ARTS . Art

Best in Show

PSPCA's DogHaus lets animal-loving interior designers off the leash.

Published: Oct 7, 2008

RAISE THE WOOF: DogHaus organizers Lynn Lehocky (left) and Rebecca Paul hope this year's pet-rified design show room will raise $160,000.
Michael T. Regan

RAISE THE WOOF: DogHaus organizers Lynn Lehocky (left) and Rebecca Paul hope this year's pet-rified design show room will raise $160,000.

(CLICK IMAGE FOR LARGER VERSION)

When Charles B. Dunn purchased a stately Victorian home in Chestnut Hill, renaming it Edgcumbe after Mount Edgcumbe in his native England, he probably had no idea that, more than 130 years later, his treasure would become one enormous doghouse. Or, to be more precise, the 2008 home of the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals' DogHaus design show.

ADVERTISEMENT

After joining the board of the PSPCA, Lynn Lehocky was looking to do something significant for her organization. Not trained for frontline work or to deal with the emotional horrors that the society's rescue workers must often face, Lehocky turned to friend and interior designer Rebecca Paul. Both animal lovers, the two created DogHaus, which showcases designer (human) living spaces to raise money for the PSPCA while giving Philadelphia-area interior designers a chance to run free.

"I wanted to do what I thought I could do best," Lehocky says: raising money and, through design, focusing on the "brighter side of awareness" of major animal problems in the city, like overpopulation, breeding pit bulls for fighting, and the abundance of stray cats. While it does tackle darker issues through the much cheerier design process, DogHaus avoids any political pretensions, Paul says. "No matter which side of the fence you're on, everyone loves animals and everyone can support animals," she says. "They're voiceless victims and they need our help."

DogHaus kicked off in 2003 at the Dilworth House on Washington Square, followed by a turn at a Chestnut Hill home in 2005. After taking a year off in 2007, DogHaus returns to Chestnut Hill, this time at Edgcumbe.

With three floors and more than 20 designers working in as many spaces, the grand scale and traditional nature of Edgcumbe — with its impressive architectural details and abundant carved woodwork — lends itself perfectly to a show house. Modern houses don't have as many "pockets" for designers to work in, Paul says. Lehocky and Paul invited established designers and ones new to the business to stop in for an open house, select a few spaces they'd like to work in, and leave behind a portfolio. Those chosen were assigned a space, free to do what they please.

Once the selection process is over, the paths of design concepts can diverge wildly. Chuck Soldano of Work in Progress, who is participating in his first DogHaus, says there are two schools of thought on approaching a show house: Go nuts with impractical features like metallic wallpaper or create a completely livable space. For his second-floor guest room, Soldano says he's staying a bit more traditional but focusing on tweaks and revealing his double threat by adding his own pattern-like contemporary paintings.

Michael Shannon of Michael Shannon Designs, a DogHaus veteran, echoes Soldano's sentiments, and says that wildly different rooms can cause the house "to lose its cohesiveness." With the entry hall as his space, Shannon is leading the charge and setting the tone for the whole house. To do that, he's working in a distinct Asian theme including what he calls his "wow factor" — an illuminated black lacquer display cabinet filled with Asian antiques from Liao Collection.

While DogHaus is a show house in its truest sense — Lehocky and Paul say they try to direct the focus on quality, livable rooms and not kitschy, animal-centric spaces — their designers still find ways to incorporate sly nods to animals, whether through the liberal use of houndstooth or, in Shannon's case, the Chinese foo dogs in his display cabinet. Others have been a bit more cheeky, says Paul, citing an example of a designer who did an entirely white room with nothing but a dog bed in the corner.

Since its start, DogHaus has raised more than $250,000 for PSPCA programs, says special events planner Nicholas Chapman. This year, he says, they're figuring on another $160,000. That's a lot of rescued puppies and kittens.

(d_mercier@citypaper.net)

Preview party Fri., Oct. 10, $175; show Sat., Oct. 11-Nov. 9, $25; Edgcumbe House, 8860 Norwood Ave., 215-426-6304, ext. 227, spcadoghaus.org.

Comments

My wife and I were there on Saturday. The architecture and show was amazing. We usually attend the new construction shows but this was truly a design show and well worth going.
by Peter on October 12th 2008 2:51 PM

What a great idea! I Loved seeing the old mansion updated. Great job for a great cause. Loads of talent and great ideas. Might go back!
by rose on October 12th 2008 3:26 PM

Great cause and nice house. It should be featured in some design magazines. Chestnut Hill is a really nice area of the city.
by Joe Ruggerio on October 19th 2008 11:52 AM


All reader comments are subject to our Terms of Use. By clicking Post Comment, you acknowledge that you have reviewed and agree to these Terms.

Name
please enter your name
Email (will not be published)
please enter a valid email
Comment
please enter a comment
Enter the security code on the right in the textbox below.
Security Code
please enter the code
Join the City Paper Mailing List
 

Also In This Week's Arts Section

Re-View:
Bare Essentials
by Robin Rice

Theater Review:
Future Perfect
by Mark Cofta

Theater Review:
Like, Whatever
by David Anthony Fox

Opera:
Voice and Virtue
by David Shengold

Arts Picks:
Reefer Madness
by Mark Cofta

Arts Picks:
This Is the Week That Is
by Mark Cofta

Arts Picks:
Gordon Parks
by Lori Hill

  • Bare Essentials
  • Future Perfect
  • Like, Whatever
  • Voice and Virtue
  • Reefer Madness
  • This Is the Week That Is
  • Gordon Parks
Recent Comments
Web Exclusives
RJ Ernst
27, Newtown
Sergeant, Marine Corps
Deployed to Iraq Spring 2005, in Iraq currently
Tim Johnson
50, Port Richmond
Specialist, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Winter 2004 and Spring 2008
Lilliam Bernal
27, Trenton
Second Lieutenant, Army National Guard
Deployed to Iraq Winter 2005
Japandroids
Tue., July 7, 8 p.m., $10, with Matt & Kim and Team Robespierre, First Unitarian Church, 2125 Chestnut St., 866-468-7619, r5productions.com.
Classifieds
Advertisements
 
Search Restaurants


search restaurants by name
search by neighborhood
Search
search by cuisine
Search Movies
title
theater

Search
Search Jobs
search for:
within:   of  
more jobs
(use zip or city, state)
Search
"Great vision without great people is irrelevant."
—Jim Collins, Author,
"Good to Great"
In Partnership with JobCircle
Search Events
Search For:
Category:
Search
Search DJ Nights
keyword:
category
locations
Search
Search Classifieds
Category:
Keywords: Search

Search Real Estate
Search Happy Hours

ALL | MON | TUE | WED | THU | FRI | SAT | SUN

or

LOCATION:

ADVERTISEMENT
- TODAY -
Go see Sheryl Crow perform at the Welcome America concert with the family-friendly masses. Or ... more »»

CCD Sips

Moveable Feast

Date My Text

DJ Nights

Primer



Dish 2008