tracks.

He and his now ex-husband had been on the hunt for homes in midtown and downtown Sacramento. They had seen the “Skinny House” in the newspaper but didn’t know it was for sale.

The Sacramento landmark, at 4920 Del Rio Rd. in Land Park, is a 1,109-square-foot, two-bedroom, two-bath house. What makes the building striking is its narrowness — the house is only 8 feet wide at its south end.

“In a house like that, you feel more like a steward than a homeowner,” Stapler said in July. “Anybody who drives down Del Rio Road, you say ‘Skinny House,’ and they know immediately what you’re talking about.”

They bought the house in 2009 for what Stapler calls the “bargain of the century,” or $190,000. Stapler and his ex-husband called the Skinny House their home until September 2015.

“It turned into this unique fun ride over the next several years,” he said. “We don’t have a great deal of iconic structures, and this is one that serves as this guidepost.”

From the front, it is difficult to tell that parts of the Skinny House are only 8 feet deep. The Sacramento landmark, photographed earlier this month, frequently inspires people to stop and take pictures, according to one of its residents.
From the front, it is difficult to tell that parts of the Skinny House are only 8 feet deep. The Sacramento landmark, photographed earlier this month, frequently inspires people to stop and take pictures, according to one of its residents. Nathaniel Levine nlevine@sacbee.com

Who designed the Skinny House?

The architectural oddity’s first owner was John Johnston, who designed it in 2006 with help from Sheybani & Associates according to Midtown Monthly, a local magazine. Johnston also owned the duplex next to it.

Johnston told The Bee in 2006 that he received varied reactions while constructing the house. People kept asking “What is it?” and coming inside, which stopped the workmen, he said.

“So I finally put up a sign that said, ‘It is a house,’” Johnston told The Bee in 2006.

When Johnston bought the duplex, the lot came with a narrow strip of land, which the Skinny House was later built on.

“[Johnston] had a sense of flair and drama, and brought that to designing and building the Skinny House,” Stapler said in an interview in July.

John Johnston, builder of the Skinny House, stands in front of the south side of his narrow Sacramento home in 2006.
John Johnston, builder of the Skinny House, stands in front of the south side of his narrow Sacramento home in 2006. Randall Benton Sacramento Bee file

After moving out, Stapler’s ex-husband rented it out for several years, Stapler said. Then, the current owner, Rebecca Fong, bought the house for $494,000 in 2021, and now, rents it out.

Growing up in Sacramento, she would drive past by the house on the way to soccer practice.

“It was kind of a unique property that maybe scared some people off,” Fong told The Bee in August. “But I was very intrigued by it.”

Fong assured that the inside makes for a “very livable space.” Other than the house’s narrowness, the antique green doors also make the house special, since they were flown in from Italy, Fong said. She tries to preserve the doors and keep them intact.

“Living in the Skinny House is like being part of a story. Its charm and quirkiness remind me daily that a home doesn’t need to be large to be full of character. Every inch of this space tells a tale of creativity and craftsmanship,” wrote Doreen Dodds, the house’s current resident.

The antique green doors of the Skinny House, a Sacramento landmark photographed earlier this month, were imported from Italy.
The antique green doors of the Skinny House, a Sacramento landmark photographed earlier this month, were imported from Italy. Nathaniel Levine nlevine@sacbee.com

Landmark fosters community in Land Park

Despite the small space, Stapler liked to entertain, calling his dilemma the “party paradox.” At the house, he hosted political fundraisers and Christmas parties, which could reach a guest list of up to 120 people.

The key is to invite the right mix of socially outgoing people, Stapler said. Though the kitchen is about 9 feet wide, Stapler once counted about 22 party goers in there. Guests would spill into the living room area and onto the back deck.

“People are curious,” Stapler said. “(They think) ‘Yes, I want to go to this party, but yes, I also want to see this house.’”

Alberto Gabriel carries a wood panel as he helps build an unusually skinny house in South Land Park in 2005. Owner John Johnston spray painted “It is a House!” on the side of the 1,100 square-foot structure to satisfy the curiosity of the passersby.
Alberto Gabriel carries a wood panel as he helps build an unusually skinny house in South Land Park in 2005. Owner John Johnston spray painted “It is a House!” on the side of the 1,100 square-foot structure to satisfy the curiosity of the passersby. Andy Alfaro Sacramento Bee file

Kimberly Insigne, who lives across from the street, called the house “ a nice little hidden gem.” During the spring, the trees in the front of the house bloom with flowers, she said.

“I’m just always looking at it from different angles,” Insigne said. “It makes me happy to live across from a unique little piece of architecture.”

Slim, but not the slimmest house in the world

The house on Del Rio Road is far from the world record of skinniest houses. The Keret House, in Warsaw, Poland, takes that title, measuring at 2.4 feet at its thinnest point and 4 feet at its widest, according to ArchDaily, an architecture news site.

Skinny houses — or micro-homes — are not a new concept, as architects have been fitting buildings in unconventional spaces for centuries. Narrow houses are popular in densely-populated Japanese cities, according to Bruce Monighan, an urban design manager for the city.

“I’ve seen homes in Japan, where … the bathroom is not even in the unit,” Monighan said. “Land is at a premium and therefore, you use every bit that you can.”

These unconventionally-sized houses are a “response to an opportunity” to use space, he said.

But by Sacramento’s standards, the Skinny House on Del Rio is “unusual,” Monighan said. According to Rocket Mortgage, the median square footage of a for-sale house is over 2,000 square feet, whereas Skinny House is 1,109 square feet.

The southern tip of South Land Park’s Skinny House is only 8 feet deep.
The southern tip of South Land Park’s Skinny House is only 8 feet deep. Nathaniel Levine nlevine@sacbee.com

Smaller houses could mean more affordable ones

Sacramento’s minimum lot size is 1,200 square feet, compared to the previously established 5,200. That change was meant to encourage more small homes, Monighan said.

“We hope that the ability to build small is encouraged by some of the things that we’ve changed, and people see an advantage in living on a smaller footprint,” he said.

The Skinny House, a Sacramento landmark, stands on Del Rio Road in South Land Park earlier this month.
The Skinny House, a Sacramento landmark, stands on Del Rio Road in South Land Park earlier this month. Nathaniel Levine nlevine@sacbee.com

In-fill development refers to making use of unused and underused lands, which creates opportunities for both residents and businesses, Monighan said.

“Infill could be a really strange lot, like on Del Rio, or it could be a two-block area that has been unattractive,” Monighan said.

As houses are becoming more expensive, young people are getting frozen out of the housing market, he added. Small infill homes allow buyers to “get in the game,” since they’re cheaper.

Living so close to the architectural oddity makes Insigne wonder about the possibilities that houses like it offer.

“It also makes me think about other little plots of land that people could do stuff with,” she said.

The Bee’s Nathaniel Levine contributed to this story.

This story was originally published September 16, 2024 at 5:00 AM.

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