In 2019, Kyle Dubay and Bo Shepherd purchased the home for $6,500 from the Detroit Land Bank Authority.
The couple found out about the home through a client who had plans to buy the property.
"One of our clients that lived in the neighborhood wanted to buy it," Dubay told Insider. "He was going to pay us to deconstruct it because he thought it was such an eyesore."
However, upon seeing the home, Dubay and Shepherd fell in love. "We went to our client and asked if he would be opposed to us buying the home instead and fixing it up," Dubay added.
The client agreed and the couple purchased the home weeks later.
The roof of the home was rotting and needed to be completely replaced.
The home's interior was crumbling, too. Many walls, windows, and floors needed to either be repaired or replaced.
"It definitely was not an easy project," Dubay said. "We pretty much had to take it all the way down to the studs."
The fire had peeled away wallpaper in some of the home's rooms, leaving behind nothing but drywall and plaster.
The couple discovered evidence of the lives that once inhabited the abandoned home, including mattresses, books, clothes, and shoes.
To reduce costs, the couple did most of the renovation work themselves.
"We put a lot of time into the home," Dubay said. "If I charged a client for all that we updated, the house should have been sold for $600,000 or more."
For the work that was outside of their wheelhouse, the couple relied on Shepherd's father who is a professional contractor.
When it came to decorating the home, the couple wanted it to look modern yet antiquated.
"We did not want a lot of ornamental stuff like a lot of old houses have," Dubay said. "We wanted to have a nice modern feel and let all of the old materials speak for themselves."
Dubay said that the kitchen, which was the home’s most expensive project, was his favorite room.
The kitchen's cabinets and refrigerator panels were built from oak salvaged from church pews around the city.
Dubay said that finding materials in the city is easy because local residents and businesses reach out when they have something interesting to share.
"We have been recycling materials for a while and have built a big network," Dubay said. I think people generally like what we do with the final product – they know we're going to save the materials and make it something special."
The kitchen's custom countertops were crafted from old science lab counters sourced from a nearby college.
"The local college went out of business so we took the old lab counters and custom cut them," Dubay said. "They're just really awesome."
The living room’s mantel came from another Detroit home the duo renovated.
Dubay said that every single piece of furniture in the home comes from Woodward Throwbacks' showroom or is recycled from another location in the city.
The living room's wine cart was made from scrap wood from Woodward Throwbacks' construction shop.
The cart is casted in bio resin and different pieces of wood that were placed into two layers," Dubay said. "We also built a custom metal frame."
The home has two bathrooms that have both been completely refurbished with new floors, sinks, and tubs.
This bathroom's vanity was designed and built by Woodward Throwbacks and is made from salvaged parquet flooring.
This staircase was donated to the couple from an Instagram follower.
"It was always our intention to find a spiral staircase for the house but we were striking out constantly when searching," Dubay said. "We made a post on Instagram about how we were struggling, and one of our followers had one that they didn't want anymore."
This dresser was constructed by Woodward Throwbacks from two separate pieces.
Dubay said that renovating the home has reinforced his beliefs about recycling.
Via PakApNews