silverorange office wins 2016 Heritage Award

Nick Burka
silverorange blog
Published in
4 min readFeb 18, 2016

In 2003, silverorange moved our offices to a beautiful heritage building in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island called the G.A.W. Robertson House. The century-old Victorian building hadn’t been well maintained for many years and had been crudely subdivided into two units before our arrival. One of our lead programmers, Nathan Fredrickson, happened to also be a master woodworker and builder and in 2010 took on the ambitious project of renovating and restoring the building back to its former glory.

First floor lounge during construction and after completion

After six years of major interior and exterior renovations, the project was completed. Nathan and his team of craftspeople (including our former CEO, Dan James) took great care in restoring and preserving architectural elements in their original form in every aspect from the faux-grain painting technique on the interior woodwork to the Wallace stone foundation.

This week, the PEI Museum and Heritage Foundation recognized the work Nathan and silverorange did in preserving the home and presented us with a 2016 Heritage Award which Nathan received at a ceremony in Summerside last Tuesday. An epic job well recognized.

Third floor workspace during construction and after completion.

The description of the project for the PEI Museum and Heritage Foundation:

The Robertson House at 84 Fitzroy became the office of silverorange, a
software company, in 2003. Over a six year period from April 2010 to
October 2015 we completed a comprehensive heritage renovation of both
the exterior and interior of the building.

Previous additions were removed and the front porch roof line was
changed to be more complementary to the original structure. All windows
were replaced with new custom wood windows. Rotten siding was removed
and all paint was removed from trim work being preserved. Great care was
taken to create exact matches of siding and molding profiles. The
original gingerbread work in the front gables was carefully removed to be
restored and then re-installed. Much of the sheathing was removed with
the siding which allowed for rewiring and repair of framing in the
exterior walls. Old insulation was removed and replaced with spray foam
insulation and modern house wrap. Everything was painted with exterior
solid stains that will avoid peeling paint in the future. Porches and
decks were rebuilt with custom railings and balusters to complement the
building.

Inside, the original plaster, trim, and floors were saved where possible.
Earlier renovations that divided the main staircase were removed and the
original servant stairs were rebuilt. Hardwood floors were uncovered,
repaired, and refinished. New hardwood was installed in other areas to
match. Where new trim was required, exact matches were made and much of
it was faux-grained in a style to match original graining. All plumbing
and electrical was replaced throughout. Lighting was greatly improved
with LED pot lights and reproduction brass fixtures. Three bathrooms and
a kitchenette were rebuilt in styles that complemented the existing
interior.

silverorange designs and develops simple and powerful web and mobile applications. We’ve worked with clients including Mozilla, Hippo Education, EM:RAP, TinEye, CourseHost, and Duolingo. Read more on our blog or follow us on Twitter.

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Nick Burka
silverorange blog

founder of silverorange, lover of bbq pork buns, cloned repo