NOLA.com16%
A teenage architect redesigned a circa 1900 Craftsman shotgun single in the Marigny 16%
By Jyl Benson21%
7/18/2026, 9:00:00 AM
Keywords: Hardwall
BS Summary: This article contains 21 faulty reasoning types, including Biased Writer Voice, Appeal to Authority, and Optimism Bias, with Ambiguity (Equivocation) as the most egregious example at 17.6% saturation with 159 hits. Analysis detected 1,171 faulty-reasoning hits from 904 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 32.3% and a BS Rank of 16% (15,021 of 17,815 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 84.30% of the article peer group.
At a time when most 16-year-olds are hitting the mall or loafing with friends, Isabella Walker was going through the labyrinthine permitting process with the Historic District Landmarks Commission, State Historic Preservation Office, National Park Service and New Orleans Department of Safety and Permits.
In August 2024, her family members pooled their resources to acquire a circa 1900 Craftsman shotgun single in the Faubourg Marigny.
The 1,350-square-foot two-bedroom, one-bath abode was in rough shape, its inherent gifts buried under decades of peeling paint, cracked linoleum and bad decisions.
“Isabella was designing modernist architecture on Minecraft when she was 6 years old,” Russ Walker said of his daughter.
It was at that same age, while attending summer camp, that the precocious tot declared architecture as her future career.
She has remained unwavering in her commitment to the practice.
She graduated from Benjamin Franklin High School in the spring, turned 18 on June 19 and will decamp for Columbia University to study architecture next month.
“As a family, we decided to put Isabella’s convictions to the test,” said Russ Walker, a general contractor specializing in historic renovations and restorations.
“I told her, ‘We are throwing you out there.
This is on you.’
She didn’t get much help from me.
She didn’t really ask for any.”
The house was leaning, and it had to be shored up.
The front pillars were crumbling.
The rear bedroom and bath that were added by a prior homeowner were structurally failing and would have to be demolished and rebuilt.
She applied for a certificate of appropriateness.
As a full-control historic district, any exterior work — including roof replacements, window repairs or porch changes — had to be reviewed before she could acquire a building permit in the Marigny.
After receiving approval, she had to submit her detailed, to-scale drawings to the appropriate government entities.
With the building permit in hand, construction began in summer 2025.
As is common, city inspectors showed up unannounced during key phases of the buildout, such as framing and plumbing installations, to ensure work was being done to code, which Walker had memorized.
After designing the renovation in her head, she used her new computer skills to map things out.
Through clever design, she carved out a second bathroom and a laundry area without expanding the house's footprint.
She stripped over a century of paint from the interior cypress doors and millwork, sealed the wood and left it in its natural state.
She restored the heart pine hardwood flooring where she could and replaced what she could not with reclaimed lumber.
In May, the house passed its final city inspection, and Walker received a certificate of occupancy, which officially closed out the job.
She secured a tenant to rent the house, who will move in just in time for the young architect to head off to college in New York.
“I feel so fortunate to have been able to take on a project like this that plays into the importance of New Orleans historic architecture,” she said.
“New Orleans is such a unique city.
Every single element that goes into a piece of historic architecture has a story — every shingle, every latch, every hinge.”
While gutting the structure down to its lathe walls, a fireplace emerged behind a Sheetrock wall.
It was situated between the second room in the house and what would become the kitchen.
She wanted to fully reveal the brick fireplace, including the chimney rise and open the wall on the right side to create a freestanding structure.
“According to SHPO and the National Park Service, the chimney rise and the wall next to it had to be intact to meet historic guidelines," said Walker.
“So, I had to put a doorway between the two rooms on the right side of the fireplace, which makes no sense, but I knew I would never win.
They said I could reveal 14 rows of bricks from the floor up.
So that’s what I did.”
She flipped the locations of the kitchen and what is now the home’s guest bedroom.
She demolished the failing rear bedroom and bathroom, redesigned both and had them rebuilt.
She stripped over a century of paint from the interior cypress doors and millwork, sealed the wood and left it in its natural state.
She restored the heart pine hardwood flooring where she could and replaced what she could not with reclaimed lumber.
In May, the house passed its final city inspection, and Walker received a certificate of occupancy, which officially closed out the job.
She secured a tenant to rent the house, who will move in just in time for the young architect to head off to college in New York.
“I feel so fortunate to have been able to take on a project like this that plays into the importance of New Orleans historic architecture,” she said.
“New Orleans is such a unique city.
Every single element that goes into a piece of historic architecture has a story — every shingle, every latch, every hinge.”
While gutting the home, Isabella Walker discovered a fireplace behind a Sheetrock wall.
While gutting the home, Isabella Walker discovered a brick fireplace with a chimney rise.
Isabella Walker found the light fixtures over the kitchen’s seated island at Home Depot.
Jyl Benson writes about homes and gardens.
Email her at jylbenson@gmail.com.
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