DECOR Right: Triangular-shaped pinwheel art hangs from the ceiling above the staircase. =- "People can find our home by just looking for the house with the triangle coming out of the top," Scott Monchnik said. 0 CO CM C CIO I ,,- ••'.--/, • OUR HOUSE Scott and Rae Monchnik's unique triangular home will highlight Groves High School home tour. STORY BY SHELLI LIEBMAN DORFMAN f you've ever seen a hair styl- ist with a great "do" or a den- tist with a perfect smile, you can imagine how remarkable the inside of the home of an architect and his creative wife might be. But guests of the third annual Heart of the Home House Tour won't have to visualize it in their minds when they are invited into the West Bloomfield home of Rae and Scott Monchnik as part of a fund-raising project for this year's Birmingham Groves High School senior class party. The party, held for the 307 grad- uating seniors, will cost between $30,000 and $35,000. The hope is to raise $7,500 with this year's tour of nine homes, held noon-4 p.m. Sunday, March 13. Until six years ago, the Monchniks lived next door to the home they live in now When the former owners of their current site tore the house down and decided against rebuilding, the Monchniks bought the land and spent the next year watching their new home being built. In designing the house, Scott focused on a unique triangular core that he created in its center. "All the rooms branch out from the central, triangle-shaped, two- story foyer," said Scott, a residen- tial and commercial architect, and owner of Scott Monchnik and Associates Inc. in West Bloomfield. There are no real hallways per se, and most rooms on the main level do not have doors on them. Even the basement stairway has only a door at the bottom. "Because of the angles of the house, we pick up niches that normally wouldn't have been there," Scott said of the 3,400- square-foot home. And the triangular shape contin- ues right through the roof. "By using cedar wood, I could use the same material on the out- side as on the inside of the trian- gle," Scott said. "On the outside, the brick masses butt up against it and then the outside is brought inside with the wood." Even before entering the home, guests can see its theme. The mezuzah at the front door is triangu- lar as is the door's stained glass Rae and Scott Monchnik open their home for Groves' seniors. A stained glass panel over the kitchen window is one of what Scott Monchnik calls "the subtle Frank Lloyd Wright influences" in the home. 1 8 • MARCH 2005 • JNPLATINUM